Construction cranes on condos in downtown Toronto in 2012. A new report says the condo market is not headed for a bust and sales will recover in 2014. (Pawel Dwulit/Canadian Press)
Canada’s condo market is not headed for a bust, although sales are expected to drop for 2013, according to a new report from mortgage insurer Genworth Canada and the Conference Board of Canada.
They suggests that population growth and employment gains will keep the condo market healthy enough to absorb the supply of new units.
Economists and real estate experts have expressed concern about major centres such as Vancouver, Montreal and Toronto where condo construction continues at a rapid pace, despite falling sales.
Federal Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said his department watches the condo and housing market and has acted to cool it over the past 18 months.
But the Genworth report says there is continued demand for condos, in part because they are affordable.
"Whether it's first-time homebuyers entering homeownership, empty-nesters looking to downsize, or professionals seeking a shorter commute, condos appear to remain a popular option for urban Canadians," said Brian Hurley, CEO of Genworth Canada.
On Tuesday, a report from RBC pointed out how affordable condos remain by comparison to detached homes in most cities. RBC estimated a two-storey home took an average of 48.4 per cent of Canadians’ pretax income, while a condo took about 27.9 per cent.
Robin Wiebe, a senior economist at the conference board, says softer prices in the condo market, where prices have been falling slightly, are making condos “an affordable way for Canadians to achieve homeownership."
In Vancouver, Canada’s most expensive housing market, condos are still an affordable option, he said. He calls Vancouver “a buyer's market” in 2013 because of prices moving downward over the past few years, but says sales and prices will pick up in 2014.
Toronto has a huge inventory of completed and unsold new condominiums, but Wiebe expects builders to pull back from the market in 2013 and 2014 until sales recover.
"Markets in Toronto and Montreal are cooling, but we think they will avoid major downturns, partly because, on the demand side, demographic requirements remain decent," the report says.
It predicts prices will rise in all major cities over the next two years.
A modest recovery in the Canadian economy will push employment up modestly, while populations expand, leading to an increase in demand for housing, he said. Interest rates are on the way up, but will increase only gradually, so Canadians will continue to enter the housing market, the report said.
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