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Canadian property prices up an average of 6.3%, led by Toronto and Vancouver
Residential property sales in Canada edged upwards 1% month on month in February while sales are now up 6.3% year on year, according to the latest data from the Canadian Real Estate Association. The monthly sales increase was led by Greater Vancouver, the Okanagan region, and Greater Toronto. Gains there offset sales declines elsewhere, with more than half of all local markets having posted weaker sales in February compared to January. Year on year price growth decelerated in February for all housing types tracked by the index except two storey single family homes, which again posted the biggest year on year price gain at 6.63%. This was followed by terraced homes with growth of 4.4%, and single storey single family homes at 4.34%. Price growth remained more modest for apartment units at 2.77%. Price gains varied among housing markets tracked by the index. Greater Toronto saw growth of 7.84%, Greater Vancouver 6.38%, and Calgary with 5.96% posted the biggest year on year increases. Even so, the increase in Calgary was far smaller than gains posted last year and the smallest since December 2012. In other markets from West to East, prices were up compared to year ago levels by between 2% and 2.5% in the Fraser Valley, Victoria, and Vancouver Island, while holding steady in Saskatoon, Ottawa, and Greater Montreal, and falling in Regina and Greater Moncton. The CREA index report points out that the national average home price remains skewed by sales activity in Greater Vancouver and Greater Toronto, which are among Canada’s most active and expensive housing markets. Excluding these two markets from the calculation, the average price is a relatively more modest $326,910 and the year on year gain shrinks to just 1.5%. ‘A number of buyers across the Prairies stayed on the side lines in February. That’s likely to remain an important part of the national housing story until the outlook for oil prices starts improving. Meanwhile, home sales in British Columbia and much of Ontario are improving,’ said CREA president Beth Crosbie. Actual, not seasonally adjusted, activity in February stood 2.7% above levels reported in the same month last year, but remained 5% below the 10 year average for the month of February, the data also shows. ‘Sales came in below the 10 year average for the month of February in two-thirds of all local markets. That said, the opposite was true in a few large urban markets in British Columbia and Ontario despite a shortage of listings there, which is fuelling prices higher,’ explained Gregory Klump, CREA’s chief economist. The number of newly listed homes fell 2.5% in February compared to January, led by Greater Vancouver, the Okanagan region, and Calgary. New listings in Calgary have retreated in recent months after having climbed sharply toward the end of last year. The national sales to new listings ratio was 52.2% in February. With sales up and new listings down, this marked an increase from 50.4% in January. A… Continue reading
Average new asking prices in UK up 1% in March
The average price of property coming onto the market in the UK increased by 1% or £2,748 this month compared with February but it is a more muted rise than normal, the latest index shows. However, the rise means that the average new seller asking price is just £30 below the June 2014, according to the index from Rightmove. According to Rightmove the upcoming general election could be to blame for the lower than expected rise which was down from 2.1% growth in February. It says that agents are reporting an increase from buy to let investors and this may be due to the forthcoming changes to pensions which means they can cash in their pension pots and there is a lot of interest in using this to buy property. The data also shows that the year on year rate of increase has fallen from 6.6% in February to 5.4% in March and the report points out that high demand and larger buyer deposits are reducing the impact of the new restrictions on mortgage lending introduced in the Mortgage Market Review last year. ‘The distraction and uncertainty of an election typically force sellers to price more keenly, though this is often short-lived. The MMR introduced in April 2014 laid out a much needed longer term framework for responsible lending, but within a year its dampening effects have been muted by high demand outstripping supply in many locations, and by buyers putting down larger deposits,’ said Miles Shipside, Rightmove director and housing market analyst . ‘The price of property coming to market is now just £30 off the record set nine months ago. The MMR has been a positive restraint on what buyers can afford to pay and has assisted in lessening the price rise pace. However, with new build levels remaining low and only a small increase in properties coming to market compared to last month, the supply side is still a critical but missing part of the jigsaw if pent-up demand is to be satisfied,’ he explained. The index report also shows that interest in searching is at an all-time high, with a record eight million enquiries sent to Rightmove agents in the first two months of 2015, and Rightmove’s busiest ever day for activity being recorded towards the end of February. ‘There is still high demand for the right property at the right price with agents reporting that quality stock is selling well despite some election jitters. Rightmove recording nearly 59 million page views in one day suggests that home movers have a confident outlook, while remaining choosy about what they will buy. Attractive long fixed term mortgage rates are obviously another great boost to positive sentiment,’ Shipside said. ‘While some of the heat has been taken out of the market by limiting loan criteria and size through the MMR and the subsequent actions of the Bank of England’s Prudential Regulation Authority, controls limiting buyer affordability appear not to be restraining… Continue reading
UK govt moves to end blanket licensing of landlords by councils
Local councils in England will no longer be able to licence landlords across a whole area without government approval, it has been confirmed. Housing and planning minister Brandon Lewis has taken action after a rush of complaints about councils introducing compulsory licensing for landlords costing hundreds of pounds per property. Reforms to the Selective Licensing scheme will now restrict local decision making powers from 01 April. Councils will need government approval before implementing a licensing scheme if they plan to license a large area or proportion of the market, likely to be above 20% of either the geographical area covered by the council or the local private rented sector (PRS). The decision comes after sustained lobbying efforts by the National Landlord Association (NLA) since 2010 and after the NLA published its report on the state of landlord licensing across the country, in February. The report revealed a boom in the number of blanket licensing schemes since 2010 but highlighted a lack of enforcement actions being taken by local councils. It also showed a correlation between the political control of a council and their tendency to license landlords. ‘We’ve argued solidly since 2010 that councils have been abusing their power to push through blanket licensing schemes,’ said Richard Lambert, NLA chief executive officer. He explained that the announcement means that if a council intends to licence a large proportion of its housing it will first need to show the case stands up to independent scrutiny. ‘The government was the first to see a copy of our licensing report, and we’re delighted they have listened to our case because at present the driving force behind licensing landlords seems to be the political will of a given local council, regardless of the evidence,’ he pointed out. ‘Many local councils won’t like this decision one bit because until now they’ve been their own judges, and the only way for landlords to challenge them has been through the difficult and complex route of judicial review,’ he said. ‘Landlords are getting fed up with being unfairly targeted and made responsible for problems such as anti-social behaviour when in reality they have little effective control over the issue, except by eviction. Hopefully this now means that councils who are serious about tackling poor property standards and anti-social behaviour will first look to the extensive existing legal powers they already have to combat the issues,’ he added. Continue reading




