Toronto real estate prices shows the third consecutive monthly decline

Housing prices in Toronto were down for the third month in a row, as growing interest rates changed the situation drastically in a city recently being one of the world’s hottest real estate markets.

According to the latest report by the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board (TRREB), the average home price in Canada’s largest city went down by 3.1% in May to C$1.18 million on a seasonally-adjusted basis. There haven’t been three consecutive months of prices decreases in Toronto since the beginning of 2019.

Now, home prices are almost 9% lower than during their peak seen in February.

Before that, Canada showed some of the fastest home-price gains in the world, with Toronto and smaller areas of Ontario reporting the highest results, as buyers benefitted from low mortgage rates and looked for larger properties to work from home. Now, as the Bank of Canada tries to restrain the inflation that’s shows almost 7% pace, borrowing costs are going up sharply.

Since March, the BoC has raised its key policy rate from 0.25% to 1.5% and warned that we can see even more aggressive hikes in the nearest future. As a result, commercial banks have also raised their variable mortgage rates making some buyers leave the market. Last month, the number of home sales was down by 9.3% from April, also marking the third consecutive month of drops on a seasonally-adjusted basis.

“There is now a psychological aspect where potential buyers tend to wait until the prices reach their bottom,” – Kevin Crigger, TRREB’s president, noted. “This tendency will probably continue through the summer.”

At the same time, sellers are entering the market, with the number of properties listed for sale in Toronto going up by 26% in May compared to a year earlier. Such conditions have allowed the remaining buyers to choose more reasonably, so homes are staying on the market a little bit longer: about 18 days compared to 15 days in May 2021.

Amid the central bank’s rate increases possibly affecting markets outside Toronto and its suburbs, another report from Vancouver’s real estate board shows price growth seems to have stopped there, as well. Last month, the benchmark home price in Vancouver was down by 0.3% to C$1.26 million, while home sales were below the 10-year average.

TRREB MLS System Sales and Average Prices May 1-31, 2022

 

 

  2022 2021
  Sales Average Price New Listings Sales Average Price New Listings
City of Toronto (“416”) 2,679 1,233,748 6,877 4,101 1,117,457 7,052
Rest of GTA (“905”) 4,604 1,200,621 11,802 7,802 1,103,219 11,541
GTA 7,283 1,212,806 18,679 11,903 1,108,124 18,593

 

TRREB MLS System Sales and Average Price by Home Type May 1-31, 2022

 

  Sales Average Price
  416 905 Итого 416 905 Итого
Detached 816 2,552 3,366 1,914,890 1,432,951 1,549,498
Yr./Yr. % -34.8% -42.6% -40.9% 11.5% 7.8% 9.5%
SemiDetached 316 436 752 1,426,273 1,044,443 1,204,893
Yr./Yr. % -29.1% -44.4% -38.9% 7.5% 14.1% 13.2%
Townhouses 267 984 1,251 1,045,874 958,558 977,194
Yr./Yr. % -47.9% -40.8% -42.4% 10.4% 13.8% 12.7%
Condo Apartment 1,264 584 1,848 793,124 722,778 770,894
Yr./Yr. % -32.5% -29.5% -31.6% 10.5% 19.7% 12.9%

 

 

 

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.