B.C. housing affordability continues eroding Print E-mail
Tuesday, 25 May 2010
ImageA surge in B.C. housing costs mean affordability is being washed away, according to an RBC economics research report released this morning.

The report found home affordability measures had risen more in B.C. than in any other Canadian province during the first quarter of 2010.

The RBC housing affordability measure is based on the costs of owning a benchmark detached bungalow in B.C. and captures the province’s proportion of pre-tax household income needed to meet those costs. A higher measure means a loss of affordability.

The measure for detached bungalows in B.C. rose 4% to 66% when compared with the fourth quarter of 2009.

"We’re probably past the peak, but still it is a market that has quite a bit of momentum. When you have prices at essentially record levels it does negatively impact affordability,” Robert Hogue, RBC’s senior economist, told BIV this morning.

The loss of housing affordability was a common theme across Canada except in Alberta where provincial housing prices have remained stable over the last year.

Resale activity in B.C. recovered to pre-downturn levels by the end of 2009 and affordability measures are now close to 2008’s all-time highs. That injects an element of risk into the province’s housing market, the report said.

Further erosion in affordability is expected during the next 12 to 18 months, but with mortgage rates expected to rise in the next year-and-a-half the market could slow. The introduction of HST has also prompted buyers to snatch up homes sooner than they would have.

“Buyers are looking at interest rate increases they want to beat, so with the higher interest rates we’re expecting demand to cool,” Hogue said, adding that affordability improvements are unlikely in the near term.

This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it




Share it:
Facebook!TwitterDel.icio.us!Google!Technorati!
 
< Prev   Next >

About Business in Vancouver

BIVBusiness in Vancouver is an award-winning weekly newspaper serving Greater Vancouver since 1989. Designed for business decision-makers, it provides local business news and information to the Lower Mainland's business leaders every week, and online every day.

For subscribers only:

Register here to have our local business news newsletters, weekly ordaily, emailed to you.

Business leaders get it.

Business in Vancouver is much more than a few news stories. Online access to over 15 years of news archives and in-depth magazine publications give you local business intelligence for that extra edge that will help you stay informed, educated, and successful. Lists and directories with the contact information of the people who make the important decisions give you resources you need to keep your business growing.

Click here to take a six-week trial subscription to Business in Vancouver, and see for yourself.

Other business resources online: 

Email newsletter

Put in your email address to receive daily business news updates:


Click here now for a free trial subscription!


Stay in touch:

twitter iconfacebook
Get notifications through
Twitter or Facebook


BIV Events:

2010 Colour Series: BLUE Breakfast
Registration now open! Speakers include Dean Gagnon of Citymax.com and Judy Brooks, co-founder Blo Blow Dry Bar

2010 Forty under 40 Awards
Still accepting nominations. Deadline: September 10th at midnight

12th Annual Influential Women in Business Awards
Nominations now open! Submit a nomination package today

Make contacts

Download leads for your marketing in Excel

Business in Vancouver's directory databases provide key contact information on thousands of companies in over 50 business sectors. Databases are compiled from our most popular annual publications including BCTech, Book of Lists, AdPages and Meeting Places. Order and start using your new lists right away. Download BIV lists as Excel files.

© 2010 www.bivinteractive.com