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Canadian home prices up 20.6% but market could be nearing turning point

High prices combined with higher interest rates could slow gains, says CREA

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Canada’s average home price rose more than 20 per cent from the year before in February to $816,720, according to data from the Canadian Real Estate Association.

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Sales jumped 4.6 per cent from the lull in January, thanks to a 23.7 per cent increase in new listings. Though strong, the sales fell 8.2 per cent short of the record set in February 2021.

The Greater Toronto Area, Fraser Valley in British Columbia and Calgary led the gains.

CREA had been expecting a rush of new listings, but chair Cliff Stevenson said it was unclear whether that would continue into the spring.

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“New supply bounced way up in February, which is similar to what we saw play out in 2020 and again in 2021,” said CREA senior economist Shaun Cathcart in the release. “The real question is what comes next? In the short term, expect at least one more month of stronger sales as the majority of those new listings came onto the market near the end of the month so many of the associated sales likely won’t happen until early March.”

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CREA’s non-seasonally adjusted benchmark House Price Index rose by a record 29.2 per cent year-over-year in February. However, the market could be at a turning point for prices.

  1. Homes under construction in British Columbia. Housing starts rose eight per cent in February from the month before.

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  2. A construction worker on a condominium building under construction in downtown Montreal.

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  3. The Financial Post's Gabriel Friedman this week looks at rising interest rates and Canada's housing market.

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“Combined with higher interest rates and higher prices, we could be at a turning point where price growth begins to slow down and inventories finally begin to recover after seven years of declines,” Cathcart said. “Still, in order to turn this market back towards balance long-term, building more new homes across the spectrum remains the key.”

The association said that the price gains were largely driven by sales in Toronto and Vancouver.

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