Toronto sales rebound signals Canadian housing is stabilizing

Canada's home sales were little changed in May, suggesting the residential real estate market is stabilizing after seeing large declines earlier this year.

Transactions fell 0.1% from April to 36,373 units, the Canadian Real Estate Association said Friday from Ottawa, keeping the level close to five-year lows. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg predicted sales would fall 1.1%, the average of four estimates.

The stabilization suggests homebuyers are beginning to adjust to the impact of tighter mortgage rules and higher interest rates, easing concern about a sharper correction. Sales rose in about half of all markets. They climbed 1.6% in Toronto, the nation's most populous city, after falling to recession-era lows in April.

Toronto
Homes stand in this aerial photograph taken above Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on Monday, Oct. 2, 2017. Photographer: James MacDonald/Bloomberg

"It's a first sign" of "stability" in the market, Benjamin Reitzes, a Canadian rates and macro strategist at BMO Capital Markets, said by phone from Toronto. "For policy makers, that's exactly what they are looking for, that the bottom isn’t falling out for housing."

Still, CREA cut its 2018 sales forecast to 459,500, which would represent an 11% drop from 2017. In March, the group predicted a 7.1% drop.

Sales have fallen an average of 5.7% each month in the first four months of 2018.

Meanwhile, benchmark prices climbed 0.6% nationally in May, compared with April. The 1% advance from the same month a year earlier was the slowest since September 2009, and reflected weakness in the Toronto area, the report said. Annual price gains are accelerating again in Vancouver, which saw an 11.5% increase.

From a year earlier, the average sales price fell 6.4% to C$496,084 ($376,935) and sales dropped by 16.2%.

"The stress test that came into effect this year for home buyers with more than a 20% down payment is continuing to suppress sales activity," CREA President Barb Sukkau said in the report.

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