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Homebuying bidding wars not decreasing in Metro Vancouver: CMHC poll

Market may have slowed in past 18 months, but just as many Metro 鶹ýӳhomebuyers are entering bidding wars, finds survey
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The Metro 鶹ýӳreal estate market may have slowed down over the past 18 months, but that doesn’t mean the dreaded bidding war is dead.

According to a survey released June 13 by the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. (CMHC), just as many people who bought a home in fall 2018 said they had entered a bidding war as those who purchased during the busy real estate market of 2017.

Overall, 55 per cent of Metro 鶹ýӳhomebuyers surveyed in 2018 said they were engaged in a bidding war, which is the same percentage as in the 2017 survey.

However, it’s worth noting that the survey doesn’t include buyers who have purchased more recently, in the slow spring market of 2019.

In 2018, 51 per cent of Metro 鶹ýӳhomebuyers who purchased single-detached homes were engaged in a bidding war, and 58 per cent of Metro 鶹ýӳhomebuyers who purchased a condominium were engaged in a bidding war, according to the 2018 results. These were the exact same results as in 2017.

The survey also asked buyers about factors that they believe have influence on the housing market in their region, and the spectre of the foreign buyer remains in the forefront, despite rapidly falling foreign buyer numbers and the 2016-launched foreign buyer tax.

In the new survey, 70 per cent of Metro 鶹ýӳhomebuyers surveyed felt foreign investors had “a lot of influence” on house prices in the region, compared with 68 per cent in 2017.

cmhc home buyers poll influence on market June 2019
These results showed the proportion of respondents who agreed that these factors had "a lot of influence in the housing market" in a survey by CMHC in fall 2018. Source: CMHC

Fewer than half (47 per cent) said they felt land scarcity had a lot of influence on prices, down from 53 per cent the previous year. And 46 per cent felt population growth had a lot of influence on house prices in the region, down from 51 per cent in 2017.