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Housing Market Remains Sluggish in Canada Despite March Rebound

Housing Market Remains Sluggish in Canada Despite March Rebound

(Bloomberg) -- Canadian home sales and prices rebounded in March from a dismal showing a month earlier, but remained below historical averages.

Home sales rose 0.9 percent nationally while the benchmark price rose 0.8 percent, the Canadian Real Estate Association said Monday from Ottawa. While the results are an improvement from February, both sales and prices were down from a year earlier as homebuyers grapple with stricter mortgage rules and rising rates.

Sales activity remains at some of the lowest levels recorded in the last six years, CREA said. It’s the latest in a string of data that show sluggishness in the housing sector after policy makers tightened borrowing regulations, partially in a bid to slow runaway growth in Toronto and Vancouver.

“March results suggest local market trends are largely in a holding pattern,” Gregory Klump, the realtor group’s chief economist, said in a news release.

Nationally, sales were down 4.6 percent and benchmark prices fell 0.5 percent from a year earlier.

In Toronto, sales rose 1.8 percent and benchmark prices gained 1.5 percent from a month earlier. Vancouver sales were down 5.8 percent while benchmark prices in the Pacific coast city fell 0.5 percent in March.

Brett House, deputy chief economist at Bank of Nova Scotia, said by email the latest data “points to ongoing firming in the Toronto market, while Vancouver continues to show the effects of the tax measures that became effective at the beginning of the year.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Josh Wingrove in Ottawa at jwingrove4@bloomberg.net

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

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