Windsor Star

Annual pace of housing starts accelerate in November, topping expectatio­ns

- LINDA NGUYEN

The annual pace of Canadian housing starts picked up in November, beating analyst expectatio­ns, and signal that the country’s real estate market continues to show signs of stability. Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. says the seasonally adjusted annual rate of housing starts in Canada was 215,941 units in November, up from 206,753 in October. Economists had expected an annual rate of 198,000, according to Thomson Reuters Eikon.

The increase in the overall annual rate of housing starts came as the pace of urban starts rose by 2.2 per cent in November to 202,054 units. The annual rate of urban multiple-unit projects such as condominiu­ms, apartments and townhouses grew 3.9 per cent to 151,596 units. This made up for a decline in single-detached urban starts, which fell 2.3 per cent to 50,458. “While single-detached starts continued to trend lower in November, this was more than offset by a gain in the trend of multi-unit starts following several months of weakness,” Bob Dugan, CMHC’s chief economist, said in a statement. Rural starts were estimated at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 13,887 units, said the agency. TD Economics says the figures weren’t completely unexpected due to the number of residentia­l permits given in the third quarter. Statistics Canada reported that the value of residentia­l building permits was $5.2 billion in October, up 4.2 per cent from September. Both multi-family and singledeta­ched permits showed gains. The agency said the increases in Ontario and B.C., helped offset a decline in Quebec, and was largely driven by permits for apartment and condominiu­m housing. “On a trend basis, housing starts appear to have troughed, with some upward momentum of late,” said TD senior economist Fotios Raptis in an analyst note. “Given the upward trend in building permits through October, there’s a good chance that housing starts will continue to see some further upside in the months ahead for both single and multi-family units”

RBC Economics senior economist Nathan Janzen anticipate­s housing starts to pull back in the new year due to the projected gradual rise of interest rates.

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