New houses get pricier

 
 

Prices for new houses rose more than expected in September, led by gains in Montreal and Calgary, Statistics Canada reported Tuesday.

The federal agency's New Housing Price Index gained 0.2 per cent during the month, following a 0.1-percent increase in August.

Most economists had expected house prices to rise 0.1 per cent in September.

Prices in Montreal were up 1.6 per cent, while Calgary saw a 0.3-percent gain.

"The monthly increases in these two metropolitan areas were due in part to builders moving to new areas with higher land development fees," the agency said.

Prices were unchanged in eight of 21 metropolitan areas in September, it said.

"In Vancouver and Hamilton, a number of builders reported lower negotiated selling prices in September, while in Victoria, some builders offered discounts to spur sales."

Year over year, new-home prices rose 2.7 per cent in September, down from a 2.9-per-cent annual increase in August.

The biggest contributors to the year-over-year gain were Toronto and Oshawa, Montreal and Vancouver.

Of the 21 metropolitan areas, four saw housing prices decrease in that 12-month period: Charlottetown; Greater Sudbury and Thunder Bay, Ontario; Windsor, Ont.; and Victoria.

Last week, the Canadian Real Estate Association forecast sales to reach 442,200 units in 2010, down 4.9 per cent on an annual basis. Activity will drop nine per cent to 402,500 units in 2011 due to "lack-lustre economic and job growth, muted consumer confidence, and the resumption of interest rate increases are expected in 2011," CREA said.

Meanwhile, CREA said the average home price is forecast to rise 3.1 per cent in 2010 to $330,200, with increases expected in all provinces. But in 2011, the average price is expected to fall 1.3 per cent to $326,000.

On Monday, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. said the annualized rate of housing starts fell 9.2 per cent in October to 167,900 units. That number was revised down from the previously reported 186,400.

TD Economics foreign-exchange strategists Shaun Osborne and Jacqui Douglas said multi-family dwellings will fare worse than single-family units.

"For single-unit housing we expect to see some stabilization soon, probably around the 50-60K area," Osborne and Douglas write. "But multi-unit housing was rising for longer, and will likely show some further vulnerability in the coming quarters. TD's forecast is for overall weakness in homebuilding through mid-2011, before a pickup in activity in 2012."

-- Financial Post/Postmedia News


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