Times Colonist

April home sales plunge to almost 40-year low

-

OTTAWA — Canadian home sales plunged to levels not seen in almost 40 years in April as the COVID-19 outbreak forced distancing measures and created economic uncertaint­y.

Home sales were down 57.6% from a year earlier to 20,630 sales for the month, while seasonally adjusted sales were down 56.8% from March as home buyers and sellers stayed home.

The levels of activity were the lowest since 1984, the Canadian Real Estate Associatio­n said Friday.

“Never in our recent history have we dealt with such widespread effects of a pandemic that limit everyone’s day-to-day life and have forced all of us to pivot and adjust to our new reality,” said Costa Poulopoulo­s, associatio­n chairman, in a statement.

Activity was down 66.2 per cent in the Greater Toronto Area, 57.9 per cent in Greater Vancouver, 51.5 per cent in Ottawa and 42 per cent in Winnipeg.

The overall drop blew through the previous record year-overyear drop of 46.7 per cent in April 1982, said TD senior economist Brian DePratto in a note.

“April’s data confirmed what we were all expecting, namely that the pandemic drove sales to historical­ly depressed levels.”

DePratto said markets are, however, starting to show signs of renewed life.

“We do expect sales to remain depressed for a few months longer as job markets slowly improve and buyers remain cautious, but a normalizat­ion process is likely already underway.”

CREA also said sales look to have already started to pick up in May, aided by virtual viewing tools that have allowed for more remote buying and selling.

New listings of 35,795 were down by 59.5% compared with a year earlier, and down a seasonally adjusted 55.7% from March.

Despite the listings drop, inventory levels jumped to 9.2 months in April compared with 4.3 months in March as older listings stayed active while sales fell.

The drop in new listings also kept the sales-to-listing ratio in what’s normally considered favourable to sellers at 62.4 per cent, but BMO senior economist Robert Kavcic notes that such indicators aren’t as helpful in the current situation.

“When the market has effectivel­y frozen, these metrics become a bit less reliable,” he said in a note.

He said the question now is how the market will evolve as activity returns; whether federal and mortgage support programs are enough to limit forced selling and whether investors look to get out of the market.

“It’s going to be a race between sales and listings out of the gate to determine how the market balance shapes up, and where prices move in the near-term.”

So far, prices haven’t seen much movement. The composite benchmark price was down 0.6% in April compared with March for the first decline since last May, but is still up 6.4% year over year.

Some areas still saw monthover-month price gains in the index, including Ottawa and parts of southwest Ontario, but Greater Toronto, and much of Western Canada saw declines.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada