Real Estate News

Toronto Home Sales Plunge 41% in April As Higher Rates Take Hold

The impact of higher borrowing rates is rippling through Canada’s largest regional housing market.

The latest data from the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board (TRREB) showed 8,008 properties were sold in the month of April, far below the 13,613 transactions that occurred in the same month last year. It represents a 41.2 per cent plunge.

Activity was also sharply lower on a monthly basis, with sales down 27 per cent from March.

“Based on the trends observed in the April housing market, it certainly appears that the Bank of Canada is achieving its goal of slowing consumer spending as it fights high inflation,” said Kevin Crigger, president of TRREB, in a release Wednesday.

“Negotiated mortgage rates rose sharply over the past four weeks, prompting some buyers to delay their purchase.”

All property types experienced double-digit sales declines ranging from 32 per cent to 47 per cent.

The board noted the slowdown was more pronounced in the suburbs.

While higher borrowing costs sidelined some potential buyers, it appears would-be sellers were also discouraged. New listings were down 11.7 per cent in April compared to last year.

The dampened activity led to a 3.5 per cent month-over-month decline in the average selling price of a property to $1,254,436.

Continue to read on: BNNBloomberg

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David Stoddard
David Stoddard
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