posted by Dave on Nov 17
According to The Canadian Real Estate Association, sales activity reached the highest level ever for the month of October.
Residential sales activity via the Multiple Listing Service® (MLS®) of Canadian real estate boards numbered 42,288 units. This is up 41.5 per cent compared to October 2008, when news of the global financial crisis hammered consumer confidence. New records for the month were reported in about one-fifth of local markets, including Toronto, Montreal, and Ottawa.
Seasonally adjusted national MLS® home sales totalled 45,818 units in October 2009. This is two per cent higher than the previous record set in May 2007, and 74 per cent above the recent low in January, when activity fell to the lowest level in a decade. New monthly records for activity were set in British Columbia, Ontario, and Quebec, which reflect record level activity in Greater Vancouver, Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal and Quebec City.
Since the beginning of 2009, some 401,124 homes have traded hands via the MLS® System. This is 1.6 per cent above the same period last year, but below levels for this period in each of the previous three years.
“Low interest rates and upbeat consumer confidence continue to release the pent-up demand that built late last year and earlier this year,” said CREA President Dale Ripplinger. “The release of that pent-up demand has boosted national sales activity to new heights and is drawing down inventories.”
The national MLS® residential average price also reached new heights in October 2009. At $341,079, the average sale price was up 20.7 per cent from the same month last year. The increase reflects the high degree to which the national average price was skewed downward last year by a significant decline in activity in Canada’s priciest markets, and then upward by the rebound in activity.
Nationally, there were 4.1 months of inventory in October 2009 on a seasonally adjusted basis, the lowest level in more than two years. The actual (not seasonally adjusted) number of months of inventory in October 2009 stood at 4.6 months, which is down slightly from the previous month (4.9 months), and among the lowest of levels this year. 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 listings are still expected to rise in the coming months in response to headline average price increases,” said CREA Chief Economist Gregory Klump. “New supply dropped dramatically in December last year and earlier this year in response to a difficult pricing environment. Sellers who moved to the sidelines should be drawn back to the market as prices rise further over the rest of the year and in early 2010.”