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Raising rates put B.C. housing “a path to normalizing” as prices and sales slide in April

Real estate association says higher interest rates pushing B.C. home sales back toward normal

The Canadian Press
CBC Radio

 April numbers from the B.C. Real Estate Association show a decreases in home sales of 34.9 per cent from the record high set in April last year. (Ben Nelms/CBC News)

The British Columbia Real Estate Association says the sharp increase in mortgage rates is pushing the province’s home sales down “a path to normalizing,” although it estimates a balanced market is at least a year away.

The association has released the B.C. home sales figures for April, showing 8,939 properties changed hands last month, a decrease of 34.9 per cent from the record high set in April last year.

However, prices continue to climb, averaging $1.065 million in April, a 12.9 per cent increase over the same period in 2021.

Association chief economist Brendon Ogmundson says fewer homes are listed for sale, meaning market conditions remain tight, but listings are “starting to accumulate” in some markets.

The April report shows the number of sales to active listings still remains far above 20 per cent in all B.C. regions, putting continued upward pressure on prices.

The association says provincial active listings were 7.5 per cent lower in April than in the same month last year, but Ogmundson predicts the trend will reverse as demand fades.

“Canadian mortgages have sharply increased, surpassing four per cent for the first time in a decade,” said Ogmundson.

“With interest rates rising, demand across B.C. is now on a path to normalizing,” he said in the statement released Thursday.

 

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