Housing prices in Canada have garnered interest well beyond its borders as prices continue to surprise the experts on the upside. Earlier this year, the Canadian housing market caught the attention of the International Monetary Fund. The Fund warned of “significant” risks to future growth due to the potential for a housing market decline that would ultimately impair bank balance sheets and spread to the broader economy. [1] Canadian banks’ portfolios of uninsured mortgages and home equity loans are nearly 4 times regulatory capital, a figure that some consider too high in such a frothy market. Despite all the hand-wringing about household debt in Canada, Toronto housing prices have been on a very steady, but aggressive, upward motion. And, despite a temporary retreat this past summer, average prices in Vancouver and Toronto remain at very elevated levels
The most recent study by the Federal agency, the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC), concludes, oddly, that there are “puzzling” dynamics in the Toronto market. [2] According to the CMHC study, “while price increases in Vancouver have largely been supported by economic fundamentals, a more puzzling result points to the state of the Toronto market, where fundamentals haven’t been as strong.” What is really puzzling is this last statement.If anything, the Toronto market is totally driven by fundamental forces, not speculative forces as hinted in the CMHC report.
Realtors and developers will argue that there are a constant set of fundamental factors that drive the market in both major cities: