Toronto Star

BRISK BUILDING

CMHC says rate of houses being constructe­d moved higher in October across Canada,

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OTTAWA— Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. says the annual rate of housing starts ticked higher in October as the pace of new constructi­on in the Vancouver region hit a 12-month high.

The housing agency said Wednesday that housing starts for the month came in at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 222,771 units in October, up from 219,293 units in September.

The annualized pace of urban starts increased by 2.5 per cent in October to 205,935 units, boosted by a 12.5-per-cent jump in multiple urban starts to 149,593. Single-detached urban starts fell 17.1 per cent to 56,342 units.

In Vancouver, the annual pace of housing starts nearly doubled to 34,850 compared with 18,116 in September. Multi-unit starts soared to 30,384 compared with 12,864, while single-detached starts in Vancouver fell to 4,466 from 5,252.

However, Toronto saw the annual rate of housing starts in that city slow to 35,299, compared with 28,049 in September, as both the multi-unit and single-detached categories moved lower.

The overall increase in home starts comes even as the resale market for homes has been slowing this year compared with the fever pitch in the spring.

“We continue to expect a moderation in starts at the national level over the next year that would be more in keeping with what we are seeing on the resale side,” Royal Bank economist Josh Nye wrote in the report.

“The combinatio­n of policy changes, including measures set to go into effect in January, and rising interest rates is expected to result in a sustained cooling in existing home sales and less price pressure.”

Rural starts were estimated at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 16,836 units.

The housing start figures came as Statistics Canada reported that building permits rose in September.

It said Canadian municipali­ties issued $7.9-billion worth of building permits in September as a 1.7-percent drop in the residentia­l sector was more than offset by a 13.9-percent increase in the non-residentia­l sector.

 ?? GRAEME ROY/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? An overall increase in home starts comes as the resale market has been slowing this year after its fever pace in the spring.
GRAEME ROY/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO An overall increase in home starts comes as the resale market has been slowing this year after its fever pace in the spring.

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