Archive for July, 2022

85 acres Crown land in Edmonton sells for $13.5 Million

Thursday, July 21st, 2022

Edmonton 85 acres with industrial potential sells for $13.5 million

Western Investor Staff
Western Investor

The parcel is Crown land but seen as ripe for future industrial development due to its location next to large Apex Business Park.

 Maxwell Polaris Commercial, Edmonton, for Western Investor

 

Property type: Crown land

Location: 14490 164 Street, Edmonton, Alberta

Size of land: 3,702,600 square feet

Land size in acres: 85 acres

Zoning: Agricultural

Potential: Industrial development

List price: $15.72 million

Sale price: $13.52 million

Vendor: Government of Alberta

Date of sale: July 5, 2022

Brokerage: Maxwell Polaris Commercial, Edmonton.

Broker: Ian Fletcher

 

© 2022 Western Investor

Re/Max housing affordability surveyed conducted by Leger

Wednesday, July 20th, 2022

Many willing to relocate to find an affordable – home but not too far: Re/Max study

Joseph Ruttle
The Vancouver Sun

Housing prices keep soaring in B.C. and other Canadian hot spots, but “the market is starting to cool and balance itself out,” says Re/Max

 Not surprisingly, cities like Toronto and Vancouver didn’t fare well in a new Re/Max housing affordability surveyed conducted by Leger. Photo by Getty Images

How far are you willing to move to find an affordable home to buy? A new Re/Max report conducted with Leger shows most people are OK with relocating to find a housing fit, but less than four in 10 would accept a different city, province or region.

 

About two-thirds (64 per cent) of Canadians say relocating is an acceptable sacrifice to find a home they can afford. Half say a distance of about 100 kilometres from where they currently live is the limit.

For those of us living along the pricey B.C. south coast, finding affordable housing might take a much longer journey than that.

Across the country, the city with the best 2022 housing affordability, based on residential selling price, is Brandon, Man., which replaces last year’s leader, Winnipeg. Next up in order are Regina; St. John’s, Nfld.; Moncton, N.B.; and Red Deer, Alta.

Red Deer also topped the list in a related category. It was Canada’s most affordable market based on the share of income spent on mortgage payments at about 26 per cent of average monthly income for an average-priced home. Best mortgage cities after that are Regina (27 per cent); Brandon (27.5 per cent); Thunder Bay, Ont. (30 per cent); St. John’s (31.5 per cent) and Moncton (33.5 per cent).

 

Other top sacrifices people are willing to make for affordability are changing their type of home (say, a condo instead of single-family), at 56 per cent; co-owning a home with family or friends (29 per cent); and renting part of a home for income (27 per cent).

A healthy housing market is characterized by price appreciation in the mid- to high single digits, and many markets across Canada are re-entering that comfort zone

Re/Max

While the main barriers to entering the house market remain high prices, the cost of living and salary shortfalls, rising interest rates are suddenly a major factor. Nearly a quarter of Leger survey respondents (24 per cent) cited high rates, up from just six per cent last year.

Higher interest rates have already had an effect in the short term, says Re/Max Canada president Christopher Alexander, who noted “the market is starting to cool and balance itself out, bringing some much-needed relief from the sky-high prices that we experienced during much of the pandemic.”

 

“The shifts we are seeing in the housing market, with prices starting to ease across the country in tandem with softening demand and sales, are an overdue adjustment,” said Re/Max executive vice-president Elton Ash. “A healthy housing market is characterized by price appreciation in the mid- to high single digits, and many markets across Canada are re-entering that comfort zone.”

The report relied on brokers and agents in 24 key Canadian markets analyzing market activity and housing affordability trends in the first half of 2022.

It found that the most affordable neighbourhoods in larger B.C. centres are Victoria’s Sooke, Saanich West and View Royal; and Rutland, Glenrosa and Kelowna North in Kelowna/Central Okanagan.

 

Brokers in high-priced Victoria and Vancouver reported an increasing trend of friends and family pooling their house-buying resources.

The report also showed many others aren’t even thinking about buying a home right now. Sixty-eight per cent of respondents said they can’t afford to buy one in their neighbourhood or region of choice in the next six months; 64 per cent said eroding house affordability has them less confident about buying; and 63 per cent said rising interest rates have put their buying plans on hold for the foreseeable future.

Thus it’s not a surprise that 70 per cent agree Canada needs a national housing strategy to solve the crisis, up 10 per cent from last year.

The survey conducted by Leger for this housing affordability report was completed of 1,529 Canadians who are part of a Leger online panel between June 24 and 26, 2022. A probability sample of the same size would yield a margin of error of plus/minus 2.5 per cent, 19 times out of 20.

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© 2022 Vancouver Sun

Canada’s inflation rate rises to 8.1% in June 2022

Wednesday, July 20th, 2022

Canada’s inflation rate surges even higher

Fergal McAlinden
other

Latest figures mark the largest yearly increase since 1983

The inflation rate in Canada rose once again in June, climbing 8.1% over the same month last year in its biggest yearly increase for almost 40 years.
Inflation figures released by Statistics Canada on Wednesday indicated that the measure had posted its most noteworthy year-over-year gain since January 1983, with the national statistics agency saying gas price increases were the main factor behind the growth.
Gas prices skyrocketed by over 54% compared with June 2021, StatCan said, meaning that the inflation rate would actually be significantly lower – about 6.5% – if gasoline was excluded.
The news came as little surprise following Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem’s remarks on Thursday that inflation would hit “a little over” 8% in the next announcement.
Indeed, many economists had believed the rate could come in even higher, with a group recently polled by Bloomberg expecting a year-over-year increase of 8.4%.
Read next: Bank of Canada announces huge rate hike
Last week, Canada’s central bank increased its benchmark rate by a full percentage point in a surprise move, saying in remarks accompanying the news that inflation was “higher and more persistent” than it had envisaged as recently as April.
“While global factors such as the war in Ukraine and ongoing supply disruptions have been the biggest drivers, domestic price pressures from excess demand are becoming more prominent,” the Bank said.
It indicated that it expected inflation to start decreasing later in 2023, returning to a level of around 3% by the end of next year and meeting the Bank’s target of 2% by the end of 2024.

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Bank of Canada announces a 1% interest rate increase

Tuesday, July 19th, 2022

What’s next for Canada’s housing market?

Fergal McAlinden
other

A recent rate jump marks a “hammer to housing” according to a BMO economist

 It’s clear that interest rate increases are having a strong impact on Canada’s housing and mortgage markets, with June marking a third straight monthly slowdown on the housing front.

Home prices registered their largest monthly decrease on record as home sales also inched downwards in June: the national benchmark price fell by 1.9% over May, while sales were down 5.6% over the same period and a huge 23.9% below activity in June 2021.

That news arrived just two days after the Bank of Canada made a landmark announcement, increasing its benchmark rate by 1% in a surprise move – its largest hike since 1998 – that signalled its continuing intention to combat inflation through aggressive action on rates.

The move is nothing less than a “hammer to housing,” according to Bank of Montreal (BMO) senior economist Robert Kavcic, who published a note indicating that he expected an “even deeper correction” in the country’s housing market as a result of the central bank’s rates strategy.

“The fact that the market had already cracked after the Bank of Canada’s initial move in rates only reinforced how sentiment-driven the market was, and how quickly that can change,” he said, noting that qualifying rates were now climbing in tandem with actual mortgage rates under stress test rules.

Read next: Canada home prices see biggest drop since at least 2005

RBC economist Robert Hogue, meanwhile, said home prices were dropping “faster and faster,” with Ontario and parts of British Columbia posting the most significant declines and price correction beginning to spread across the country.

The MLS Home Price Index was down in Winnipeg, Montreal and Quebec City between May and June, he said, which he believes will “mark a turning point” for the housing market in Canada. 

Kavcic highlighted the influence of psychology in Canada’s housing market, emphasizing the “abrupt turnaround” that now sees more Canadians expecting lower prices than higher ones in the near future.

As of the July 8 week, only 30% of Canadians expect higher prices, according to weekly survey data from Nanos – a dramatic decline from 70% at the height of the recent housing market boom.

“The proof is that even just an initial nudge in interest rates was enough to crack expectations and trigger a correction,” he said. “The latest move by the Bank of Canada will wash away any remaining froth.”

While the possibility of a housing market crash in Canada has been discussed in recent weeks amid those cooling conditions, that’s an unlikely prospect, according to Ratehub.ca co-CEO and president of CanWise mortgage lender, James Laird (pictured top).

He told Canadian Mortgage Professional that there would still be sufficient clamour for housing among specific cohorts to render a market collapse improbable.

“I don’t think demand for housing has changed at all,” he said. “I think first-time homebuyers, millennials, Gen Z [renters] who don’t own – they still want to.

Read next: Annual pace of housing starts slows, says CMHC

“Rental rates are going up quite significantly, so even if your mortgage payment is higher with the higher rate, if the mortgage payment’s going to be the same or lower than what you have to pay to rent the same property, people are still going to make the purchase decision if they can qualify.”

Indeed, Ontario’s provincial government recently announced that its rent increase guideline for 2023 would be 2.5%, its highest in a decade and a significant jump from the 1.2% cap this year.

That trend is set to be accompanied by an immigration surge in the coming years: in February, the federal government increased its target for new permanent residents to 432,000 in 2022, with 447,055 slated to arrive next year and 451,000 in 2024.

“With close to half a million new Canadians arriving each year, one of their first priorities is housing,” Laird pointed out.

He also noted that Canada’s housing market has prior form when it comes to bouncing back quickly from a slow year, having recovered swiftly following the global financial meltdown over a decade ago.

“Looking at real estate data from 2009, the year after the financial crisis really caused real estate to slow, and I think it was even more disconnected than it is now,” he said. “The year after that was a huge year. So, whenever it stabilizes, expect it to kind of rush back.”

 

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Housing starts activity in Canada remains historically high since 2020

Monday, July 18th, 2022

Canada records over 273,000 housing starts in June

Michelle McNally
Livabl

 The number of new being built in Canada dropped slightly between May and June, but housing start levels remain at a high.

New data released by the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) shows that the standalone monthly seasonally adjusted annual rates (SAAR) of housing starts for all areas in Canada during June was 273,841 units. This marks a three per cent drop from May, when there were 282,188 unit starts nationwide.

The SAAR of total urban starts also fell three per cent over the same time period, down from 264,578 units to 257,438 units between May and June. Multi-unit urban starts decreased two per cent from 201,874 units to 197,022 units, while single-detached urban starts declined four per cent from May to June from 62,704 units to 60,416 units. Rural starts were estimated at a SAAR of 16,403 units.

CMHC defines a housing start to have been initiated when construction begins on a building where a dwelling unit is located. This tends to happen when concrete is poured for the footing around the structure or the equivalent stage when there is no basement.

“The monthly SAAR was lower in June compared to May; however, the level of housing starts activity in Canada remains historically high and well above 200,000 units since 2020,” said Bob Dugan, CMHC’s chief economist, in the monthly starts report. “The decrease in monthly SAAR housing starts in Canada’s urban areas was driven by lower single-detached starts in June.”

Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal reported a monthly increase of 27 per cent, 32 per cent and five per cent to their total SAAR starts in June, which resulted in 49,860, 32,420 and 36,469 unit starts for all housing types in each city that month.

“Vancouver, Toronto and Montreal all recorded higher total SAAR starts, driven by higher multi-unit starts except for Montreal where single-detached starts posted a higher increase,” said Dugan.

Between May and June, Thunder Bay, Guelph and Kelowna reported some of the biggest increases to their monthly SAAR starts, which rose 353 per cent, 341 per cent and 304 per cent month-to-month, respectively. Meanwhile, Saint John and Gatineau reported a 72 per cent and 82 per cent decrease in the number of their total monthly SAAR starts over the same period.

When analyzing Canadian housing starts as a long-term trend, starts grew in June. CMHC reported that the trend in housing starts was 258,295 units last month, an increase from 252,444 units in May.

The trend measure is a six-month moving average of the monthly SAAR of housing starts. CMHC says that it uses the trend measure as a “complement” to the monthly SAAR of housing starts to account for changes in monthly estimates and to gain a better picture of upcoming new housing supply. Analyzing only SAAR data can be misleading as the multi-unit segment that largely drives the market can change significantly on a monthly basis.

 

© 2020 BuzzBuzzHome Corp.

BoC’s intention to “frontload” policy rate could peak as early as September | CIBC

Monday, July 18th, 2022

Bank of Canada rate could peak in September, says CIBC economist

Fergal McAlinden
other

Could one more supersized increase conclude the central bank’s rising-rate trajectory?

 The Bank of Canada’s intention to “frontload” its path to higher rates means its policy rate could peak as early as September, according to a prominent CIBC economist.

The banking giant’s executive director and senior economist Karyne Charbonneau (pictured) told Canadian Mortgage Professional that a further oversized hike in the Bank’s next rate announcement, scheduled for September 07, could bring rates to a level they may not go beyond.

“We [CIBC] think the rates will peak at 3.25%, probably. We don’t think there’s space for this type of hike [one percentage point] anymore,” she said. “So probably a 0.75%, maybe in September, and then take a break. That’s the CIBC view at this point.

“We think that by then, the economy will be slowing significantly on these higher interest rates and still-high inflation.”

The Bank caught many analysts off guard with that full-percentage-point hike, belying expectations among market observers and economists that a 75-basis-point jump was in the offing for its July 13 announcement.

Charbonneau said that while the latest increase had come as something of a surprise, in practice the move would have a similar impact to the previously expected three-quarter-point hike.

Read next: Bank of Canada: reaction to seismic rate hike

“I think it’s not completely shocking to be honest, but it’s not what we had forecasted,” she said. “I don’t think there’s a big difference – especially since they’re talking about frontloading.

“I’m not sure it changes the finish line very much. I think they’re trying to get there faster, and the messaging in the statement was very clear. It’s also very clear why they did that: because they want to avoid inflation expectations de-anchoring.”

Canada’s housing market has already cooled noticeably under the impact of the central bank’s previous rate hikes this year, with the July increase marking its single biggest move on rates in 2022 (and largest since 1998).

The Bank has now increased its benchmark rate four times this year: first by a quarter point in March, then in two half-basis-point hikes before the latest move, which brings that trendsetting rate up to 2.5%.

That said, a housing market meltdown in light of the latest Bank move is unlikely, according to Charbonneau, particularly since the Bank’s end goal remains largely the same – although it seems to be determined to get there quicker.

“I don’t think it’s a material change [for the housing market] because of this frontloading. I think we’re just getting to pretty much the same point,” she said. “We anticipated [rates to peak at] 3%, now we’re thinking 3.25%. That’s not a huge difference.

“I think the slowdown is already well underway in the housing market. I don’t think it’ll change the path that we’re already on.”

Read next: Bank of Canada rate hikes could cause recession, says economist

The Bank’s statement made it clear that targeting inflation, which recently hit a 39-year high in Canada, remains its number one priority. It’s likely to linger around 8% in the coming months, the central bank indicated, as domestic price pressures continue to escalate amid other factors including the war in Ukraine and supply chain disruptions.

The biggest threat facing the Bank at present on that front is the risk of inflation expectations that start to run away, Charbonneau said, because that could compel it to hike rates even further than it currently intends.

Factors outside the Bank’s control that contribute to higher inflation – such as energy prices and geopolitical strife – remain a concern, with Governor Tiff Macklem emphasizing in remarks on Wednesday that the path to a desired soft landing for the economy has “narrowed.”

Still, Charbonneau said rate increases should be enough to tackle the inflation crisis, and that CIBC believed inflation could come down more rapidly than the central bank is forecasting.

The Bank said on Wednesday that inflation would start to come down later this year, declining by the end of 2023 to about 3% and returning to its target of 2% by the end of 2024.

“We think it’ll come down a bit faster than what the Bank has right now,” Charbonneau said. “I think now they have it very persistent – but certainly it could all come down quite rapidly. It’s very hard to predict, but it could, and I think everyone would be happy about that.”

 

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Canadian real estate in recent weeks has been a spike in “delistings,”

Monday, July 18th, 2022

The froth is off: Canadian houses now selling at $200K discounts

Tristin Hopper
The Vancouver Sun

The plunge is merely a correction of a Canadian real estate market that has long operated beyond any reasonable notion of economic fundamentals

 A home for sale in Mississauga, Tuesday July 5, 2022. [Photo Peter J. Thompson/National Post]

The once-red hot Canadian real estate market is beginning to witness a trend that would have been unthinkable just months ago: Homes are starting to sell at a discount.

In Victoria, a luxury five-bedroom listed at $2.25 million ended up selling at $1.93 million — a drop of $320,000. In the same month, a home on the other coast — in Halifax — sold at $140,000 below its list price of $900,000.

The Toronto suburbs, in particular, are yielding a near-daily stream of homes sold at discounts of more than $100,000.

A detached home in Mississauga, west of Toronto, went on the market in April at $1.6 million. After two months, the sellers let it go for $1.38 million.

A four-bedroom mini-mansion in Brampton, 40 km northwest of Toronto, hit the market at $1.8 million but ultimately sold for $1.5 million, a price reduction of $300,000.  A similar Brampton home spent 35 days on the market at a list price of $1.4 million before sellers accepted an offer that was more than $250,000 lower.

 

Many other sellers are rejecting low bids outright.

Another phenomenon to hit Canadian real estate in recent weeks has been a spike in “delistings,” homes that are taken off the market after failing to attract any bids. In some regions of Ontario right now, more homes have been delisted in the past 30 days than have been sold.

If sellers are chronically overestimating the values of their homes, it’s largely because Canadian home sales had spent more than a year being defined by the exact opposite phenomenon. This time in 2021, virtually every real estate market in Canada was seeing homes go to bidding wars that yielded sales up to 20 per cent higher than list prices.

In Ottawa last September, the average list price was $524,000 against an average sale price of $670,000 — indicating that the average home was being bid up by $146,000. As recently as March, Toronto was seeing bids over asking of more than $500,000.

 

The return of “sold under ask” pricing to Canadian real estate is one of the most obvious signals of a market that is entering a period of prolonged freefall. In June alone, Canadian home prices fell by 1.9 per cent, which a Royal Bank analysis called the “largest-ever one-month decline.”

“Canadian home prices are dropping faster and faster, especially in Ontario and parts of British Columbia,” it read.

The biggest driver for the decline is the looming end of cheap debt. Last week, as part of its ongoing bid to curb skyrocketing inflation, the Bank of Canada upped its overnight rate to 2.5 per cent. Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, by contrast, interest rates had sat at a rock-bottom 0.25 per cent.

Thus far, the plunge is merely a correction of a Canadian real estate market that has long operated beyond any reasonable notion of economic fundamentals. In the last 20 years, average Canadian real estate prices have risen 375 per cent nationwide — a surge that has rendered home ownership unaffordable for millions of Canadians.

 

Even homes selling “below asking” are still fetching prices up to 100 per cent higher than the values they commanded just a few years ago.

Last week, a five-bedroom outside the city limits of Fredericton, N.B., sold for $720,000 — just a touch under its list price of $725,000. In November 2019, however, that same house sold for just $475,000. Even with the “under ask” sale, that’s a rate of appreciation equivalent to nearly $8,000 per month.

In Toronto last month, the average home price stood at $1.15 million, a decline of $100,000 from the $1.25 million that had reigned just two months prior.

Nevertheless, after a fall and winter in which six-figure overbids had been routine, that “lower” price of $1.15 million is still 5.4 per cent higher than last summer.

© 2022 Vancouver Sun

Majority of metro areas rental markets went up in July

Monday, July 18th, 2022

Revealed: The most and least expensive rental markets in Canada in July

Micah Guiao
other

The report looks into the 23 most populous metros in the country

 Although there have been signs pointing to a cooling housing market, Canada’s rental markets have never been hotter as the majority of metro areas went up in monthly value in July, according to the Zumper Canadian Rent Report.

Looking into 23 of the most populous metros, Zumper.com found that 18 metro areas experienced a monthly increase in rent, five experienced a decrease and one remained flat in pricing.

Read next: Canada home prices see biggest drop since at least 2005

The most expensive markets aren’t too surprising: Vancouver continues to top the list as one-bedroom rent climbed 2.7% to $2,300, while two-bedroom rent remained flat at $3,300.

Next is Toronto, hitting a two-year high with one-bedroom rent at $2,100 and two-bedroom rent at $2,700. Burnaby comes in as the third most expensive, with one-bedroom rent at $2,060 and two-bedroom rent at $2,750.

“The majority of the priciest markets, besides Toronto, have either hit or surpassed their respective pre-pandemic rent prices, which shows that the mounting demand for rentals has not been met with enough supply in many markets,” Zumper said.

Zumper added that the upward trend is expected to continue as employment and interest rates soar amid the “summer moving season.”

Read more: Where are the most affordable places to live in Canada?

Windsor, Quebec and St. Catharines experienced the largest monthly changes in rent price as the 17th, 20th and 11th most expensive cities, respectively. In particular, Windsor saw a 6.3% jump to $1,350 for one-bedroom rent, Quebec a 6% jump to $1,060 and St. Catherines a 5.4% jump to $1,550.

Similarly, Quebec and Windsor take the lead for the largest year-on-year growth, along with Halifax in third place.

The three markets to note a slip in rent prices are Abbotsford, Kelowna and Barrie, falling 6% to $1,400, 5.7% to $1,650 and 5.1% to $1,670, respectively. Meanwhile, Saskatoon is the lone area to remain flat in its monthly one-bedroom rent at $990.

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The provincial economy is too dependent on large-scale in-migration to bring in capital, say economists

Saturday, July 16th, 2022

Analysis: B.C. has an unusual economy because it hinges so heavily on “outside money,” say economists. How long can it go on?

Douglas Todd
The Vancouver Sun

 

When 100,000 people move into B.C. and buy real estate and services “it creates the illusion that the economy is strong. But for me the question is, “Is it sustainable?,” says Don Wright, who recently retired as B.C.’s top civil servant. Photo by Jennifer Gauthier /Bloomberg

B.C.’s economy is not as healthy as it might appear, since it relies too much on housing and newcomers to keep it above water, say prominent economists and analysts.

The real estate sector makes up a much larger section of the B.C. economy than in the rest of the country. The B.C. economy is heavily reliant on large-scale flows of people arriving each year from other provinces and countries, say the specialists.

They maintain B.C. has not been effective at developing its resources, businesses and industrial capacity in a way that increases wages and improves productivity. This B.C. phenomenon, going on for two decades, puts demand pressure on housing prices.

Don Wright, former head of B.C.’s civil service, says there is a general feeling among British Columbians that the economy is healthy because unemployment is relatively low and government revenues stable.

But there is a distinct possibility the economy is not sustainable, Wright says.

B.C.’s trade deficit has been growing steadily since 2005. The province, he said, is “spending about $28 billion more per year than we are earning.”

Both Wright and David Williams, senior policy analyst for the Business Council of B.C., say the provincial economy is too dependent on large-scale in-migration to bring in capital, which fuels the housing sector and props up spending on goods and services.

Last year, according to the B.C. government, the province welcomed a record 100,000 new people. About 33,000 came from other provinces, which is the highest amount in three decades. The other 67 per cent arrived from other countries, a lower proportion than normal, and most chose Metro Vancouver.

B.C. has an unusual economy because it hinges so heavily on “outside money;” on new arrivals coming in to “buy real estate and support consumption with income earned elsewhere,” says Wright, an economist who gives presentations on the issue to Ottawa politicians and business organizations.

“In essence we are ‘exporting’ the right to reside in B.C.,” Wright says.

“This has become our largest ‘export industry.’ It accounts for more than twice the annual level of forest industry exports. In the short run, this injection of dollars does create the impression of a healthy economy, but how long can this go on?” 

 

The provincial economy is too dependent on large-scale in-migration to bring in capital, say economists. Photo by DARRYL DYCK /THE CANADIAN PRESS

The business council’s Williams generally agrees. A tremendous amount of B.C. money is going into “housing-related consumption,” he says.

But investment dollars are not flowing strongly enough into such things as new machinery and equipment and intellectual property rights, said the business economist. Those sectors can much more add to the “economy’s future productive capacity” and potentially increase stagnant wages.

In-migration should not be seen as a cure-all for the economic woes of Canada or B.C., says Williams.

He questions the way Canada, particularly B.C., depends on “record immigration levels to turbocharge population growth and housing demand.” Canadian economists believe immigration numbers have an overall neutral effect on real wages and gross domestic product per capita.

According to Stephen Punwasi, of Better Dwelling, B.C.’s economy is almost twice as reliant as neighbouring Alberta on real estate, which accounts for 20 per cent of B.C.’s GDP.

That compares to an average of 13.5 per cent across the country, a proportion that is still much higher than in the United States. If B.C.’s construction industry is included, it adds up to almost one third of B.C.’s GDP coming from real-estate related services.

Canada, and especially B.C., are “addicted” to real estate-driven growth, says Punwasi, who maintains it’s an unhealthy dependence that won’t be easy to break. 

 

Of the provinces B.C. relies the most on the residential housing sector. And if B.C.’s construction industry is included, it adds up to 30 per cent of B.C.’s GDP coming from real-estate related services.

Wright, who was NDP Premier John Horgan’s deputy minister until stepping down in 2020, cites the danger of over-relying on new arrivals.

When 100,000 people move into B.C. and buy houses and services “it creates the illusion that the economy is strong. But for me the question is, ‘Is it sustainable?,’” Wright says.

“Let’s say somebody from outside B.C. retires to Comox and buys a place. And they’ve accumulated a lot of net wealth over their life. Whenever they spend money, it’s money that’s not being earned in B.C. In the short term it’s not bad for the economy, because it creates employment when somebody goes out and eats at a restaurant.”

But Wright doesn’t think relying on imported wealth is sustainable — for two reasons.

The first is that “you only get to sell off a piece of real estate to somebody outside the province once,” he said.

“And another reason is it’s not socially sustainable: Young people cannot afford a house anymore.” And too many new real-estate units are not suitable for families.

“A whole generation is going to be frozen out of the housing market, unless they have a well-capitalized, generous bank of mom and dad.”

What might happen to B.C. “when the party stops?” Wright asks, referring to a time when newcomers stop bringing in tens of billions of dollars each year from beyond provincial borders?

B.C., he said, will need to restructure by strengthening sectors such as forestry and mining, manufacturing and high tech — all of which are capable of producing superior middle-class wages.

“We better know,” Wright says, “how to rebuild the standard of living of the next generation.”

 

© 2022 Vancouver Sun

Canada’s eight largest lenders, drop 3.8% since June 2022

Friday, July 15th, 2022

Canada’s banks battered by recession fears

Stefanie Marotta
other

It’s the biggest drop in more than two years

 Canadian bank stocks slid the most in more than two years as the first round of earnings from US lenders weighed on the outlook for the financial sector amid growing fears of a recession.

The S&P/TSX Composite Commercial Banks Index, which tracks Canada’s eight largest lenders, dropped 3.8% Thursday, the biggest drop since June 2020, after JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Morgan Stanley posted results that pointed to deteriorating prospects for the world’s largest economy.

Royal Bank of Canada, the nation’s largest lender, sank 5.6%, the most since March 2020 when the pandemic devastated markets. It has plunged 20% since its record high in January. Bank of Nova Scotia and Toronto-Dominion Bank slumped as much as 3% and 2.1% respectively. Canadian lenders are due to report earnings next month.

“The knock-on effect to Canada has been much more significant than I would have expected,” AGF Investments vice-president and portfolio manager Mike Archibald said in an interview. “Canadian banks are down as much or more than the US banks, more depending on which one you’re looking at. There’s a lot of uncertainty around what the economic environment could look like over the next six to 12 months.”

The two US banks reported worse-than-expected second-quarter earnings, with JPMorgan suspending share buybacks to bolster its capital buffer. It also added $428 million for potential sour loans, reflecting “a modest deterioration in the economic outlook.”

Meanwhile, Morgan Stanley investment banking revenue plunged 55%, more than the 47% that analysts predicted, as capital markets activity slowed.

With four major US banks set to report earnings in the next few days, investors will be assessing the degree to which lenders are bracing for the downturn and potential recession — and what that could mean for Canadian banks when they report at the end of August.

Canadian banks started the year as one of the strongest performing sectors on the S&P/TSX Composite Index, driving the market to a record high in March. Since then, fears of a recession have grown as central banks tighten monetary policy to combat accelerating inflation. That’s weighed on banks and the broader market, dragging down Canada’s equity benchmark 17% since March 29.

The Bank of Canada hiked interest rates by a full percentage point on Wednesday, a surprise move to withdraw stimulus before four-decade-high inflation becomes entrenched. A report Thursday showed Canada’s manufacturing sales fell for the first time in eight months.

 

 

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