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B.C. home sales continue to climb, hitting highest activity level in nearly two years

B.C. home sales remained on an upswing in October with MLS sales up 1.3% from September and 16% year-over-year.

 B.C. home sales remained on an upswing in October  2019. Photo: Houses for sale in Vancouver. File photoHome sales took a big hit in October

B.C. home sales remained on an upswing in October with Multiple Listing Service (MLS) sales up 1.3% from September and 16% year-over-year to a seasonally adjusted 7,304 units.

This was a fourth straight monthly gain, and a seventh over the past eight months. Momentum since the spring has lifted activity to the highest level since January 2018.

That said, performances were mixed across regions. Growth was led by the Lower Mainland, which posted a gain of 5%; Kamloops (up 7.7%), and north and central Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­Island (up 5%). In contrast, sales slipped by 5% in Victoria, the Okanagan markets and northern B.C. Despite declines in some areas, the trend remains positive in most markets as low mortgage rates, modest economic growth and rising populations underpin demand for housing.

Provincially, the sales-to-active-listings ratio rose to 21% (seasonally adjusted), which is firmly planted in a balanced market and pointing to tightening of market conditions and rising price pressure. The Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­Island and the Fraser Valley markets favour sellers while Greater Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­is flirting with seller’s-market territory, although strength is in the more affordable multi-family sector.

The average provincial MLS price rose 1.4% from August to $729,024 and 3.8% from a year ago. Composition effects are a factor due to the stronger sales pickup in higher-priced markets. Nevertheless, average and benchmark prices have risen in many markets, reflecting the tightening of market conditions following more than a year of softness. Annual MLS sales are forecast to come in mildly lower than 2018 by 3.8%, with upward momentum lifting 2020 sales to 87,000 units. The average provincial price settles at $692,000 with a gain of 3.3% to $715,000 forecast next year.

Let’s call this the big build. Non-residential construction in B.C. continued to trend at a strong pace, according to the latest data. The value of building permits issued in September reached $655.1 million, marking a 63% bounce-back following an August decline. While monthly permit data is volatile given the impact large projects and structures can have on values, the trend remains significantly higher than a year ago.

Year-to-date, volume rose 35% through the first three quarters of 2019, with the Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­census metropolitan area (up 37%) and Kelowna (up 40%) driving much of the increase.

Bryan Yu is deputy chief economist at Central 1 Credit Union.