Monthly Archives: November 2010

House Price Index (HPI): September 2010

Canadian home prices in September were down 1.1% from the previous month, according to the Teranet-National Bank National Composite House Price Index released today.

The monthly decline ended a string of 16 consecutive increases in the composite index since the last monthly deflation in April 2009. For the first time since February 2009, prices fell in all six of the metropolitan markets surveyed.

Year-over-year, Canadian real estate values were up 7.9%, showing increases in all cities surveyed with the largest YoY increase in Vancouver & Ottawa at 9.2%.  

In Calgary, house prices were down 2.2% from the previous month. It was the second consecutive monthly decline.  Year-over-year, Calgary house prices were up 1.7%.

House Price Index: September 2010 (click to enlarge)

On Forecasting and Humility

I’m used to pundit’s real estate forecasts falling short, but when someone stubbornly asserts something in the face of evidence to the contrary, I get irked.

On November 24, 2010 Garth Turner posted: “I have consistently suggested there will be a correction of up to 20%, followed by a slow and painful decline in prices. Where it ends is anyone’s guess. I do not expect a drop of 40-70% as in Phoenix, and never suggested that would be the case — Garth”

This is where some of his “blog dogs” have taken issue, as some are still wistfully holding onto the promise of 50% declines in Canadian real estate values for years now. But wherever would they have gotten such an idea? Surely not from Garth himself, right?

December 2008
Don’t be surprised if these things happen
* Real estate prices in Calgary, Edmonton, Fort Mac at 50% of 2006 levels
Expect these things to happen
* Falling house values until at least 2010

September 2008
The explosion in resale listings across Canada is but the first phase of a market meltdown which will soon move into widespread price reductions in all markets. Those price drops will be between 15% and 50% (as I previously forecast), based on local conditions. My numbers may well be revised in early 2009, and it won’t be for the better.

July 2008
We are in the early stages of this correction, and price reductions will be much more dramatic by October. Year-over-year, I am sticking with my prediction of a 15% national dive by this time next year, with some markets off twice that amount.

July 2008
I expect all major Canadian markets will correct by an average of 10-15%, and some areas will be clobbered with 30% declines by the end of 2008, or the early Spring of 2009. Does everyone agree? Of course not…Especially if you are a greater fool.

August 2008
Home values will be lower next year by between 15% and 50%, depending on the community

August 2008
The next on the hit list (in this order, I would say), are Vancouver, Toronto, Victoria, Regina, Winnipeg and Saskatoon. In those last three cities, the reduction in home values could look more like Armageddon, with drops of up to 50%. In Vancouver, it will be about 30% by this time next year, and in Torontopolis, 15% with more pain to come after that.

September 2008
The Canadian market is doing exactly what I forecast. This will continue. Declines in prices of 10% or 12% in Alberta will become 20% and 25%. Vancouver ultimately will be even harder hit, and Toronto values will drift lower at the end of 2009 by about 15%. Some neighbourhoods, far more.

…and those are just some of the forecasts I quickly found while browsing his blog.   Ironically, today when a local bubble blogger posted on Greaterfool that “Calgary will become Phoenix and see a 60% plunge,” Garth responded by saying, “Helping people rests on credibility, not hyperbole.”   Whoa, talk about a policy shift.

What’s even more tragic about his forecasts is that Canadian real estate prices actually went UP 20% between 2008 and 2009. So to “continue” predicting a drop of 20% followed by a slow melt means what about his previous forecasts exactly?

On November 2008 he posted an artists rendition of the Bow tower, with his comments underneath stating: “This is what the future looked like. Remember it well.”

No reason to “remember it well.” The future is here, and guess what, I see the Bow Tower rising proudly above the Calgary skyline.

Photograph by: Leah Hennel, Calgary Herald

November 1-21, 2010 Calgary Real Estate Market Update

After 3 weeks a total of 626 Single Family Homes (SFH) have sold in Metro-Calgary representing a 14% increase from the same time period last month.  Year-over-year sales are down almost 22%.

Now below 4300, inventory is at its lowest level since the first week of April.  However this is still 50% higher than this time last year (Nov 21, 2009: 2857 active listings)  The number of active listings that are unoccupied (vacant/new construction) are up over 68% from a year ago. (11/21/2009:  841,  11/21/2010: 1415)

SFH Sales (click to enlarge)

The condo market is still anemic with no signs of a resurgence in the short-term.  With only 205 sales in the first 3 weeks of November, it’s barely above the 201 recorded back in 2008.    What’s causing this slowdown?  The successful pre-sale launches in recent weeks show that buyer demand is still there for condos with the right price and location.  Although it could be argued, at least in the case for University City, this was mostly due to investor interest.   It would be interesting to see what the final owner/renter ratio will be in those Phases when they are complete.

Condo sales (click to enlarge)

While sales are similar to the historic lows in 2008, inventory is lower now than it was then.   In November 2008 there were 2399 active listings compared to the 2050 we have today.   But if you were to compare to November of last year, there were only 1434 listings by month-end.

Calgary Housing Prices

For average and median prices, follow the statistics daily on my website:

FindCalgary.com

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Housing Predictions Vary By Economist

Property Wire has a good article rounding up the various divergent outlooks for the Canadian housing sector.  (click to read)   Whatever your viewpoint, you’ll find an economist with data to back your opinion up.   Whose forecast do you give more credence to?

November 1-14, 2010 Calgary Real Estate Market Update

The sales pace of SFHs has slowed from the opening week of November just as the pending figures were projecting.  Month-to-date there have been 421 sales, an 18.8% drop from the same time period last year but up over 34% from 2008. This marks the most sales in the first two weeks of a month since June.  At this pace we should see a MoM increase in sales (However, the second half of October did pick up noticeably)

SFH Sales (click to enlarge)

SFH Pending Sales (click to enlarge)

While SFH sales are up considerably from the dismal November in 2008, condo sales are barely keeping pace.  128 condos have sold in the first two weeks compared to the 123 that sold in 2008.  Year-over-year, sales are down over 42%.

Condo Sales (click to enlarge)

Condo Pending Sales (click to enlarge)

New Listings to Sale Ratio

Here is the chart TT emailed me (Thanks!) with his thoughts below

Source: Blog reader, TT (click to enlarge)

On November 3rd, TT commented:

Regarding the listing to sales ratio – I was reading Jonathon Tonge’s blog the other day and he had some pretty interesting insight into how this can be used as a market indicator. I encourage everyone to have a look.

http://americacanada.blogspot.com/2010/09/21-tipping-point-revisited.html

Basically, he says, based on analysis he has done, that when this ratio is > 2.1, it indicates a market top in price. Conversely, a ratio of new listings to sales that is below 1.5 signals that the bottom is in.

In fact, I took the data from Truman’s site (goes back to 2005) and trended the following:
1) new listing : sale ratio
2) 30 day median price (i.e. month end median price)
3) BoC bank rate

I found that his rule of thumb applies to the Calgary SFH market. This was a bit surprising given how much of a rollercoaster the market has been in.The last time the ratio broke 2.1 was in January. Within 3 months the market peaked in March (median price = 423,000).

The only time that the ratio was completely out-to-lunch was when it signalled a peak in late ’09 and early ’10. After adding the BoC bank interest rate to the chart it clearly shows why his indicator did not work – it could not account for the effect of the rate dropping from 3.25% to 0.5%.

So, if your forecast is correct, we are certainly moving towards a bottom indicator in price. (Nov ratio would be 1.6). If the trend continues it would suggest a market bottom sometime this winter.

Caution to Sellers Using Out-of-Province Agents

So there’s this agent based out of Ottawa that lists homes across Canada for $109. You’ve probably heard of him in the news.

The most recent dust-up was between him and the Manitoba Securities commission who pulled his listing from MLS® because he isn’t a licensed agent in that province.

Regardless of whether it’s ok under CREA’s and provincial rules, there’s something you as sellers in Calgary should know.

If you use an agent from out of province and not a member of the board, they can still post in on MLS®

For example, take a couple of his listings in Calgary at: 398 Wildwood Drive or 93 Hidden Spring Circle.

(click to enlarge)

Seller forks over some money, and now thinks their listing is on MLS®. All good, right? Not quite.

First of all, those listings don’t even show up in my database. He listed them through Ottawa, as you can tell the MLS# doesn’t match the format we have here in Calgary.

Anytime myself or any of the 5,400 agents do any searches, auto-email notifications, CMA’s – absolutely anything – those listings will never show up for us. There is absolutely no record of those active listings in our database.

Go to any Calgary agent’s website, whichever one you prefer to do your browsing on and search for those homes. You won’t find either. All these Calgary IDX-enabled websites get their feeds from CREB and if it wasn’t listed through CREB it won’t show up.

I don’t know how long the properties have been listed, if there were any price reductions, etc. or anything else about them other than what the public sees.

The only place those listings will show up is on MLS.CA.

If you are a Calgary seller, use an agent that’s licensed in Alberta and submits their listings through CREB otherwise you’re wasting your time and money because you’re not utilizing the potential of the MLS®

Now if someone lives by any of these orphaned listings and sees the sellers peeking through the blinds wondering why they aren’t getting many showings, please be kind and let them know.

New House Price Index (NHPI): September 2010

The price of a new house in Calgary increased 0.3% in September according to the New House Price Index released today by Statistics Canada.   Year-over-year, prices were up 2.1% in September. The monthly increase was due in part to builders moving to new areas with higher land development fees.

Nationally, the NHPI increased 0.2% in September and was up 2.7% from the previous year. The 3 largest year-over-year increases were recorded in:

  • Regina (+6.1%)
  • Winnipeg (+5.2%)
  • St. John’s (+4.9%)

Of the 21 metropolitan areas surveyed, 4 registered annual declines:

  • Charlottetown (-2.2%)
  • Greater Sudbury and Thunder Bay (-1.2%)
  • Victoria (-0.6%)
  • Windsor (-0.5%)

Source: Statistics Canada (click to enlarge)


Note: The New Housing Price Index (NHPI) measures changes over time in the selling prices of new residential houses agreed upon between the contractor and the buyer at the time of the signing of the contract. It is designed to measure the changes in the selling prices of new houses where detailed specifications pertaining to each house remain the same between two consecutive periods.