Sask. home prices hit record in April, while average Canadian price dropped - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Sask. home prices hit record in April, while average Canadian price dropped

While prices reached a new high in Saskatchewan, the home-buying frenzy of the pandemic is showing some signs of slowing,with the number of home sales dropping last month, according to the Saskatchewan Realtors Association.

Prices up but number of sales down compared to record set in April 2021: Saskatchewan Realtors Association

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A May 2019 file photo shows a home for sale in Regina. Chris Gurette, CEO of the Saskatchewan Realtors Association, says the province is struggling with a lack of available inventory. (Bryan Eneas/CBC)

The home-buying frenzy of the pandemic is showing some signs of slowing,with the number of home sales in Saskatchewan dropping last month by almost 17 per centcompared to the recordset in April of last year, according to the Saskatchewan Realtors Association.

However, housing prices are up, as Saskatchewan's average price reached a new monthlyhigh last month, according to the association'smarket statistics forApril 2022.

Prices have been trending upward over the past two years, the association said, and the residential benchmark price for the province climbed to $295,000 last month two per cent higher than March's benchmarkandfour per cent gain higher than a year earlier.

"We are still seeing prices increase year-over-year," said Chris Gurette, CEO of the Saskatchewan Realtors Association.

"We see a variety of different prices throughout the province, but in all regions except two, the benchmark price has gone up."

At the national level, Canadian average home prices fell six per cent in April from the month before, to $746,000.

The national average price is heavily influenced by sales in Greater Vancouver and the Greater Toronto Area, two of Canada's most expensive housing markets, the Canadian Real Estate Association said on Monday.

"Places where you're talking about buying a half duplex for $2.5 million need some correction," said Ashley Turner, a realtor with Century 21 in Saskatoon.

"And that's going to happen withinterest rates going up, the government trying to cool off those housing markets."

For people in Saskatchewan trying to make a decisionabout a home, Gurette recommends buyers and sellers to look at the local market rather than the national one.

'Supply is not meeting demand'

Both Turner and Gurette agree that Saskatoon and other parts of the province have amajorshortage of listings.

On Tuesday, the Saskatchewan Housing Continuum Networkanew housing advocacyassociation projecteda deficit of 100,000 housing units, based on expected population growth over the next eight years.

Inventory also called active listings was almost 20 per cent lower last month than in April2021and over 30 per cent below long-term trends, according to the Saskatchewan Realtors Association.

The Saskatchewan Realtors Association's April 2022 market report says inventory was 20 per cent lower than in April 2021, and over 30 per cent below long-term trends. (Saskatchewan Realtors Association)

"We've been fortunate in Saskatchewan that we haven't seen some very large increases in housing prices that you see, such as in cities in Vancouver and Toronto," said Gurette.

"But at the same time, when we take a look at the past three years and the numbers are always creeping up and inventory is always falling, then that to me is an indication that supply is not meeting demand."

Turner is seeing that demand in Saskatoon.

About 1,500 to 1,600 listings would be a balanced market for Saskatoon including houses and condos, she said.

In April, though, there were1,053 properties available for purchase in Saskatoona year-over-year drop of more than 27 per cent, according to the realtors association.

"We're sitting at about two monthsworth of inventory for the entire city of Saskatoon, which is one of the tightest, actually, for inventory in the country for major cities," said Turner.

"We are seeing people that want to buy, but you have six people that want to buy the same house. That's going to bring those numbers down for sales, when inventory is just not available."

The Saskatchewan Realtors Association's April 2022 market report says the province's months of supply a measure of how many months it would take for the current inventory of homes on the market to sell is at its lowest level in years. (Saskatchewan Realtors Association)

In Saskatoon, the average residential homeprice rose to $338,500 in April a new high for the city while Regina's average climbed to $271,100, the realtors association says.

Higher interest rates might leadsome potential buyers to pause their search or lookat lower-priced homes, such as condos, said Turner.

"We don't want it to get to a point where the inventory is so low that we start seeing a very clear rapid erosion of affordability," said Gurette.

"I would hate for individuals to think that because sales are down, that we are not feeling the crunch anymore."

With files from David Shield, Pete Evans and Saskatoon Morning