The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Hot housing market finally cooling

Buyers eye POST-COVID life

- JULIE GORDON

OTTAWA — Canada's scorching hot housing market is starting to cool, as burnedout buyers shift their focus from getting more space to getting back to normal after COVID-19, and the fear of missing out fades into a prevailing sense of "wait and see."

Home sales in Canada fell for the third consecutiv­e month in June and sit 25 per cent below March's peak, though they still touched a monthly record, data showed on Thursday.

The average selling price fell to $679,000, down 5.3 per cent from the March apex.

"People are focusing their minds on different things. They want to go to the beach, they want to enjoy the summer, they're just not as focused on real estate these days," said Jeremy Cossette, an agent in Regina, Sask.

Home prices surged across Canada amid the COVID19 pandemic as lockdowns prompted people to seek out more living space and recordlow interest rates fueled a buying frenzy. At the peak, home prices were up more than 40 per cent year over year on average, and desperate buyers were offering hundreds of thousands over the asking price just to get a toehold in the market.

A few months later, high vaccinatio­n rates have allowed Canadian cities to reopen. Consumer spending on restaurant­s, hotels and clothing jumped in June, according to the RBC COVID Consumer Spending Tracker, and travel spending is shooting up.

That shift in priorities may have would-be home buyers reconsider­ing how much they want to spend and even where they want to live, Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem said.

"Now that we can go back to a restaurant, do you still want a bigger kitchen? We'll see," Macklem said Wednesday, while explaining that the central bank is seeing signs of moderation in the market.

In Calgary, longtime agent Lowell Martens said the lull may be more about buyers sensing there is less competitio­n and just taking some time off to "see what happens in the fall."

While that pause has cooled things down, it does not feel like previous collapses, he said, with activity still strong in certain segments.

In Toronto, often Canada's hottest housing market, June sales were well below March's peak but still strong relative to previous years as a drop in new listings kept conditions tight, according to agent and market analyst John Pasalis.

"It's like if you're in a car that's going 200 kilometres an hour and then it drops down to 120 kilometres an hour. You've slowed down, but you're still fast.”

The big question is what will happen in the autumn when more people typically list their homes and inventory begins to build. Agents say buyers will be back, particular­ly if border restrictio­ns loosen and immigratio­n begins ramping up.

But some would-be buyers are looking elsewhere. A recent poll by Ontario's Real Estate Associatio­n found nearly half of residents under 45 are considerin­g leaving that province because of the high cost of housing.

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