House prices in Canada rose by 5.2 per cent in May compared to last year.
Prices jumped in all five markets followed by the Canadian Real Estate Association?s Home Price Index. Greater Toronto led the way, with prices up by 7.9 per cent. Calgary and Greater Vancouver followed with rises of 4.8 per cent and 3.3 per cent respectively.
Year-over-year gains had been slowing through the end of last year, adds the report, and have stabilized at close to five per cent so far this year.
Year-over-year price gains again picked up speed in Calgary, with May marking the largest year-over-year gain there in nearly two years. The increase lifted the MLS? HPI for Calgary to its highest level since August 2008.
By contrast, year-over-year gains continued to shrink in Greater Vancouver and the Fraser Valley. Price gains in Greater Toronto and Montreal held their ground in May compared to April. Greater Toronto also remains the hottest market tracked by the index, with single family homes in its urban core continuing to sell briskly.
?While price gains overall are running steady, diverging trends among local markets show clearly that all real estate is truly local,? said Wayne Moen, CREA President. ?Because price trends are different between markets and within them, anyone buying or selling a home should consult with their REALTOR? to best understand how the housing market is shaping up locally.?
Among the Benchmark housing types tracked by the index, two-storey single family homes continued posting the strongest year-over-year growth in May (6.7%). Gains for one-storey single family homes (5.8%) also surpassed the rise in the overall index, while townhouses and apartments saw more modest gains (3.3% and 2.95 respectively).
?Home price gains in Greater Toronto continue to eclipse those in other markets. Gains are also starting to pick up speed in Calgary after months of stability,? said Gregory Klump, CREA?s Chief Economist. ?As always, prospects for home price trends depend on buyers? willingness to pay and sellers? expectations and motivations, both of which are tied to economic, labour market, and interest rate prospects. With European sovereign debt and banking issues likely to cloud the global economic outlook, Canadian interest rates will remain at or very near current levels. The continuation of low interest rates will continue to support Canadian housing activity and prices for some time to come.?
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