TORONTO, January 8, 2008 – Canada’s real estate market posted significant gains in the fourth quarter of 2007 and showed little sign of the traditional seasonal slowdown. Average house prices continued to increase in the fourth quarter with many markets experiencing double-digit gains, according to a House Price Survey report released today by Royal LePage Real Estate Services.
Of the housing types surveyed, detached bungalows increased to $337,555 (+11.6 %), followed by standard two-storey properties, which rose to $399,738 (+11.3%), and standard condominiums, which increased in price to $240,395 (+11.7 %), year-over-year.
“The fourth quarter 2007 was surprisingly strong, with unseasonably high price increases and unwavering demand,” said Phil Soper, president and chief executive, Royal LePage Real Estate Services. “The strength of the market was apparent throughout the country, largely due to positive economic fundamentals. The value and export-demand for our natural resources has underpinned high employment rates, providing Canadians with confidence in the future stability of their jobs and their local residential real estate markets.”
The impact of the rise of Canada’s dollar to parity with the US dollar was mitigated by the end of the fourth quarter, as the manufacturing sectors in Ontario and Quebec continued to adjust to the dollar’s appreciation. Buyer activity levels in Central Ontario and Quebec remained strong and steady through the fourth quarter. In fact, Toronto displayed high levels of home buying activity in the fourth quarter, despite the city’s rising house prices, partly related to the introduction of a new land transfer tax that will be implemented on January 1, 2008.
Toronto’s real estate market shattered all previously held records for unit sales in 2007. The momentum from the year’s first three quarters carried over to the end of the year, as robust buyer activity pressured average house prices upwards.
The Royal LePage Survey of Canadian House Prices is the largest, most comprehensive study of its kind in Canada, with information on seven types of housing in over 250 neighbourhoods from coast to coast. This release references an abbreviated version of the survey, which highlights house price trends for the three most common types of housing in Canada in 80 communities across the country. A complete database of past and present surveys is available on the Royal LePage Web site at www.royallepage.ca, and current figures will be updated following the end of the fourth quarter. A printable version of the fourth quarter 2007 survey will be available online on February 15, 2008.
Housing values in the Royal LePage Survey are Royal LePage opinions of fair market value in each location, based on local data and market knowledge provided by Royal LePage residential real estate experts. Historical data is available for some areas back to the early 1970s.
Thursday, January 17, 2008
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