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BC Housing Market Remained Active But Rising Interest Rates Curb Sales & Prices


Under Market Updates

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May 18th, 2022

British Columbia’s housing market remained active through March but is expected to downshift as rising interest rates curb sales and prices.

Multiple Listing Service (MLS) home sales fell 0.8% to a seasonally adjusted 9,940 units. While nearly a quarter lower than last year’s high-water mark, levels remained elevated and amounted to the third-highest same-month sales on record. Six of the 12 regional real estate board areas reported declines, with sharp drop-offs in Chilliwack (-23%), Victoria (-12%), and Kamloops (-12%) following strong February gains.

Elevated sales and low inventory kept prices firm, with an average MLS price of $1.045 million, up 15% year over year. The average price in the Greater Vancouver (-1.8%) and Fraser Valley (-7.7%) real estate board areas eased, while prices generally increased in other regions.

Composite benchmark values which adjust for housing attributes remained positive.

While the market remains strong, a slowdown is anticipated due to affordability erosion from the triple whammy of higher interest rates, home prices and general inflation. Fixed rates have already climbed to above 3.6% to lift mortgage stress-test thresholds, while variable mortgage rates will continue to move higher as the Bank of Canada hikes rates. Elevated first-quarter activity was buoyed by buyers looking to use lower rate pre-approvals. Adding to this pressure will be a decline in households looking to move further to suburban markets and smaller urban areas as more workplaces require employees to return to the office more frequently.

MLS home sales fell 20.1% to 26,577 units from a year ago through the first quarter, while the average price rose 20% to $1.086 million.

BC consumer spending slipped in February with retail sales down 0.9% to a seasonally adjusted $8.22 billion marking a second decline in five months. Year over year, sales were up a scant 0.2% compared with 0.9% in January, reflecting a flat sales environment for nearly all of 2021 and strong growth in 2020 as spending rotated toward services, tourism and event spending. •

Hot BC Housing Market Set to Cool by Bryan Yu | BIV

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