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Five signs a housing recovery is on the way

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1) Housing starts are expected to rise

While the seasonally adjusted annual rate of housing starts decreased to 132,000 units in July from 137,000 units in June, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. says starts statistics – which mark the actual, shovel-in-the-ground beginning of construction – are expected to improve throughout 2009.

The reason?

“Over the next several years, housing starts will gradually become more closely aligned to demographic demand, which is currently estimated at about 175,000 units per year,†CMHC said.

How solid is this foundation? Economists' opinions are mixed.

BMO economist Robert Kavcic said July results indicate a rain delay, rather than a reversal. Unseasonably soggy weather caused “a puddle on the road to recovery,†he said.

However, Toronto-Dominion Bank economist Pascal Gauthier noted that the July results, which were dragged down by fewer starts in the condominium sector, were below expectations.

“The latest data for July is yet another warning that extrapolating the bounce back from [the earlier] extreme lows further out can be overly optimistic,†Mr. Gauthier wrote.

2) Building permits have bounced higher

This indicator of builder confidence and construction plans has made steady gains.

“Building permits not only held on to the big bounce in May, they were revised higher (to 15.5 per cent) and they rose again in June (up 1 per cent) in another sign that construction is recovering from the extreme lows earlier this year,†the Bank of Montreal said in a research note.

In June, the value of building permits was $5.2-billion, 1 per cent higher than the revised $5.1-billion measured for May. Residential permits rose 0.5 per cent to $2.7-billion, marking the fourth month in a row for an improvement. The increase in permits for single-family homes outweighed the decline in permits for multi-family buildings such as condos.

“While a recent strong uptick in the issuance of building permits suggest some near-term upside to housing starts, activity remains on track with our forecast, which calls for a protracted period of weakness extending to the end of this year, with national starts struggling to break through the 150,000 units level,†TD's Mr. Gauthier said.

3) Existing home sales soar
Nowhere has the turnaround been more apparent than in July sales of existing homes in Canada's biggest cities, BMO reports.

“For instance, sales in Greater Vancouver were up a massive 89 per cent year-over-year, a world away from a 70-per-cent drop last November. Toronto is a little less frenetic, but managed to post a 28 per cent year-over-year gain in July.â€

Edmonton also reported a 28 per cent increase in the number of homes that changed hands year-over-year and, in Calgary, the level of resale activity was up 22 per cent year-over-year.

The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) is expected to report further gains in national home resale activity later this week.

4) It's still a buyers' market, but prices are firming up

Economists expect that when CREA reports on the national picture Friday, the statistics will show that the prices are up about 4 per cent year over year – skewed upwards by sales in the higher-priced markets.

Real estate agents are sleeping with their pagers again with the return of bidding wars in some local markets.

Toronto-based Royal LePage realtor Samantha Hewit, who specializes in condominiums and starter homes for first-time buyers, said four of her listings in the past two months have resulted in bidding wars, and prices are back to last summer's levels.

“We had a super cute condo, a two-story loft…we were asking $269,000. We had 49 appointments in five days and they got $277,000,†Ms. Hewit said in an interview.

BMO reports that new home prices “are a bit slower to turn, and we believe Wednesday's report on that front will show a 3.2 per cent year-over-year decline for June.â€

5) Affordable mortgages
“Nowhere is the benefit of record-low [interest] rates more apparent than in the housing market, where results have jumped 57 per cent in the past five months and look solid again in July,†BMO economist Sal Guatieri said this week.

“The sharp drop in mortgage rates has almost single-handedly returned housing affordability to its long-term norm from the worst levels in 17 years,†Mr. Guatieri said.

Royal LePage's Ms. Hewit agreed that affordability has made a big impact.

“We have a couple of clients right now that have a 3.6 per cent interest rate locked in to the end of September, and they want to buy and close by the end of September,†she said. “They are the ones that are driving the market.â€

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/repo...ousing-recovery-is-on-the-way/article1247801/
 
This author is oddly optimistic.
On a global scale, indications all point to the notion that we are not out of the forest yet.

Hopefully people are making their purchasing decisions on factual evidence instead of propaganda media publications though.

We can only hope!
 
That's a weird list. The first four points are basically the effects of the fifth point, which is low interest rates. I maintain that without the ultra-low interest rates, housing would be recovering much more slowly. Also, there's pent up demand from the last 12 months, of people who could afford to buy a place but decided to wait out the downturn, and are now jumping on the bandwagon again.

A co-worker of mine sold his place in one day, getting $80,000 more for it than what he payed two years ago.
 
there's pent up demand from the last 12 months, of people who could afford to buy a place but decided to wait out the downturn, and are now jumping on the bandwagon again.

A co-worker of mine sold his place in one day, getting $80,000 more for it than what he payed two years ago.

There was a house on my street that was listed at $489,000, when talking to a couple of neighbours we thought that this smaller 2 storey non-renovated 100 year old detached house would sit for a while. Lo and behold we just found out that after a week and a price war it ended up selling for $512,000....Thats Insanity:eek:
 
There was a house on my street that was listed at $489,000, when talking to a couple of neighbours we thought that this smaller 2 storey non-renovated 100 year old detached house would sit for a while. Lo and behold we just found out that after a week and a price war it ended up selling for $512,000....Thats Insanity:eek:

nope its location..location..location...I live around the Spadina/Trinity area and chitty little run downed houses barely 1800 sqft are selling for $450,000 and up.They are selling also...I seen two houses that was listed a month ago and it had sold signs on it already.
 
Canada housing starts rise 12.1 pct in August

* August starts rise to 150,400 units
* Multiple dwellings rise by 23.8 pct, singles up 2.5 pct (Adds details)

TORONTO, Sept 9 (Reuters) - Canadian housing starts rose 12.1 percent in August, more than forecast, largely from big gains in construction of condos and apartments, data from the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. showed on Wednesday.

The number of groundbreakings climbed to a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 150,400 units in August from an upwardly revised 134,200 units in July, CMHC said.

Analysts had expected starts to rise to 139,000 units. July starts were previously reported at 132,100 units.

Starts for single family homes rose 2.5 percent to 54,200 units in August, while new construction for multiple dwellings such as condos and apartment buildings increased by 23.8 percent to 77,600 units.

Rural starts in August were estimated at an annual rate of 18,600 units. (Reporting by Ka Yan Ng; Editing by Jeffrey Hodgson)

© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved

Toronto housing starts up 19.7% for August, but strike stalled permits

http://www.nationalpost.com/homes/story.html?id=1983997
 
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nope its location..location..location...I live around the Spadina/Trinity area and chitty little run downed houses barely 1800 sqft are selling for $450,000 and up.They are selling also...I seen two houses that was listed a month ago and it had sold signs on it already.

Yes, location is everything in real estate, but in the context of this thread, even good locations weren't selling as fast and now it's getting better which is the point of the OP.

Overall, prices are still down from the peaks of 2007, but I think the reason why prices have risen recently is due primarily to low supply as listings are still relatively low.
 
There have never been so many people so overstretched and in debt as there are now. There have never been conditions where credit is so readily available to so many people for so little. Home ownership is at a record level and demographically there have never been fewer people in the first-time home-owner age bracket as a percentage of the overall population. This is the over-arching big picture.

When you consider these issues it is pretty hard to imagine much upside potential for the real estate sector on the horizon. This is not to say there aren't opportunities sometimes great opportunities to buy, to sell, to own or to make a great investment. I just challenge anyone to present an argument that moving forward debt will be easier to access than it is now, people will be able to pile on more debt, Canadians will feel wealthier fueling demand, and demographically there will be a boom in the homebuying population.
 
How about this one? a detached, maybe 1300 sqf home with a lipstic paint job sold for 475k. On galt (jones and gerrard.)

Rediculous!
 
People are buying because they feel they missed the boat. It's the same issue which took us up from 2002. Plus the incentives are much better, making the deals look better.

If you're going to live in the homes fine, but if these are investment homes, we are nowhere near out of this mess. People have such short term memories. Look out below!!
 
Expert talks of Toronto condo-sale ‘miracle’

The city’s condominium market experienced a “miraculous†rebound during the third quarter of this year, new data shows, just as luxury home sales also edge higher.

More new condos were sold during that period than in the first two quarters combined, said Ben Myers, executive vice-president of Urbanation Inc., which tracks the Toronto condominium market. And on the resale side, numbers hit a record high.

Mr. Myers called the rebound “nothing short of miraculous,†a sign the recession’s grip on the condo market has eased dramatically.

“It was quite shocking to us,†he said yesterday. “We certainly didn’t anticipate this type of increase because there hasn’t been a lot of new site openings, but the market kind of caught up to where pricing was. People that had been sitting on their hands for a long time finally got into the market.â€

New unit sales jumped by 56% from the last quarter, at 4,617, which also marks a 16% increase over the same period last year. On the resale side, 4,854 units sold, representing a 29% increase over the third quarter of 2008, and an all-time high.

The optimistic numbers come after months of depressed activity, and are spurred, experts say, by lower pricing and historically low interest rates.

Michael Polzler, executive vice-president of Re/Max Ontario-Atlantic Canada, says agents have been seeing a “very busy†market, and many of the buyers are young Torontonians.

“Usually the first step in home ownership is to purchase a condominium. What a lot of young people are realizing is they really can’t rent for less than they can own for,†Mr. Polzler said.

The average price per square foot for new condos, which has remained relatively flat over the past year at about $475, slid closer to $430 for new projects launched in the third quarter, Mr. Myers said.

A substantial portion of the sales were at existing sites, he said, noting the number of new condo units opening in the third quarter this year was significantly lower than last year — about 1,750 compared to about 4,500.

In addition to setting a new sales high in the resale market, Mr. Myers said, this quarter also marked the highest sales-to-listings ratio on record.

“Most of the stuff that’s being put out there is getting sold,†he said. Units are taking about 27 days on average to sell within the Toronto census market area, data from Urbanation shows.

In the luxury home market, a new report from Re/Max shows a steady acceleration in sales in most regions of the Greater Toronto Area.

The year-to-date figure for 2008 stood at 1,687; this year, it is up to 1,706, and Mr. Polzler said that difference will increase as the year continues, particularly since the final quarter of 2008 was exceptionally poor.

Mr. Polzler said the numbers have taken realtors by surprise, especially after a slow start at the beginning of the year.

“Nobody would have anticipated, especially in luxury properties, that the demand would be as high as it is, and that we would actually outpace last year.â€

http://network.nationalpost.com/np/...pert-talks-of-toronto-condo-sale-miracle.aspx
 
i don't know...everyone seems to be losing or worried about losing their jobs still. Meanwhile, taxes are going up, and cost of everything as well. I'm not buying the "recovering economy" propaganda
 
i don't know...everyone seems to be losing or worried about losing their jobs still. Meanwhile, taxes are going up, and cost of everything as well. I'm not buying the "recovering economy" propaganda

GTA real estate sales boom in October

Sales of homes, primarily in the 905 area, "were up an astounding 173 per cent," it said Friday.

High-rise condo sales, primarily in Toronto, "rose by an impressive 77 per cent," BILD said, citing RealNet Canada Inc. as the data source.

"The turnaround in new home sales has been nothing short of remarkable, with homebuyers taking advantage of ultra-low interest rates and intense competition among builders,"

http://toronto.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20091120/gta_res_091120/20091120?hub=Toronto
 

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