Average Canadian house price rises

July 16th, 2009

John Cocomile can’t seem to walk a few steps before his BlackBerry starts to buzz. It’s another client trying to close on a home purchase.

“It has been like this for the last couple months,” says Cocomile, a mortgage broker and owner of popular website greedymortgage.com. “Real estate agents are normally on holiday in the summer, so everyone expected things to slow down. But, good gosh, stuff is really selling out there.”

He’s right. Canadian existing homes sales soared in June, up 17.9 per cent year over year to 54,416 units, according to the Canadian Real Estate Association in a report released yesterday

The national average sale price also reached new heights on a monthly basis, climbing 3.6 per cent year over year to $326,613.

On a quarterly basis, sales in the second quarter were up 1.4 per cent, marking the first year-over-year increase in such activity since 2007.

The solid numbers beat consensus estimates by analysts and took some market watchers by surprise.

“Canada’s housing market looks to have managed the equivalent of the great escape from the clutches of a lengthy, painful downturn,” said BMO Capital Markets economist Doug Porter. “The rapid fire rebound in Canada’s housing market is the most astonishing economic development of 2009.”

Cocomile said a jump in five-year mortgage rates in June also may have been a contributing factor to the boom. Posted rates at some banks went from 3.79 per cent to 4.49 per cent last month.

“You have a situation now where people are saying: `If I don’t buy with my locked-in rates, then I’m going to have to pay more later if I don’t get something now’,” Cocomile said. “It becomes a bit of a false boom because people are encouraged to buy earlier than later.”

That mini-bump in demand, combined with less inventory, has put pressure on prices even though Canada is officially in recession fast cash loans.

“It has certainly lasted longer than I anticipated and prices have been more stable than I anticipated,” said CREA chief economist Gregory Klump. “We are seeing some snapback as buyers who were sitting on the fence jump into the market.”

However, analysts warned that the months ahead could be more volatile as the effects of the recession linger.

“Only a rocket goes straight up forever. There will undoubtedly be some turbulence ahead,” Klump said.

“Further gains will be much tougher to come by, particularly with the job market suffering,” BMO’s Porter warned.

The Canadian Real Estate Association has forecast a 5.2 per cent average price decrease by the end of 2009 compared with 2008. But, based on improving conditions, the association now expects sales transactions in the second half will exceed the first half.

Analysts also expect pressure on prices to ease as more listings come onto the market in the second half.

Listings were down sharply in June, with just 4.2 months of inventory on the market so buyers had fewer choices.

This is the lowest level since August 2007, and below the peak of 12.8 months in January.

The months-of-inventory figure is the time it would take to sell homes listed at the current rate of sales activity.

Although average prices are up, demand in the more expensive markets in the country such as Toronto and Vancouver was a contributing factor in skewing the numbers higher.

“The strong rebound in sales activity is skewing prices upward nationally and in some provinces. Just as a sharp decline in activity in these markets skewed the average price lower in 2008,” the association said.

http://onlinebusinesssurvey.com/average-canadian-house-price-rises/

brought by Moishe Alexander, CFC canadian funding corp CEO

Morning Market Report

July 9th, 2009

The markets were relatively mild up until the last couple hours. The most market shaking event came in the bond market. The three year auction went off spectacularly well. It caused all bonds to improve dramatically. The Ten Year U.S. Treasury, for instance, wound up losing fifteen basis points to 3.29%. Now, mortgage rates are also again below 5.5% on the 30 year mortgage. Oil was down nearly two dollars a barrel as well falling near $60 per barrel. Equities were down most of the day before pulling out of it with both the Dow and the NASDAQ up slightly while the S&P was down marginally. Alcoa came out with much better than expected numbers coming in with loss of 26 cents a share while the consensus was 38 cents a share in losses.

The markets in the Far East were mixed. The Hang Seng was up .39%, the Japanese NIKKEI was down 1.38%, while the Straits Times Index in Singapore was up 2.12%. In Europe, all markets were up. The London FTSE was up by .83%, while the DAX lead the way up 1.67%, and the index in SPAIN was up 1.21%.

Oil looks to be up at the open currently trading at just over $61 per barrel. All the major indices look to open slightly up. The Dow is up about 34 in futures, the NASDAQ is up 5 in futures trading, while the S&P is also 5 in futures trading.

The Dollar hit is mixed this morning. It’s trading better slightly (up .25%) against the Yen, while losing value against the British Pound, the Euro, and the Candian Dollar.

There’s also breaking news from the jobs front.

The number of Americans filing claims for unemployment benefits fell last week to the lowest since January, as early automotive plant closures altered the timing of layoffs that typically happen at this time of year.

Initial jobless claims fell by 52,000 to 565,000, a lower level than forecast, in the week ended July 4, from a revised 617,000 the prior week, the Labor Department said today in Washington. Meanwhile, the number of people collecting unemployment insurance jumped to a record in the prior week.

at the same time…

But in a sign of ongoing employment weakness, so-called continued claims of people still on jobless aid after an initial week of benefits rose by 159,000 to a record 6.883 million in the week ending June 27, the latest for which data is available.

As such, less people are losing work but those without work are still not finding a new job. In what has become a broken record, here’s what one so called expert said of the latest numbers.

Job losses lessening is a sign that the worst is over, but it doesn’t mean the labor market will get better in a hurry,” Michael Gregory, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets in Toronto, said before the report. “It’s going to keep consumer spending depressed. People will be reinstating the term ‘jobless recovery.’”

I’ve lost track of how many times a so called “expert” has proclaimed that some piece of data means “the worst is over”. I think we’ll be hearing something like this well into next year.

Meanwhile, June retail sales numbers disappointed.

My analysis:

Today is a perfect example of why I only look at GDP, monthly unemployment numbers, and inflation. All of the data released just today could be read in any which way. The Treasuries are still what I am watching. The lower their rate goes the better it will be for everything else. Lower treasury rates have filtered to mortgage rates. Look for real estate activity to pick up again. Real estate is where the recession started and it’s still the key to the recovery.

That said, all of this is short term. The lower rates should spawn some short term economic activity and that will grow interest rates. This is the economic yo yo that I have already talked about. What the market needs is sustained low mortgage rates that aren’t manipulated lower. There’s no evidence that this is going to happen anytime soon.

http://theeprovocateur.blogspot.com/2009/07/morning-market-report_09.html

reviewed by Moishe Alexander, CFC  canadian funding corp CEO

Top Ten Toronto Real Estate Deals

July 8th, 2009

TopTenRealEstateDeals.com is a new independent website offering exciting and unique Top 10 lists of today’s best deals on real estate for sale. Their newest market addition is Toronto, Canada.

In today’s economy, owning real estate in Toronto has become a more affordable option than ever before. With low interest rates and declining prices, it’s a good time to buy Toronto Real Estate.

(Vocus/PRWEB ) July 7, 2009 — TopTenRealEstateDeals.com is a new independent website offering exciting and unique Top 10 lists of today’s best deals on real estate for sale. Their newest market addition is Toronto, Canada.

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The Toronto Top Ten list covers downtown Toronto and surrounding areas.

According to Toronto Real Estate Top Ten Concierge Agent, Joy Paterson, ” In today’s economy, owning real estate in Toronto has become a more affordable option than ever before. With low interest rates and declining prices, it’s a good time to buy Toronto Real Estate.”

Joy only features the best deals on Toronto real estate including downtown Toronto condos.

To view the Toronto Ten Real Estate List visit: http://www.toptenrealestatedeals.com/luxury_real_estate/condos/regional/toronto/

This list is a welcome addition to their already extensive list of regional markets. To view a full list of TopTenRealEstateDeals.com’s regional real estate markets visit: toptenrealestatedeals.com

The site also offers a weekly Real Estate Top 10 list of national (United States) deals.

In addition to the best home and condo bargains, the Top Ten research team looks for fun eye catching deals. Recent Top Ten listings have included a spaceship house in Chattanooga, a cave home in Missouri, and a haunted house in Massachusetts.

Their independent Top Ten team focuses on uncovering the best luxury real estate deals from the web, newspapers, auction lists, and pre-construction ads while including only those deals that they feel are the very best bargains! The deals are not their listings, they do not broker sales, and they are not an agency. TopTenRealEstateDeals.com is a general media showcase of great deals.

http://www.prweb.com/releases/TopTenRealEstateDeals/toronto/prweb2617394.htm

reviewed by Moishe Alexander, CFC CEO