Saskatoon StarPhoenix

February home sales tumble across Canada, average price down: CREA

- ALEKSANDRA SAGAN

The average price for homes sold last month was down 5.2 per cent from last year as the number of sales dropped to a 10-year low for the seasonally weak month of February, the Canadian Real Estate Associatio­n reported Friday.

The national associatio­n highlighte­d the impact of a mortgage stress test that affects federally regulated lenders, including the big banks, but some analysts said February’s drop may be due in part to severe winter weather.

“February home sales declined across a broad swath of large and smaller Canadian cities,” CREA chief economist Gregory Klump said Friday in a statement.

CREA said February sales by its members fell 4.4 per cent compared with the same month last year. That is the lowest level for the month of February since 2009 and almost 12 per cent below the 10-year average for the month.

On a month-over-month basis, national home sales in February were down 9.1 per cent compared with January for the lowest level since November 2012. It’s the biggest month-over-month drop since the mortgage stress test came into effect in January 2018. The new stress test requires borrowers to prove that they can service their uninsured mortgage if lending rates go above a certain threshold.

The national average price for homes sold in February was $468,350, down 5.2 per cent from the same month in 2018. Excluding the Greater Vancouver and the Greater Toronto Area, two of the country’s most active and expensive markets, the national average price was just under $371,000.

“Only time will tell whether successive changes to mortgage regulation­s went too far, since the impact of policy decisions becomes apparent only well after the fact,” said Klump. “Hopefully policy-makers are thinking about how to fine tune regulation­s to better keep housing affordabil­ity within reach while keeping lending risks in check.”

Some analysts however focused on the weather as a key factor.

Doug Porter, chief economist at BMO Financial Group, wrote in a note Friday that February is normally a seasonally slow month even during a tame winter.

“This was most patently not a tame winter month, further bludgeonin­g a sluggish market,” Porter said.

He added that the year-over-year drop in sales was heavily concentrat­ed in British Columbia and Alberta, while the other eight provinces saw a 2.8-per-cent yearover-year rise.

Porter said he won’t delve into great detail on the housing figures as they’re more of a weather report than an economic one at this time of year.

In its updated outlook for the year, the associatio­n said it expects home sales in Canada to pull back by 1.6 per cent to 450,400 in 2019, a change that would mark the weakest annual sales since 2010. The associatio­n expected British Columbia to account for much of that projected decrease, as well as continued decline in Alberta.

Its forecast projects sales will rise to 459,400 in 2020, up two per cent from the 2019 forecast.

 ?? RICHARD BUCHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? National home sales in February were down 9.1 per cent compared with January, the biggest month-over-month drop since the mortgage stress test came into effect in January 2018.
RICHARD BUCHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS National home sales in February were down 9.1 per cent compared with January, the biggest month-over-month drop since the mortgage stress test came into effect in January 2018.

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