Home sales declined by 5.3 per cent in July, back to pre-COVID levels


Canada’s housing market continued to cool in July, with the average home price clocking in at $629,971 — a figure that drops by another $104,000 when excluding the Greater Toronto Area and Vancouver markets — as compared to June’s average price of $665,850. 

The volume of home sales also went down, dropping by 5.3 per cent on a month-over-month basis. This marked the smallest decline in sales since housing activity started slowing five months ago, according to a monthly housing statistics report released by the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) on Monday. 

The report shows housing activity returning to pre-pandemic levels, and the housing market continuing to stabilize after two pandemic years that set Canadian housing activity ablaze with record-setting sales prices and selling volumes.

That fire was then extinguished when the Bank of Canada hiked interest rates in early 2022, upping mortgage prices and giving buyers less bang for their buck.

The GTA, Greater Vancouver and the Fraser Valley, Calgary and Edmonton led the home sales decline, which occurred in three quarters of all local markets, according to the statement from CREA.

“July saw a continuation of the trends we’ve been watching unfold for a few months now; sales winding down and prices easing in some relatively more expensive parts of the country as well as places where prices rose most over the past two years,” CREA chair Jill Oudil said in the national statistics report.

She added that while strong demand from earlier this year hasn’t faded, “some buyers will likely stay on the sidelines until they see what happens with borrowing costs and prices. As they re-enter the market, they’ll find a bit more selection, but not as much as might be expected.”

 

Newly listed properties also declined by 5.3 per cent — the same figure, incidentally, as the decline in home sales — which indicates that some sellers are “playing the waiting game,” according to Shaun Cathcart, CREA’s senior economist.

Prices falling but still up year-over-year

Robert Hogue, an assistant chief economist at RBC, told CBC News that the report shows the market is “pretty much in full correction mode.”

“But what we’re seeing in July is that some of that weakness is also starting to spread across the country, which is what we expected, given that higher interest rates are affecting pretty much every buyer from coast to coast,” he said.

“There is relatively more supply relative to where demand is being softer and prices are starting to weaken as well, especially in Ontario.”

The MLS house price index, which adjusts the national numbers by volume and type of housing so that Toronto and Vancouver don’t affect the overall picture disproportionately, was down 1.7 per cent month-over-month but still up 10.9 per cent year-over-year.

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