Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Canadian housing market vulnerability increases, but Vancouver’s drops: CMHC

The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation says Metro Vancouver is bucking a trend - that sees the rest of the country's real estate market poised for a correction. But as Ted Chernecki explains, another report suggests buying a place might be better than renting in the region – Sep 28, 2021

Vancouver’s housing market vulnerability rating has been reduced from “moderate” to “low” in the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation’s latest market assessment.

Story continues below advertisement

The results, released Tuesday, show the city is trending in the opposite direction of the housing sector nationwide, whose vulnerability rating increased from “moderate” to a “high degree” of vulnerability.

Bob Dugan, the corporation’s chief economist, suggested the COVID-19 pandemic may have played a role.

READ MORE: ‘Nowhere to go’: Canadian homebuyers without family help are running out of options

“Exceptionally strong demand and home price appreciation through the course of the pandemic may have contributed to increased expectations of continued price growth for homebuyers in several local housing markets across Ontario and Eastern Canada,” he said.

“This, in turn, may have caused more buyers to enter the market than was warranted.”

The number of home sales in Canada reached a historic high in the first quarter of 2021, the corporation reports, cooling slightly in the second quarter, but still at a historically high level.

Story continues below advertisement

There is low evidence of excess inventory nationwide, the third quarter assessment says.

In Vancouver, the corporation said price growth has “settled down” along with the pace of housing sales. Owners have listed their homes in “larger numbers than usual,” it added, which has eased competition between buyers.

Absent from the annual assessment, however, is the question of home affordability as it relates to household income.

Story continues below advertisement

Market vulnerability assessments are made based on a market’s vacancy rates, accelerating prices, level of demand against available supply, and the disparity between housing prices from a level that’s consistent with labour income, population, interest rates, and other factors.

READ MORE: Global supply chain crisis: Why consumers should start holiday shopping now

In the assessment, the Greater Toronto Area remained at a high degree of market vulnerability. Montreal moved from moderate to high, Ottawa’s market kept its high vulnerability rating, and so did Halifax and Moncton, N.B.

Victoria, Calgary and Edmonton were all given moderate vulnerability rates, while Regina, Winnipeg and the rest of Quebec all show a low degree of market vulnerability.

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article