Photo: James Bombales
The Canadian housing market certainly got off to a cooler start in 2018 than many had predicted. Home sales and prices have continued to drop on a year-over-year basis, leaving many economists predicting that the market will be adjusting to regulatory changes for months to come.
When will things start to heat up again? No one knows for sure, but some experts have ideas as to why it’s taking so long. BuzzBuzzNews has rounded up the latest commentary, to give you a sense of what the rest of the year has in store.
The mortgage stress test isn’t playing around
While industry watchers had initially predicted that the market would adjust to the new mortgage stress test after the first quarter of 2018, that no longer seems to be the case.
“It increasingly looks like the new stress test is causing more than just a temporary dip in housing market activity in the greater Toronto and Vancouver areas,” wrote RBC senior economist Robert Hogue earlier this week.
Sales were down 22.2 and 35.1 per cent year-over-year in Toronto and Vancouver, respectively, in May. The numbers are a reflection of the harsher mortgage qualification rules and foreign buyer taxes in both cities.
“May 2017 was when activity really started to nosedive in the Toronto area following the introduction of Ontario’s Fair Housing Plan in late-April,” writes Hogue. “In Vancouver, market-cooling measures announced in the 2018 provincial budget in February also likely weighed on May resales.”
Higher interest rates will weigh things down
But it’s not just the mortgage stress test that’s putting downward pressure on the market. According to the Bank of Canada’s (BoC) Financial System Review, rising interest rates have also had a role to play.
“The two main vulnerabilities we have been watching closely are showing continued signs of easing, which is encouraging,” wrote BoC Governor Stephen Poloz, in the review.
Historically high Canadian household debt levels and housing prices have both fallen over the past few months, after the BoC hiked the overnight rate to 1.25 per cent in January.
“Growth in residential mortgages and home equity lines of credit slowed in the first four months of the year, in line with weaker home sales and slower house price growth,” reads the review. “The pace of other consumer borrowing, which makes up the remaining 15 per cent of outstanding household debt, has also slowed.”
The Bank is expected to hike the overnight rate at least once more before the end of the year, which will only increase the pressure on the already slumping market.
Canada may slip further in global rankings
The new mortgage rules and higher interest rates are both being blamed for Canada’s recent drop in Knight Frank’s first quarter real estate price growth ranking.
In Q4 2017 the country held 10th spot, but in Q1 2018 it’s fallen to number 15, as its price growth slows to a 6.6 per cent 12-month change and a 6-month 1.1 per cent drop. In Q4 2017, the country’s 12-month price growth was 8.9 per cent, with a 6-month drop of 1.3 per cent.
Austria, Hungary, Slovenia, Latvia and the Czech Republic have all surpassed Canada in the ranking in the last three months.
“Europe’s recovery is now well-underway, closer analysis confirms 11 of the 15 strongest-performing housing markets globally were in Europe at the end of March 2018,” reads the ranking.