Canadian home prices rise as Toronto sees first gain in 6 months - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 30, 2024, 03:38 AM | Calgary | -15.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Business

Canadian home prices rise as Toronto sees first gain in 6 months

The Canadian real estate market got off to a good start this year with house prices rising in January, as Toronto saw its first gain in six months, according to a bank measurement.

National house price index rose 0.3% in January, while Toronto prices rose 0.2%

Toronto's yearly gain on the index of 8.4 per cent was still below the national average of 8.7 per cent in January. (Graeme Roy/The Canadian Press)

The Canadian real estate marketgot off to a good start this year with houseprices risingin January, as Toronto saw its first gainin six months, according to a bank measurement.

The Teranet-National Bank composite house price index,rose 0.3 per cent last month from December and gained 8.7 per cent in January from a year ago.

That's up from a 0.2 per cent monthly gain in December, but down from the9.1 per cent yearlyrise thatmonth.

The index measures changes inresales of single-family homes, and each month's reading is a rolling three-month average to smooth out monthly fluctuations in price.

While the national gaugerose for the second time since a monthly decline in November, only four of the 11 major cities measured onthe indexsaw price increases last month.

Toronto was one of them rising0.2 per cent from December marking its first gain since the middle of last year.

But National Bank economistMarc Pinsonneaultwarned that itwaspremature to conclude that home prices in Canada's largest city have "turned the corner."

"This firming of home prices in Toronto might reflect a rush to buy with pre-approved mortgages granted before more stringent rules on qualification foruninsured mortgages were applied starting Jan. 1," he said.

Further increases to mortgage rates could still impact prices in the city, he added.

Toronto's housing market pulled back last year after Ontario implemented a series of measures such as restricting foreign buyersto cool the once red-hot market.

Last week, data from the Toronto Real Estate Board showed the average selling price of a detached home in Toronto fell almost four per cent in January from a year ago.

The National Bankindex reading of an 8.4 per cent gain inTorontofrom a year ago is still below the national average.

Vancouver leadsgains

Meanwhile, Vancouver, Victoria and Montreal were the other three cities on the index that also saw prices rise.

House prices in Vancouver rose 1.2 per cent, making it the main contributor to the index.

"Just like it did the prior month, Vancouver drove the composite index in January," saidPinsonneault."Without Vancouver, the composite index would have retreated for a fifth month in a row."

Gains in the still hot market were driven by condo prices, as the index for the unitssurged 23 per cent in January from last year.

"The fact is that Vancouver's home resale market remained tight even after the introduction of a tax on acquisitions by foreigners," he said.

The Vancouver index for other types of homes rose 13.5 per cent.

The figures from National Bank come a day ahead of monthly housing data from the Canadian Real Estate Association.