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Toronto Home Sales Soar in July Amid Housing Supply Crunch

Toronto Home Sales Soar in July Amid Housing Supply Crunch

(Bloomberg) --

Toronto home sales and prices continued to move higher in July amid tight supply.

Sales in Canada’s biggest city jumped 24% to 8,595 from the same period last year, the Toronto Real Estate Board said in a report Tuesday. On a seasonally-adjusted basis, sales rose 5.1% from June, the most since the end of 2017, before harsher mortgage-lending rules were introduced.

The benchmark price, which accounts for the type of home sold, rose 4.4% to C$800,900 ($606,926), largely driven by gains in the condo segment.

Toronto sales have been rebounding all summer from a slump earlier this year amid tighter borrowing conditions that came into play in 2018. Meanwhile, housing supply is still limited, driving prices higher for most segments.

Toronto Home Sales Soar in July Amid Housing Supply Crunch

“As more and more households come to terms with the stress test and move back into the market in the coming months and years, they could suffer from a chronically under-supplied marketplace and an acceleration of home price growth to unsustainable levels,”John DiMichele, chief executive officer of the housing board, said in a statement.

New listings rose 3.7% to 14,393 in July compared with last year, while active listings were down by 9.1%.

The average price of a home rose 3.2% from last year to C$806,755. The average was down from June’s level of C$831,737. Detached homes saw a sales boost in July but average prices for the segment continued to remain down in various suburban communities, the housing board said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Natalie Wong in Toronto at nwong133@bloomberg.net;Erik Hertzberg in Ottawa at eschmitzhert@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Debarati Roy at droy5@bloomberg.net, David Scanlan, Chris Fournier

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