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Canadian housing prices continue to rise

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Posted on August 31, 2011

 

Canadian housing prices continue to rise

 

 

 

Scott Olson/Getty Images

 

Canadian house prices were up 1.7% in June compared with the previous month.

 

Eric Lam Aug 31, 2011 – 9:42 AM ET

 

Canada’s economy may have hit the skids in June but house prices across the country still jumped almost 2%, the biggest one-month increase in two years, the latest Teranet-National Bank National Composite House Price Index report said Wednesday.

 

Canadian house prices were up 1.7% in June compared with the previous month, the biggest month-on-month jump since August 2009 taking the index to a new all-time high of 144.27, the report said.

 

This is the third straight monthly increase of more than 1% and the seventh straight rise in a row. The index is also up 4.5% compared with a year ago.

 

The news comes the same day Statistics Canada reported the Canadian economy actually shrank 0.4% annualized in the second quarter, the first contraction since mid-2009.

 

Prices were up in all six major metropolitan markets surveyed, with Toronto leading the pack at a 2.0% increase. Vancouver and Ottawa came in at +1.7%, while Calgary posted a 1.6% rise, Montreal +1.1% and Halifax +1.0%.

 

This is the ninth-straight monthly increase for Vancouver, and all-time index highs for five of the six cities.

 

Calgary is 10.9% off its all-time high in August 2007.

 

Since Teranet first started tracking prices in June 2005 with a base level of 100, home prices have jumped 44.27%.

 

The Vancouver index leads the pack at 167.77, suggesting prices have gone up 67.77% since 2005.

 

Toronto, meanwhile, has the lowest index rating at 131.26, meaning prices have accelerated only 31.26% in that time.

 

Posted in: Real Estate Tags: Canadian house prices, Statistics Canada, Teranet, Teranet-National Bank Composite House Price Index

 

 



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