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Canadian housing market just keeps on ticking

| August 22, 2011 | 0 Comments

Canada’s housing market remains resilient, says BMO Financial economist Douglas Porter based on Canadian existing home sales numbers, which rose by 12.3 per cent from July 2010 levels and held steady from the prior month.

 

“Canadian housing remains surprisingly robust, thanks to still-low interest rates and solid job growth,” says Porter. “While the strong year-over-year growth is flattered by a weak year-ago comparison – when the HST was introduced in B.C. and Ontario – sales are certainly faring better than what we expected earlier this year. While new listings have also risen recently, the backlog of unsold homes just nudged up last month, almost bang on the long-run average.

Porter says the recent financial market turmoil may temporarily weigh on activity, but sales should ultimately find support from continued exceptionally low borrowing costs.

“Today’s data release is yet another sign that Canada’s real estate market has great resiliency,” says BMO Bank of Montreal Mortgage Specialist Laura Parsons. “As long as consumers continue to push demand, which remains the case, we see ongoing strength in the housing market across the country.”

Parsons counsels Canadians to consider a shorter amortization period in order to become mortgage free faster. For instance, BMO offers a low five-year fixed-rate mortgage with a maximum 25-year amortization at 3.79 per cent. She also notes that stress testing your budget using a mortgage payment based on a higher rate can help avoid nasty surprises in the future should interest rates rise.

  

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