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Canadian Home Building Rebounds From Deep Freeze: Housing Update

Canadian Home Building Rebounds From Deep Freeze: Housing Update

(Bloomberg) -- Canada housing starts rebounded in March from a sluggish performance a month earlier, returning to levels more in line with demographics and highlighting the buoyancy of the nation’s battered real estate market.

Builders started an annualized 192,527 homes in March, the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. reported Monday. That’s up from 166,290 a month earlier, when excessively cold weather slowed construction.

While housing starts are down considerably from the elevated levels of the past two years, the current pace is largely consistent with population growth and household formation and suggests builders haven’t been scared off by recent sales declines in some of the country’s priciest markets.

“Canada’s housing market is down but far from out,” Sal Guatieri, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets in Toronto, said in a note to investors. “The latest data on construction suggests the downward trend is stabilizing.”

The six-month moving average of starts remains near historical levels, Bob Dugan, CMHC’s chief economist, said in the release. “The trend has been very stable since the final quarter of 2018, following a period of steady declines from the historically elevated levels registered in recent years,” Dugan said.

Canadian Home Building Rebounds From Deep Freeze: Housing Update

Canadian real estate has faced headwinds over the past year, in particular higher interest rates and tougher mortgage qualification rules, that have significantly cooled markets in Vancouver and Toronto.

Major Drag

That’s prompted speculation housing could act as a major drag on future growth by depressing business for real estate brokers, banking and construction. Falling home values also damp consumer confidence and could keep households from spending.

For example, real estate transactions dropped sharply in February -- 9.1 percent -- in a broad-based retreat. The February housing starts number was the lowest since 2015. Building permits for the month, released Monday by Statistics Canada, dropped 5.7 percent, after a 6 percent decline in January.

But February was even colder than normal in Canada, making the month an unreliable reading of trend. Housing numbers for March are looking stronger.

Toronto Stabilizes

Toronto’s real estate board reported April 3 that home sales in Canada’s biggest city totaled 7,187 in the month, little changed from a year earlier, though transactions are still hovering at decade lows. New listings, meanwhile, declined 5.1 percent over the year, supporting benchmark prices, which are up 2.6 percent over the past 12 months.

One market that continues to be unambiguously weak is Vancouver, where home sales in March fell to the lowest in more than three decades and prices continued to decline. Vancouver also bucked the national housing construction trend in March, and recorded a drop in starts during the month. Building permits in the Pacific-coast city dropped 21 percent in February after sliding 29 percent in January, the federal statistics agency reported Monday. The back-to-back decline of C$616 million ($462 million) in permits is the most since at least 2002.

That market, though, is facing the most stringent regulatory regime for new home buyers, and is still the most expensive in the country by far.

Montreal home sales in March rose 1 percent from a year ago, with prices of single-family homes up 5 percent and condos gaining 3 percent, the Quebec Professional Association of Real Estate Brokers said Monday.

Upcoming housing releases this month:

  • April 11: Statistics Canada releases new housing prices for February
  • April 12: Teranet/National Bank releases housing price index for March
  • April 15: Canadian Real Estate Association releases March transactions and price data

--With assistance from Erik Hertzberg.

To contact the reporters on this story: Josh Wingrove in Ottawa at jwingrove4@bloomberg.net;Theophilos Argitis in Ottawa at targitis@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Theophilos Argitis at targitis@bloomberg.net, Chris Fournier

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