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Lower Mainland detached housing market values holding steady: report

Burnaby, Coquitlam and Port Coquitlam are among Metro Vancouver's most durable areas.
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Detached home values in the Lower Mainland are holding steady.

Detached house market values in West Vancouver and Vancouver’s west side are bucking downward price trends while Burnaby, Coquitlam and Port Coquitlam markets are proving durable, a new RE/MAX Canada report says.

In addition to examining Ontario communities, the 2022 RE/MAX Hot Pocket Communities Report released Aug. 18 looked closely at municipalities across the Metro Vancouver region.

"Buyer sentiment changed virtually overnight as growing geopolitical concerns and spiralling inflation destabilized global markets, leaving the Bank of Canada little option but to raise interest rates," says Christopher Alexander, president at RE/MAX Canada, in a statement. "Those fast and furious incremental increases placed downward pressure on housing sales and prices, improving affordability on one hand, but eroding it on the other."

The report said while detached housing values showed substantial year-over-year gains in the first half of 2022, successive increases to the Bank of Canada's overnight rate put a damper on price appreciation in the second quarter (Q2) of the year in both the Greater Toronto and Vancouver regions.

The central bank surprised market watchers July 13 with a hike of 100 basis points, bringing its target for the overnight rate up to 2.5 per cent.

RE/MAX said at the time it was the bank’s biggest move since 1998, and the fourth in a series of increases expected for 2022, as the bank tried to tamp down the soaring inflation rate.

The study found core markets in Vancouver’s west side and West Vancouver/Howe Sound also bucked the downward price trend in terms of preliminary estimates of Q2 median values, posting increases of 2.4 per cent and 8.2 per cent, respectively. 

Further north, Squamish and the Sunshine Coast also held steady, with no value changes reported between the first and second quarters.

However, 75 per cent of Greater Vancouver markets experienced a downturn in second median values, coming off peak levels reported in 2022’s first quarter.

Most of the declines reported were below 10 percent, with one outlier — Whistler/Pemberton, which fell by just over 16 per cent.

In the Fraser Valley, percentage declines in average price ranged from a low of just over three per cent in Langley to a high of close to 13 per cent in Delta-North between the first and second quarter.

The report found Burnaby, Coquitlam and Port Coquitlam to be among Metro Vancouver’s most durable areas.

These established communities are drawing purchasers who are looking for affordable detached housing with good accessibility to the downtown core, with preliminary estimates of the Q2 median values ranging from just $1.44 million in Port Coquitlam to $2.12 million in Burnaby.

North Vancouver and Squamish have also held up well, with both experiencing rapid growth well before it was further accelerated by the pandemic.

The report said market shifts could be good for condo owners looking to jump to a detached home or detached owners looking to upsize.

The report explained that the 'spread' — the difference between an existing property’s selling price and the purchase price of a new one — has narrowed. So, with mortgage portability, the move can work in favour of the buyer. “Condominium and strata owners have also seen benefits in the 'spread' as values for their apartments and townhomes have remained relatively stable, while detached housing values have softened,” the report said.

The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver was not immediately available for comment.

The board did report Aug. 3 that the region’s housing market has entered a cycle marked by quieter homebuyer demand and a gradual rise in the supply of homes for sale.

The board said detached home sales in July 2022 reached 523, a 50.2 per cent decrease from the 1,050 detached sales recorded in July 2021.

The benchmark price for a detached home is $2,000,600. This represents a 11 per cent increase from July 2021 and a 2.8 per cent decrease compared to June 2022, the board said.

Sales of apartment homes reached 1,060 in July 2022, a 36.4 per cent decrease compared to the 1,666 sales in July 2021, the board said.

The benchmark price of an apartment home is $755,000, an 11.4 per cent increase from July 2021 and a 1.5 per cent decrease compared to June 2022.

Attached home sales in July 2022 totalled 304, a 50.2 per cent decrease compared to the 610 sales in July 2021. The benchmark price of an attached home is $1,096,500, a 15.8 per cent increase from July 2021 and a 1.7 per cent decrease compared to June 2022.

jhainsworth@glaciermedia.ca

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