Times Colonist

Rate hike could prolong TO real estate slowdown

- JESSICA SMITH CROSS

TORONTO — The Bank of Canada’s interest-rate hike could prolong the cooling-off period the Toronto housing market is experienci­ng following the implementa­tion of a provincial foreign-buyer tax, a prominent economist said this week.

But the recent drop in the number of home sales in the Greater Toronto Area — down 37.3 per cent in June from 2016 — is not expected to last longterm, said Benjamin Tal, deputy chief economist with CIBC World Markets.

A similar slowdown occurred in the Vancouver area — another hot housing market — following the implementa­tion of B.C.’s foreign-buyer tax a year ago, but Tal said the measure hasn’t deterred non-resident buyers and the market is rebounding.

“We haven’t seen a significan­t decline in foreign investment activity in Vancouver following the tax,” he said. “What led to the slowdown was really more domestic buyers waiting to see what the tax will do.”

While Toronto should follow a similar trajectory, there are two other factors now at play, Tal said. “We also see interest rates going up and the regulators are talking about introducin­g more measures to slow down the market,” he said. “That’s why it’s possible the slowdown in Toronto will be more durable than the slowdown in Vancouver.”

The Office of the Superinten­dent of Financial Institutio­ns has proposed tighter rules that include requiring a qualifying stress test for all uninsured mortgages.

While Tal said he supports the changes, he cautioned it might be prudent to reconsider the timing of their implementa­tion, set for the fall. “Just not to shock the market too much, maybe we have to think twice about the timing of the changes,” he said.

That advice doesn’t apply to the Bank of Canada’s decision Wednesday to raise its key interest rate to 0.75 per cent from 0.5 per cent, he added, considerin­g the many different economic agendas at play.

The Ontario government released new data that show foreign buyers were involved in seven per cent of residentia­l real estate transactio­ns in Toronto and nine per cent in York Region, a suburb north of the city, between April 24 and May 26, the month following the introducti­on of the foreign-buyer tax.

Tal said the figures show foreign homebuyers are having “non-trivial” impact, pushing up home prices in Toronto and surroundin­g areas, but added Canadian demand remains more dominant. “They also impact, indirectly, other regions, like Hamilton, Kitchener and even Barrie, because you have all those Toronto refugees who are impacted by that inflation caused by foreign buyers,” he said.

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