Real estate up, down or flat? 5 factors that could affect home prices in 2017
Outside forces like U.S. interest rate hikes and foreign buyers play important role
By Don Pittis, CBC News Posted: Dec 29, 2016 5:00 AM ET Last Updated: Dec 29, 2016 5:00 AM ET
Here’s a look at five factors that could affect Canadian real estate in 2017.
1. U.S. Federal Reserve’s interest rates
When she increased rates by a quarter of a percentage point in December, Yellen implied there would be three more rate rises in 2017. That means prospective Canadian homebuyers should expect mortgage rates to get more expensive in the coming year, though many market commentators have expressed doubts that Yellen will move that fast.
2. Canadian economy
Predictions for the Canadian economy have been all over the map as analysts balance a resurgence in oil and gas, rising manufacturing and a weaker loonie against fears for trade in a Donald Trump-dominated North America. Last week, a British think-tank, the Centre for Economics and Business Research, predicted Canadian growth would stall at two per cent as the economy slips from 10th place to 12th, behind Indonesia and South Korea.
3. Foreign buyers
4. Construction
So far, there has been no shortage of real estate developments in Canada’s priciest cities. Nor has there been any shortage of buyers to snap up newly constructed flats. The government’s Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation and real estate analysts will be watching carefully to see whether construction and potential buyers stay in balance.
5. Government regulation
The trouble is a sudden change in rules, such as the tax on foreign buyers in Vancouver , can cause equally sudden distortions in the expected path of house prices. If prices were to begin to fall, inevitably governments could become worried about the impact on the wider economy, in which real estate has become a reliable driver of jobs and growth.
