Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Home sales rise for fifth straight month

- COLIN MCCLELLAND

Homes sales across Canada rose for the fifth consecutiv­e month and recorded a double-digit increase compared to a year ago in part aided by interest rates, according to the Canadian Real Estate Associatio­n.

However, sales in Vancouver and Toronto, the two largest domestic markets, remained “well below” the levels achieved before mortgage stress tests were introduced last year, the associatio­n said.

Sales rose by 3.5 per cent in July compared with June and by 12.6 per cent versus the same month in 2018, the associatio­n’s figures show. The Bank of Canada kept interest rates at 1.75 per cent last month after raising them five times since 2017.

“After a challengin­g 18 months, the Canadian housing market is showing widespread signs of, not just stabilizin­g, but firming again,” BMO chief economist Douglas Porter said in a note to clients. “With global uncertaint­ies driving borrowing costs lower again — Canada’s 20-year government bond stands at a record low yield today — the market is poised to receive a further fillip.”

House prices advanced 0.6 per cent from June, the largest monthly gain in two years, and 0.2 per cent from a year ago, according to the MLS Home Price Index. Ontario cities and Montreal were mostly responsibl­e for the increase.

The average transactio­n prices, which tend to be more volatile than the MLS index because they don’t take into account changes in the housing mix, rocketed 3.9 per cent compared with a year ago.

Porter says the average price is still good leading indicator for the index and prices “are clearly headed higher.”

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