X2 Buyer
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do not know if anybody posted this article yet. just in case no one
Canadian Housing: Booming Rebound, No Bubble
Canadian Housing: Booming Rebound, No Bubble
do not know if anybody posted this article yet. just in case no one
Canadian Housing: Booming Rebound, No Bubble
However, prices are still 3.4% below year-ago levels.
However, the expected unleashing of “pent-up supply†has lagged demand. In April, new listings contracted a record 22% y/y and, in September, new listings fell to a near five-year low (Chart 4). The lack of new listings is draining the inventory of homes available for sale (active listings), and pushing up the sales-tonew-listings ratio. The latter is a measure of real estate market tightness and a key driver of home prices. As such, some of the price spike is due to the tightening of supply conditions, in which case, prices are behaving as they should...
Relative to even incomes, prices are now hitting record highs (Chart 7). For example, in Q2, the average price was 10.6 times the level of labour income per capita (the ratio has trended up over time as the proportion of two-income households has risen). The current lofty level reflects the impact of two forces, record-low mortgage rates and recession-ravaged incomes. Both of these forces are poised to reverse course.
I dunno.. he claims prices are below last year:
However, prices are still 3.4% below year-ago levels.
do not know if anybody posted this article yet. just in case no one
Canadian Housing: Booming Rebound, No Bubble
Canada’s resale market metrics are stoking
fears of a housing bubble, but the fears for the most part
are unfounded.
1) It’s not a bubble when a record sales rebound follows a massive sales collapse, owing to the vagaries of pent-up demand.
2)It’s not a bubble when prices accelerate because growing demand is butting up against shrinking supply.
3)It’s not a bubble simply because relative prices are at record highs.
4) Furthermore, given that mortgage credit growth is moderating, and new home and land prices remain subdued, the evidence on the ground argues against a housing bubble
In terms of location and rush hour commute times to downtown, lot size, home size, and safeness of the neighbourhood, NY still seems noticeably more expensive than Toronto does even now.Canadian housing prices are more expensive now than when the US prices peaked a couple of years ago. We have the same urban vs rural distributions, and indeed their per capita income is higher.
So if Canada's housing prices are not in a bubble now, does that mean the US prices were not in a bubble two years ago?
I'm not answering this question myself -I'm posing it to those who disagree that our prices are inflated beyond a price warranted by fundamentals and supported by a speculative belief in continuing asset price increases. (ie a bubble)
In terms of location and rush hour commute times to downtown, lot size, home size, and safeness of the neighbourhood, NY still seems noticeably more expensive than Toronto does even now.
Miami seems less expensive though.
Rental Commentary
Rental numbers continue to track downwards. In October, 22 studios, 160 one bedroom units, and 88 two bedroom units were leased. This was down another 20% from the previous month. Rental numbers will not pick up again until January. Still, rates are holding firm. Everything is renting on average at 100% of list or ask price. Expect to pay $1300-1400 for a studio, one bedroom units now range from $1450 -1650 with parking and den. Parking will cost on average $100 per month. Two bedroom units range from almost $2,000 to $2400. If you are looking for a 3 bedroom unit - 6 were leased this month. Three of them were townhouses at an average price of $2500.
Who said New York and Toronto are comparable? I said New York is more expensive, which it is. I did not say Toronto should be the same price as New York, and it isn't.Outside of some hopeful people who coincidentally live in Toronto, there is no-one in the world who views New York and Toronto as comparable cities.
Who said New York and Toronto are comparable? I said New York is more expensive, which it is. I did not say Toronto should be the same price as New York, and it isn't.
Or are you suggesting New York is in a bubble right now too, and its cost premium over Toronto is not justified?
I thought it was obvious, but I'll explain it.??
Eug, in answer to the question I posted you compared the prices of RE in New York and Toronto. If you don't think they are comparable, why did you compare them? And in your question in the quoted post above, you once again compared the two cities