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Vancouver Westside Attached & Detached Market Reports February 22 – March 1 courtesy susankeevil.com

Posted by admin on March 05, 2010
Market Reports, Westside / No Comments

We are proud to present our Westside market reports for the period running from February 22 – March 1 courtesy susankeevil.com

Westside Vancouver Attached Report February 22 – March 1 :

The Westside neighbourhoods saw a post-Olympic recovery in supply numbers this past week with 77 new attached listings in the Westside markets (or 41% of the overall 189 new active listings over Vancouver West). Kitsilano once again posted the strongest attached supply figures with 19 new attached listings. We expect a steady increase in new listing activity after the closing of the Olympics as buyers bring their homes on the market, and short-term Olympic rental also also affect supply.

Please click HERE for the full article.

Westside Vancouver Detached Market Report February 22 – March 1

The Westside Detached market returned to pre-Olympic levels this past week after posting strong gains going into the 2010 Games. We saw 58 new detached listings on the Westside (down from approximately 80 per week in the periods prior), with Cambie and Dunbar remaining the strongest markets with 10 and 9 new listings respectively. The detached market on the Westside had been quite hot on the buyer side through the end of January and as such we saw quite a supply increase through the first two weeks of February.

Please click HERE for the full article.

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Vancouver Sun : “B.C. real estate 2009 bounce-back to taper off this year, 2011″

Posted by admin on January 29, 2010
Market Reports / No Comments

According to the B.C. Real Estate Association, much of the forward momentum for 2010/11 has been used up by the interest rate driven market improvements we saw in 2009:

B.C. real estate 2009 bounce-back to taper off this year, 2011

Muir characterized his forecast as 2009 ending with a “gold-medal finish, [which] will give way to a silver-medal performance in 2010.”

“Affordability is the biggest factor over the longer term,” Muir added in an interview, “because home prices in markets such as Victoria and Vancouver are trending on record levels, and mortgage rates are likely to edge higher at the end of this year and through 2011.”

“That’s going to increase the carrying cost of housing, and by extension, overall housing demand.”

Home carrying costs, the monthly mortgage payment, taxes and other fees saw a dramatic trim during the downturn that lasted through the last half of 2008 and first part of 2009, but Muir noted that that advantage is rapidly disappearing.

Please click HERE for the full article.

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REBGV : “Increased demand steadies housing market in Greater Vancouver”

Posted by skeevil on June 24, 2009
Market Reports / No Comments

Recent reports from the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver support Vancouver Realty Online’s recent statistical analysis of the late-Spring market turn-around:

VANCOUVER, BC – A continued increase in buyer activity over the last four months has resulted in increased home sales and lessened the downward pressure on housing prices in Greater Vancouver.

The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV) reports that the number of residential property sales in Greater Vancouver totalled 3,524 in May 2009, an increase of 17.4 per cent from the 3,002 sales recorded in May 2008, and an increase of 18.9 per cent compared to last month.

Since the beginning of the year, the MLSLink® Housing Price Index (HPI) benchmark price for all residential properties in Greater Vancouver has increased 4.5 per cent to $506,201 from $484,211. However, home prices compared to May 2008 levels are down 10.9 per cent.

“The increased level of buyer activity over the last few months has had a stabilizing effect on home prices across our region,” Scott Russell, REBGV president said. “MLS® data continues to show a trend toward a balanced market in the region.”

New listings for detached, attached and apartment properties declined in Greater Vancouver, down 36 per cent to 4,733 in May 2009 compared to May 2008, when 7,390 new units were listed. At 13,641, the total number of property listings on the Multiple Listing Service® declined 4.7 per cent compared to last month and 16 per cent compared to May 2008.

Sales of detached properties increased 16.5 per cent to 1,402 from the 1,203 detached sales recorded during the same period in 2008. The HPI benchmark price for detached properties declined 11.8 per cent from May 2008 to $680,320.

Sales of apartment properties in May 2009 increased 17.2 per cent to 1,458, compared to 1,244 sales in May 2008. The benchmark price of an apartment property declined 10.2 per cent from May 2008 to $349,987.

Attached property sales in May 2009 are up 19.6 per cent to 664, compared with the 555 sales in May 2008. The benchmark price of an attached unit decreased 9 per cent between May 2008 and 2009 to $435,848.

Bright spots in Greater Vancouver in May 2009 compared to May 2008:

Detached: Burnaby - up 48.9 per cent (140 units sold from 94)
Maple Ridge/Pitt Meadows - up 13.4 per cent (144 units sold from 127)
North Vancouver - up 31.4 per cent (134 units sold from 102)
Port Moody/Belcarra - up 52.6 per cent (29 units sold from 19)
Richmond - up 14.0 per cent (170 units sold from 142)
Vancouver East - up 11.1 per cent (180 units sold from 162)
Vancouver West - up 59.5 per cent (193 units sold from 121)
Attached:
Burnaby - up 31.5 per cent (96 units sold from 73)
Maple Ridge/Pitt Meadows - up 43.8 per cent (46 units sold from 32)
North Vancouver - up 31.8 per cent (58 units sold from 44)
Vancouver West - up 54.5 per cent (102 units sold from 66)
Apartments: Burnaby - up 32.6 per cent (187 units sold from 141)
North Vancouver - up 22.6 per cent (103 units sold from 84)
Richmond - up 27.4 per cent (200 units sold from 157)
Vancouver East - up 28.7 per cent (139 units sold from 108)
Vancouver West - up 25.4 per cent (529 units sold from 422)
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REBGV Market Update : “Buyer activity brings greater stability to the housing market”

If you’ve been following our weekly stats over the last month, none of the conclusions here should come as much of a surprise to you. Decreased overall supply, combined with competitive financing driven demand increases have led to a much tighter market across Greater Vancouver. The downtown markets have seen a notable increase in sales volume, and listing inventory has also began to increase. Attached property on the Westside also continued to improve with detached property to follow in the next 2-3 months.

VANCOUVER, B.C. – May 4, 2009 – With more buyers and fewer homes for sale in recent months, the Greater Vancouver housing market has entered a more moderate and balanced state.

For the sixth consecutive month, new listings for detached, attached and apartment properties declined in Greater Vancouver, down 33.7 per cent to 4,649 in April 2009 compared to April 2008, when 7,010 new units were listed. The total number of property listings on the Multiple Listing Service® (MLS®), while slightly down compared to last month, remains unchanged compared to the same period in 2008.

The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV) reports that residential property sales in Greater Vancouver totalled 2,963 in April 2009, a decline of eight per cent from the 3,218 sales recorded in April 2008, and an increase of 31 per cent compared to last month.

“We’re seeing greater balance in the housing market, as evidenced by a strong sales to active listings ratio of over 19 per cent,” Scott Russell, REBGV president said. “The result is a relatively stable market in which homes are being realistically priced.

“The bridge between buyer demand and housing supply is continuing to narrow, which, as we see, helps bring stability to home prices,” he said. “The trends in our housing market over the last couple of months offer a much more comfortable, historically normal set of conditions.”

Sales of detached properties declined eight per cent to 1,190 from the 1,293 detached sales recorded during the same period in 2008. The benchmark price, as calculated by the MLSLink Housing Price Index®, for detached properties declined 12.2 per cent from April 2008 to $675,268.

Sales of apartment properties in April 2009 declined 10.5 per cent to 1,179, compared to 1,317 sales in April 2008. The benchmark price of an apartment property declined 12.6 per cent from April 2008 to $340,203.

Attached property sales in April 2009 are down 2.3 per cent to 594, compared with the 608 sales in April 2008. The benchmark price of an attached unit decreased 9.7 per cent between April 2008 and 2009 to $431,759.

Bright spots in Greater Vancouver in April 2009 compared to April 2008:

Detached:

Vancouver West                                 up 59.5 per cent (193 units sold from 121)

Attached:

Port Coquitlam                                    up 69.6 per cent (39 units sold from 23)

Richmond                                           up 17.9 per cent (132 units sold from 112)

Vancouver West                                 up 46.3 per cent (98 units sold from 67)

Apartments:

North Vancouver                                up 29.2 per cent (84 units sold from 65)

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An unexpected rate cut by the Bank of Canada this morning! 2.25% Prime

Posted by skeevil on April 22, 2009
Downtown, Market Reports, Susan's Blog / No Comments

Mortgage news provided by Jim Kwon and Lisa Yun at the Mortgage Centre.  The big news this week involves the unexpected rate cuts from the central bank to record lows.  Referred to as a ’shock’ mechanism these forms of economic influence are geared towards spurring investment and growth vis a vis an unexpected rate cut from policy makers.  We will see how it turns out!

OTTAWA – The Bank of Canada has taken its influential target interest rate to the lowest practical level in an effort to combat what it says is deeper and more widespread global recession.

The central bank sliced the overnight rate in half to 0.25 per cent – the lowest it says is practical – and signaled strongly it will have to keep it there until at least mid-2010.

In addition, the bank has extended the term of its purchase and resale agreements it uses to inject liquidity into money markets from one-and-three months to six-and-12 months, while setting minimum and maximum bids that correspond to the historically low target rate.

The bank said it will target a daily level of settlement balance in the financial system at $3 billion, a move it says will help drive the overnight rate to the bottom of the trading band.

The Bank of Montreal (TSX:BMO) was the first of Canada’s major banks to announce that it would lower its own prime rate in step with the central bank, dropping the benchmark around which it calculates variable mortgages and other loans to 2.25 per cent.

Shortly after, Royal Bank (TSX:RY) said it too would lower its prime rate to 2.25 per cent, signaling that the other chartered banks would likely follow suit.

The dramatic actions – and more are expected Thursday when bank governor Mark Carney unveils options for increasing the money supply – signal a new and darker view of the global and domestic recession than the Bank of Canada has previously admitted to.

“In an environment of continued high uncertainty, the global recession has intensified and become more synchronous since (January),” Carney wrote in an unusually lengthy note accompanying the interest rate decision.

“Deteriorating credit conditions have spread quickly through trade, financial and confidence channels. While more aggressive monetary and fiscal policy actions are underway across the G20 (countries), measures to stabilize the global financial system have taken longer than expected to enact.”

As a result, Carney has basically thrown out the playbook for the Canadian economy that he outlined in January.

Then, the recession was supposed to be over by the summer and accompanying growth was to built in the third quarter on the way to a robust recovery in 2010, with output growth of 3.8 per cent. Total economy shrinkage this year would be limited to 1.2 per cent.

Now Carney says the economy won’t stop falling until at least the fourth quarter and in total will contract three per cent this year. That is in line with the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development projection and that of a growing number of private sector economists.

Carney remains a relative optimist on how strong the rebound will be, however, predicting a bounce-back of 2.5 per cent next year and 4.7 per cent in 2011. While lower than his previous prediction of 3.8 per cent growth in 2010, it is still far ahead of the OECD’s 0.3 per cent flatline forecast for next year.

“Given significant restructuring in a number of sectors, potential growth has been revised down,” he says.

“The recovery will be importantly supported by the bank’s accommodative monetary stance.”

The new pessimism, or realism as some economists would call it, has increased the odds that Carney will do more than outline options for so-called quantitative easing later this week – a technical way of saying printing more money to get credit markets functioning better – but that he will soon move into the uncharted territory.

The central bank sees no immediate danger of inflation for all the stimulus it is injecting into the dormant economy.

In fact, Carney said he expects inflation to be minus 0.8 per cent in the third quarter and not to return to the central bank’s desired two-per-cent target until the third quarter of 2011.

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