“Indeed, the second half of 2010 has proven to be weaker than expected, and Calgary’s housing market is taking some time to re-gain traction,” says Diane Scott, president of CREB®. “Subdued sales have meant buyers have an abundance of products to choose from, and they can be selective in their buying criteria.”
Home sales activity in New Brunswick posted a noticeable year-over-year decline in July 2010 compared to the record levels reached in the same month last year.
According to statistics provided by real estate boards in New Brunswick, home sales numbered 649 units in July 2010, a decrease of 22 per cent from year-ago levels. National sales, by comparison, were down 30 per cent on a year-over-year basis.
Activity was down on a year-over-year basis across the province, with declines in Northern New Brunswick (-10 per cent), Moncton (-14 per cent), Saint John (-26 per cent), and Fredericton (-30 per cent).
The average price for homes sold in July 2010 was $159,513, rising five per cent from a year earlier. Within the province, the average home price was up on a year-over-year basis in all areas except Moncton, where the average figure came in on par with July 2009. The national average price was up one per cent from a year earlier to $330,351.
The dollar value of all provincial home sales totalled $103.5 million in July 2010, down 18 per cent from a year earlier.
New residential listings numbered 1,330 units in July 2010, down eight per cent from year-ago levels. This is the third consecutive decline. Active listings on the MLS® Systems of real estate boards in New Brunswick were down one per cent on a year-over-year basis to 5,702 units at the end of July 2010.
There were 8.8 months of inventory at the end of July, up from seven months one year ago. The number of months of inventory is the number of months it would take to sell current inventories at the current rate of sales activity.
|
New Brunswick |
Residential Dollar Volume |
Total Dollar |
Residential Average Price |
|
Fredericton |
$ 31,843,358 |
$ 33,353,653 |
$ 174,007 |
|
Moncton |
$ 37,160,515 |
$ 39,672,555 |
$ 149,239 |
|
Northern NB |
$ 4,413,300 |
$ 4,582,700 |
$ 95,941 |
|
Saint John |
$ 30,106,445 |
$ 32,370,995 |
$ 176,061 |
|
Provincial |
$ 103,523,618 |
$ 109,979,903 |
$ 159,513 |
“Housing sales numbers were fairly typical for a November and indicate a fairly balanced market. Activity on the buyer side has been stable, with slight increases, over the last few months while the number of homes listed for sale in our region has declined each month since we reached a peak in June,” Jake Moldowan, REBGV president said.
“Consumers are responding to how prices have moderated in the last six months, in addition to the double dip in mortgage rates,” says Deanna Horn, Board president.
“Last year, we experienced the busiest July in our history and this year it was the quietest in a decade,” says FVREB President, Deanna Horn. “Although the real estate market typically slows in the summer months, we didn’t anticipate this level of change.
The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV) reports that the number of residential property sales in Greater Vancouver totalled 2,255 in July 2010. This represents a 45.2 per cent decline from the 4,114 sales in July 2009, the highest selling July ever recorded, and a 24.1 per cent decline compared to June 2010.
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TorontoMLS® system in January 2011. This result was 13 per cent lower than the record result reported
in January 2010. "While off the record pace experienced a year ago, the GTA resale market has started the year on a solid
footing. Home buyers in Toronto and surrounding areas continue to benefit from a diversity of housing
types for sale at many different price points," said TREB President Bill Johnston.
“The GTA resale market has tightened since the summer. Healthy market conditions continued to support growth in the average selling price,” said Toronto Real Estate Board President Bill Johnston.
Members of the Ottawa Real Estate Board sold 1,149 residential properties in July through the Board’s Multiple Listing Service® system compared with 1,578 in July 2009, a decrease of 27.2 per cent.
This represented a 29 per cent decrease compared to the 3,832 sales recorded during the same period in 2009. New listings, at 4,770 were down eight per cent compared to the first two weeks of August 2009.
“The level of July sales remained below the expected long-term trend. The market has become more balanced following record monthly sales through most of the winter and early spring,” said Toronto Real Estate Board (TREB) President Bill Johnston.
“Riding the wave of renewed economic growth and the recovering labour market, the volume of IC&I leased space continues to run well above last year’s levels,” Commercial Council Chair Larry Purchase noted.
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