Home prices tick higher despite sales slump - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 20, 2024, 01:42 AM | Calgary | -9.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Business

Home prices tick higher despite sales slump

Canadian home prices continued their upward trajectory in March despite a large decline in the number of homes sold, the Canadian Real Estate Association says.

Prices inch 2.5% higher in March from year earlier, CREA reports

Canadian home prices inched higher in March, despite a large drop in the number of homes sold. (Darren Calabrese/Canadian Press)

Canadian home prices continued their upward trajectory in March despite a large decline in the number of homes sold, the Canadian Real Estate Association said Monday.

The number of sales recorded on the group's MLS system declined by 15.3 per cent in March 2013 compared with the same month a year earlier.

Yet despite that drop-off, prices inched higher. The average price of a Canadian resale home was$378,532 in March, up 2.5 per cent from a year earlier.

"The factors that crimped March sales this year were not in play for the same month last year, resulting in speculation that the gap between sales activity this March and March of last year would be bigger than it was in February," CREA's chief economist GregoryKlump said.

"That the gap in fact improved marginally speaks to the resilience of housing demand in Canada."

Fewer sales in the huge Vancouver and Toronto housing markets continue to exert a downward pull on the national average sale price, but price gains in Calgary and Edmonton are increasingly putting upward pressure on the national average, the agency said.

If you take Vancouver and Toronto out of the equation, the national average price would have been 4.3 per cent higher. But if you strip out Calgary and Edmonton, it would have been only 1.9 per cent.

"Housing is always a regional story and this month is no exception," TD economist Sonya Gulati said in a research note. "The tug-of-war across the major markets is set to endure leaving national price gains flat for the year as a whole."