Vancouver Sun

Break on affordabil­ity will likely be short-lived: RBC

- ARMINA LIGAYA

Housing affordabil­ity in Canada hit the worst level in 27 years in the second quarter of this year, according to a Royal Bank of Canada report.

RBC Economics said in a report Friday that its housing affordabil­ity measure for Canada deteriorat­ed for the eighth straight quarter.

The least-affordable place to purchase a home remains the Vancouver area, where affordabil­ity worsened after two straight quarters of improvemen­t but remains better than a year ago. Outside of British Columbia and Ontario, affordabil­ity remains mostly stable, RBC said.

RBC’s housing affordabil­ity measure shows the proportion of median pre-tax household income required to service the costs of owning the average home — factoring in both condos and singlefami­ly detached homes — including mortgage payments, property taxes and utilities.

“Clearly, home ownership remains out of reach for many would-be buyers in the area,” RBC’s report says. “The good news is that some relief is on the way. Recent downward pressure on prices is poised to lower ownership costs in the period ahead. The bad news, unfortunat­ely, is that rising interest rates will take some of that relief away.”

The Toronto area was the hardest hit. RBC says affordabil­ity declined the most compared to the previous year and hit the worst level ever measured in the city.

The Ontario government’s actions in April to cool down the housing market, including a foreign buyers tax, did not have an immediate impact on provincial housing prices in the second quarter, RBC said.

The Vancouver area was the least affordable in the latest quarter, ended June 30 at 80.7 per cent, down 2.4 percentage points yearon-year. However, RBC says prices have already begun to climb, which means “the window for a meaningful improvemen­t in affordabil­ity in the Vancouver area likely has closed for now.”

The report warns this affordabil­ity relief for Vancouver “may well be temporary. Not only are prices on the rise again, but interest rates have begun to climb as well.”

The Toronto area was secondhigh­est year-over-year at 75.4 per cent, marking an increase of 12.7 points. Victoria came in third at 58.6 per cent, with a year-on-year increase of 7.3 points. Across Canada, RBC’s housing affordabil­ity measure hit 46.7 per cent in the latest quarter, a level not seen since the end of 1990 and a jump of 3.7 points from a year earlier.

Affordabil­ity in Edmonton worsened slightly year-on-year to hit 30.3 per cent. In Calgary, however, affordabil­ity deteriorat­ed by 1.5 points year-on-year to 39.2 per cent.

Rising interest rates will further weigh on Canadians’ ability to afford a home, RBC said. After rate hikes in June and September, RBC’s economists expect the Bank of Canada to raise its overnight rate one more time before yearend and three times in 2018 for a total increase of 100 basis points.

RBC Economics estimates that, everything else remaining constant, a 100-basis-point increase in mortgage rates would worsen RBC’s national housing affordabil­ity measure by roughly 3.5 percentage points. Canada’s most expensive housing markets would be hit harder, RBC adds, noting Vancouver would see an almost seven-point increase.

“This would occur at a time when housing affordabil­ity is already stretched in some of Canada’s largest markets,” the report says.

“While high sensitivit­y to a rise in interest rates highlights material vulnerabil­ity, the reality is bound to be less threatenin­g as other factors such as income gains will mitigate at least of part of the impact.”

The Canadian Press

Not only are prices on the rise again, but interest rates have begun to climb as well.

 ?? NICK PROCAYLO ?? While it’s more affordable to own a home in Metro Vancouver today than it was a year ago, an RBC Economics report predicts the brief reprieve seen in two quarters of improvemen­t “may well be temporary.”
NICK PROCAYLO While it’s more affordable to own a home in Metro Vancouver today than it was a year ago, an RBC Economics report predicts the brief reprieve seen in two quarters of improvemen­t “may well be temporary.”

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