The Telegram (St. John's)

Toronto-area home prices, sales volume in February down from record highs

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The number of Toronto-area homes sold last month fell nearly 35 per cent and the average selling price dropped more than 12 per cent from historical­ly high levels set last year, the Toronto Real Estate Board reported Tuesday.

There was a total of 5,175 residentia­l transactio­ns through the board’s MLS system last month, down 34.9 per cent compared to the 7,955 sales in February 2017.

The region’s average selling price, covering all types of residentia­l re-sales, was down 12.4 per cent to $767,818 - still one of the most expensive in Canada.

Detached houses - the most expensive of the major categories tracked by TREB - showed the biggest declines in both the number sold and sales price compared with last year.

The detached category had also been the driving force behind a spike in prices in the early months of 2017 that prompted the Liberal provincial government to introduce a package of measures last April to cool the market.

That was followed by a financial stress test for buyers, which officially came into effect on Jan. 1 for federally regulated lenders, following an October announceme­nt by the Office of the Superinten­dent of Financial Institutio­ns.

“When TREB released its outlook for 2018, the forecast anticipate­d a slow start to the year compared to the historical­ly high sales count reported in the winter and early spring of 2017,” TREB president Tim Syrianos said Tuesday. “Prospectiv­e home buyers are still coming to terms with the psychologi­cal impact of the Fair Housing Plan, and some have also had to reevaluate their plans due to the new Osfi-mandated mortgage stress test guidelines and generally higher borrowing costs.”

Interest rates for mortgages have risen over the past year as a result of moves by the Bank of Canada and fluctuatio­ns in the bond markets.

However, higher borrowing costs and OSFI’S stricter requiremen­ts didn’t slow the Montreal market - which marked the 36th straight increase and the busiest month of February since 2012 for the Greater Montreal Real Estate Board.

The Montreal-area board reported Tuesday that home sales in Quebec’s largest market - which hasn’t seen a spike like Toronto’s - grew five per cent year-over-year in February, and prices were up across all major categories of properties.

The median price of singlefami­ly homes across Greater Montreal was $310,000 last month, up six per cent yearover-year, while plexes reached $481,500, a one per cent increase. The median price for condominiu­ms grew by five per cent last month, with half of all units selling for more than $250,000.

“The accelerati­on in price growth is a direct result of increasing­ly tighter market conditions, which can be explained by a decline in the supply of properties for sale,” said Mathieu Cousineau, president of the GMREB board of directors.

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