Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Home sales hit record, as Ontario’s hot market

- CRAIG WONG

OTTAWA Home sales across the country hit a record high last month, propped up by transactio­ns in the fiercely hot market of Toronto, further fuelling concerns about the city’s real estate sector.

The Canadian Real Estate Associatio­n said Tuesday home sales over its Multiple Listings Service system increased by 1.1 per cent in March to top the previous monthly record set in April 2016. On a seasonally adjusted basis, sales totalled 46,353, up from 45,856 in February.

Bank of Montreal chief economist Doug Porter said where you stand on the issue of Canada’s housing market depends on where you live.

“Almost the entire province of Ontario’s housing market is now on fire, while most of the rest of the country wonders what all the fuss is about,” Porter wrote in a research note.

Policy-makers, think tanks and the Bank of Canada have issued repeated warnings that while concerns of an overheated housing market may be confined to the Toronto area, a correction could have repercussi­ons for the national economy given the sheer scale of the city’s real estate industry.

The latest sales data came ahead of a meeting between Mayor John Tory and the federal and Ontario finance ministers to discuss soaring home prices in the Greater Toronto Area, which have leaped by more than 30 per cent in the last year.

The actual national average price for homes sold in March this year was $548,517, up 8.2 per cent from a year ago. Excluding Greater Vancouver and Greater Toronto, the average price was $389,726.

Compared with a year ago, actual sales in Canada, not seasonally adjusted, were up 6.6 per cent. Gains in the Greater Toronto Area led the way with a 17.0 per cent increase.

But it wasn’t just Toronto posting whopping hikes.

Sales in Greater Vancouver, once the country’s hottest real estate market, fell 31.5 per cent compared with a year ago. But the region was up 4.1 per cent on a month-overmonth basis.

CREA said the number of newly listed homes increased 2.5 per cent in March, led by gains in the Toronto region, Calgary, Edmonton and B.C.’s Lower Mainland.

 ?? PETER J. THOMPSON/FILES ?? A home for sale in Mississaug­a, Ont., on Monday. The actual national average price for homes sold in March this year was $548,517, up 8.2 per cent from 2016.
PETER J. THOMPSON/FILES A home for sale in Mississaug­a, Ont., on Monday. The actual national average price for homes sold in March this year was $548,517, up 8.2 per cent from 2016.

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