National Post

Vancouver condo sales heat up

- Garry Marr

Almost a year after B. C. brought in a 15- per- cent tax on foreign buyers in Greater Vancouver, the detached housing market in Canada’s most expensive city for housing continues to show limited price growth.

But while detached price gains continue to be mostly flat, the overall market for housing in Greater Vancouver does show signs of recovering, buoyed by the strength in less- expensive segments like condominiu­ms and townhomes, the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver said Wednesday.

“Two distinct markets have emerged this summer. The detached home market has seen demand ease back to more typical levels while competitio­n for condominiu­ms is creating multiple offer scenarios and putting upward pressure on prices f or t hat property type,” Jill Oudil, president of the board, said in a statement.

The Vancouver results are being watched closely in Ontario, where the province introduced a 15- percent non- resident speculatio­n tax in April for homes bought in the Greater Golden Horseshoe, the area that surrounds and i ncludes Toronto. The Toronto Real Estate Board is set to release updated statistics Thursday but provincial officials announced this week, that in the wake of the tax, about 4.7 per cent of home buyers were from abroad.

There were 1,320 Greater Vancouver detached home sales in June, a 15.5-per-cent decrease from a year ago. The benchmark price for detached properties was $1,587,900, a 1.4-per-cent increase from June, 2016 and a 1.1- per- cent increase compared to May.

In the apartment sector, there were 1,905 sales in June 2017, a drop of 9.6 per cent from a year ago. The benchmark price of an apartment property was $600,700, a 17.6-per-cent increase from a year ago and a 2.9-per-cent increase from a month earlier.

Attached property sales, which includes townhomes, were off 8.5 per cent in June from a year ago. The benchmark price of an attached unit was $745,700 in June, a 10.7-per-cent increase from a year ago and a 0.6- per- cent increase compared to May.

Overall, REBGV said there 3,893 sales across the region last month, an 11.5- per- cent decrease from June, 2016, an all- time record, and a 10.8-per-cent decrease from May. June sales were still 14.5 - per- cent above t he 10-year sales average for the month.

“Home buyers have more selection to choose from in the detached market today while condominiu­m listings are near an all- time low," Oudil said. “Detached home listings have increased every month this year, while the number of condominiu­ms for sale has decreased each month since February.”

The MLS Home Price Index composite benchmark price for all residentia­l properties in the metro Vancouver area was $998,700.

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