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Housing market will feel effect of COVID-19 until 2022, CMHC says

Canada's national housing agency says the number of new homes being built and sold will remainbelow the levels they were at before COVID-19 until 2022 at least, and prices won't get back to where they were for another two years either.

Sales, new construction and prices all expected to decline during pandemic

The COVID-19 pandemic has put a deep freeze on Canada's real estate industry, as even the process of buying, selling and showing homes is more difficult due to physical distancing requirements. (The Associated Press)

Canada's national housing agency says the number of new homes being built and sold will remainbelow the levels they were at before COVID-19 until 2022 at least, and prices won't get back to where they were for another two years either.

In a special report, the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation said Wednesday that the COVID-19 pandemic will lead to a "historic recession in 2020," which will lead to "significant falls in indicators of the housing market."

The pandemic settled in across the country just as the spring home-buying season was starting,casting a chill on the market as lockdown measures made it difficult to do showings. Sales fell 15 per cent in March before falling even more the next monthto theirworst April in 36 years.

While the average selling pricehasso far stayed fairly flat, that is unlikely to continue if people keep feeling the financial pinch of COVID-19.

The CMHC is now forecasting that prices will fall by between nineand 18 per cent from where they were before the pandemic, before recovering a little in the early part of 2021. But they aren't expected to be fully back to where they were before at least 2022.

The CMHC expects the average price figure to hover between $493,000 and $518,000 this year. In February, before COVID-19 hit, the average selling price of a Canadian home was $540,000. By April, that figure had fallen by more than $50,000 to $488,000.

"Following large declines in 2020, housing starts, sales and prices are expected to start to recover by mid-2021 as pandemic containment measures are lifted and economic conditions gradually improve," CMHC's chief economist Bob Dugan said.

The speed of the slowdown will obviously not go at the same pace everywhere. In oil-dependent Alberta, prices are forecast to go down by as much as 25 per cent. Other provinces are expected to see smaller declines.

It's not just prices going down, as construction of new homes is expected to slow to a crawl. CMHC is forecasting that housing starts could plummet by as much as 75 per cent, while home sales will likely fall by about 29 per cent.

"The precise timing and speed of the recovery is highly uncertain because the virus's future path is not yet known," Dugan said.

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