Tag Archives: Home Ownership

What To Do When Housing Prices Fall

It appears as though the seemingly infinite rise of Canadian housing prices has finally come to an end. After years of marvelling at record breaking list prices and historically low mortgage rates, the tides have finally shifted. Phrases like “cooling market” and “slow sales” are gracing national headlines, causing buyers and sellers alike to contemplate the repercussions.

If we’re to believe what the experts are saying, real estate in Canada has hit a tipping point. According to the Canadian Real Estate Association, sales are down a staggering 30 percent compared to last years numbers. What’s more, the average house price has dropped by roughly 3.5 percent since July.  Continue reading

New Barriers for First-time Home Buyers

It’s no secret that the residential real estate market relies on a steady stream of first-time home buyers. A constant and consistent demand from young buyers is what keeps housing prices from declining.

Unfortunately, new mortgage rules are making it harder for cash-strapped buyers to qualify for current real estate prices. In a logical economy, housing prices would have to drop in order for new home buyers to handle the restrictions. But as we all know, things are rarely rational when it comes to the economy. Continue reading

Canadian Housing Market at Tipping Point

According to economists at the Bank of Nova Scotia, Canada will soon boast a more than 70 percent homeownership rate. The question now is whether or not the nation’s housing market has reached the tipping point (the United States is believed to have cracked the same 70 percent threshold just before the housing bubble burst in 2008).

Growing concern over Canada’s seemingly out-of-control housing market has already prompted Ottawa to crack down on mortgage rules. These restrictions, which include limiting amortizations to 25 years, are designed to disuade cash-strapped Canadians from taking on mortgage debt that they can’t afford. What’s more, the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions has also implemented new rules that will tighten up lending regulations at financial institutions. Continue reading

Consumer Debt Hits A New High

A report released this morning by TransUnion shows that, despite repeated warnings, Canadians are back on the borrowing bandwagon, pushing consumer debt to a new record high.

According to the report, the average Canadian’s non-mortgage debt hit $26,221 in the second quarter of 2012, up $192 from the previous quarter. This is the highest per person debt level since the credit bureau started tracking this type of data back in 2004.

The increase in average debt spanned the country, although Saskatchewan reported a slight dip on a quarterly basis and Alberta recorded a decreased annual debt growth. Continue reading

Are Two Addresses Better Than One?

Whether it’s a cottage in the Muskokas or a vacation home in Cabo, multiple homeownership is becoming more and more common among wealthy Canadians. Now, more than ever, Canadians are picking up secondary properties, many of them south of the border. While statistics are hard to come buy, numbers from the National Association of Realtors show that foreign buyers are having a big impact on the United States housing market… and many of these buyers are Canadian.

International buyers purchased roughly $82.5 billion worth of property in the U.S. in the year ending March 31, 2012, compared to $66 billion the previous year. Canadians are estimated to represent about a quarter of those buyers.  Continue reading