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    Housing market has peaked, says Royal LePage

    Canada's housing market has hit a peak and will likely slow in the next six months, says one of the country's largest real estate companies, Royal LePage.

    "The market has seen its near-term peak in house price appreciation," the company said in a forecast released Thursday. "A slower second half of the year is expected."

    The realtor group says home prices by the end of 2011 will be 7.7 per cent higher than they were at the end of 2010, on average. Sales volume is forecast to fall by two per cent over the same period.

    High house prices are concealing early signs of a moderating market, the report said.

    The national average price of a detached bungalow has gained 7.5 per cent in the last 12 months to $356,625.

    Meanwhile, the price of a standard two-storey home rose 6.1 per cent to $390,163 and the price of a standard condominium rose 3.5 per cent to $238,064.

    "In many of Canada’s regional markets, we saw house prices appreciate at a significantly faster rate than wages and salaries, and this trend cannot continue indefinitely," Royal LePage CEO Phil Soper said.

    There are wide regional variances within those numbers. The Canadian Real Estate Association has noted repeatedly in recent months that the national average price is being skewed higher by a red-hot Vancouver market, for example.

    The Vancouver market continues its rally, Royal LePage says, with the average price of detached bungalows and standard two-storey homes both over $1 million and seeing double digit year-over-year gains.

    It is interesting to note, however, that the average price for a standard Vancouver condominium saw a very modest increase of 2.5 per cent over the past year.

    Soper noted that Vancouver — specifically certain neighbourhoods in the lower mainland of British Columbia — "remains an anomaly, as investment from outside of the country continues to support higher price levels."

    Most regions are still seeing strong gains, but home prices in Calgary declined modestly as the market continues to adjust following the Alberta housing boom experienced in the middle of the previous decade, the report noted.

    The Atlantic provinces are still seeing gains, although smaller than the ones seen in recent quarters. And additional inventory coming on to the market in the Montreal area has provided home buyers with more choice and opportunities for negotiation, the report said.

    Toronto's seller's market witnessed strong year-over-year price appreciation, with price gains ranging from 4.7 per cent to 6.1 for the housing types surveyed.

    The company is predicted flat price gains in the fourth quarter of 2011 as the year-ago period was unusually strong.

    The report makes no mention of the current mortgage rate environment. but it's clear that borrowing costs are set to rise — something that could put pressure on home prices. Earlier this week, a couple of major banks raised their posted five-year fixed mortgage rates by .15 percentage points to 5.54 per cent.

    The Bank of Canada is expected to resume raising its key overnight lending rate later this year. That will cause the interest rate for variable mortgages to rise.

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    4 comments

    • Johnny Longhorn  •  10 months ago
      for the past years house prices have only gone up. Now the huge dilemma for potential buyers is whether the market will maintain itself or if in the near future there will be a huge crash as it happened in the USA. If you don't buy your home now, the prices might just keep on rising, but if you buy it now, there's the very real possibility of a crash and then you're stuck with the mortgage.
      • ♥Bettsy♥ 10 months ago
        Lots of people got stuck in that game in the past....it's funny it was all the "speculators" themselves that drove the price up to such ridiculous unsustainable levels. The USA crashed cause there was no work...no jobs. You can buy homes in Arizona for $14,000....good luck....if you can find anything to do there.
      • ♥Bettsy♥ 10 months ago
        I shouldn't have said UNSUSTAINABLE....obviously they DID sustain themselves...but the only ones who got rich off that is the banks...and the realtors.
      • Jone Q 10 months ago
        I agree with you Johnny. Especially for non-real estate experts, the decision is indeed very difficult one. I guess it will be up to personal preference and financial capability. If you want price appreciation only, don't buy. If you cannot afford to buy, don't buy.
    • Harold  •  10 months ago
      With people spending 75-80% of their pre-tax income(s) for mortage payments, taxes, etc. or rent, other segments of the economy are being starved of income. Under a free-enterprise/capitalistic economy no more than 30% of income should be spent on shelter. In short, we are experiencing an acutely dysfunctional overall economy. Witness the ever-increasing number of retail outlets folding in Canada's major cities. The river of debt exacerbated by insane utterly unrealistic suppressed interest rates is rising and when it breaks the dam the consequences will be disastrous for all of us.
      • ♥Bettsy♥ 10 months ago
        Have you seen the prices of drywall and other building materials as of late? They have SHOT THROUGH THE ROOF. Everyone wants your money. Good luck trying to keep it in your pocket.
      • rip 10 months ago
        I hardly find this funny at all.
      • amkinnear 10 months ago
        i am renovating right now and at home depot 3/4" osb has dropped 15%, which i`m happy about. rona on the other hand is expensive.

        don`t listen to the so-called experts about housing prices. if they were such good analysts, they wouldn`t be realtors.

        we all need to live somewhere, and equity is still king, even if you have to work a little harder occasionally, and don`t eat in restaurants so mauch.
    • yepitsme  •  10 months ago
      YET ANOTHER " conclusion" ... houses will continue to rise ... the economy is holding its own and houses will always be your best investment !!! Really tired of hearing these same old stories on Yahoo ... well between that and the Royal Visit ... thank god that BS ends today !!!
    • onewanderer  •  10 months ago
      What goes up comes down. When the pendulum swings back it will shock most homeowners. US is 5 years in decline and still going down. Sell now if you can, pay down all debts, take it serious, protect your family. For millions of Americans the biggest regret is not to have sold their house while they could...
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