A report in this weeks The Globe and Mail says that Bank of
Nova Scotia economist Derek Holt thinks it’s too soon to relax about the
Canadian housing market.
“I remain of the
conviction that one doesn’t drop one’s guard on housing risks as we push toward
higher and higher peaks,” he writes in a research note. “Indeed, one’s guard
should be raised…”
Years after warnings about a potential housing market crash
surfaced, national home prices are still hitting new records. The sky has not
fallen. Canadians are sick of hearing about impending doom, and housing market
bears who continue to raise fears are brushed off much like the boy who cried
wolf.
Even Toronto’s condo market, one of the most worrisome
segments of the broader market, continues to defy negative expectations. Sales
of new condos last month were 22 per cent higher than a year earlier. Prices,
which many economists predicted would drop, ticked up 1 per cent, to a
benchmark of $437,773, according to RealNet Canada Inc. So far this year more
than 8,305 new condos have sold in the Toronto area. That’s 33 per cent higher
than last year, and 15 per cent above the 10-year average.
Toronto-Dominion Bank economists predicted in March that
Toronto area condo prices would fall on average by about 4 per cent this year
and a further 4 per cent next year as a glut of new condos weighed on the
market. Three months on, it’s hard to say.
“Condo sales are performing better than expected,” says
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce economist Benjamin Tal. “As long as we have
such momentum, economics 101 suggests that we will not see a drop in prices in
the near term.”
Mr. Tal warns that the real test of the market will come
when interest rates rise. But is anyone listening to warnings any more?
While pockets of the country have sluggish markets,
predictions of a crash are now generally being shrugged off as Chicken Little
Syndrome amid a stronger-than-expected picture at the national level.
Economist David Madani and the team at Capital Economics
started calling for a significant price correction back in early 2011.
“House prices have been growing rapidly for nearly a decade
now, and it has reached the point where housing is so overvalued relative to
incomes that a downward correction seems unavoidable,” they wrote in a research
note at that time. “We fear that house prices could fall by as much as 25 per
cent over the next three years.”
Three years on, Mr. Madani stands by his call. In fact, it
remains unchanged.
“I believe it’s a bubble,” he says. “You’ll never get the
timing right, but that’s sort of the nature of a bubble. Bubbles contain an
element of surprise.”
“The problems are still evident,” he adds. “You’ve got
severe overvaluation, overbuilding, and a sharp run-up in household financial
leverage.”
He says that other countries, including the United States,
were in denial about their own housing bubbles before they reached a tipping
point. And he says that Canada’s housing market is now the subject of more
concern outside of the country’s borders than in it, pointing to warnings from
groups such as the International Monetary Fund and the Organization for
Economic Co-operation and Development.
The Bank of Canada said in its Financial System Review this
month that a sharp correction in house prices is the top risk to the Canadian
financial system.
“In view of the expected strengthening of the global and
Canadian economies, the probability of this risk materializing is low,” the
Bank said. The Bank and most economists are now of the view that the most
likely scenario will be a so-called “soft landing” in which prices peter out
without a crash. Indeed, the Bank noted that the pace of national home price
growth has moderated. But it also said that “if such a risk were to
materialize, the impact could be severe.”
And the Bank once again highlighted Toronto’s condo market
as a source of concern, warning that “a correction in this important market
could spill over into other parts of the housing market through various
channels, including buyers’ price expectations.”
To learn more about local market conditions, or insight into prices for Durham real estate in Whitby, Brooklin, Ajax, Pickering, Oshawa, Courtice and Bowmanville, please contact me.
Randy Miller
Sales Representative
Re/Max Rouge River Realty Ltd., Brokerage
905-668-1800 or 905-427-1400
randy@randymiller.ca
www.randymiller.ca
Sales Representative
Re/Max Rouge River Realty Ltd., Brokerage
905-668-1800 or 905-427-1400
randy@randymiller.ca
www.randymiller.ca
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