Posthaste: Toronto's housing market has an Achilles heel that could cool prices for months to come

Condos headed for biggest pullback in two decades, forecast warns

Toronto’s housing market has ground to a halt and so far not even the forces of Bank of Canada interest rate cuts have been able to revive it.

Housing market conditions in the Greater Toronto Area are the softest they have been since the 2008 recession, outside the pandemic, says National Bank economist Darren King.

And though home sales here inched up 0.6 per cent in August from the month before, they are still an “astounding” 32 per cent below pre-pandemic levels, said Royal Bank of Canada economist Robert Hogue.

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Economists believe that sales will eventually pick up as the Bank of Canada continues to cut rates, but growth in average prices could still lag behind.

A big reason for this is Toronto’s glut of condos up for sale, said Rishi Sondhi, an economist with TD Economics.

Over the past year condo listings have climbed to about 30 per cent above normal levels, while sales are 25 per cent lower than before the pandemic.

The sales-to-active listings ratio in the GTA condo market, which measures the balance of supply and demand, is 60 per cent below the long-term average, “meaning there was too little demand chasing too much supply,” he said.

There are myriad reasons for this state of affairs. Higher interest rates have made it difficult for some buyers to close on their mortgage and investors, many of whom are losing money on their rentals, are listing more properties.  A recent wave of condo completions is also adding to supply.

To add to these problems, the job market is weakening. (Toronto has one of the highest unemployment rates in Canada, see below.)

Sondhi expects sales won’t climb back to pre-pandemic levels until next year and this will put more pressure on benchmark condo prices, which already have fallen 5 per cent since the third quarter of 2023.

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If condo prices suffer another mid-to-high single-digit decline between now and early next year as TD forecasts, it will be the longest pullback since 2000. It would also be the steepest price plunge in over 20 years, possibly larger than the decline during the global financial crisis.

There is context needed here though, Sondhi stresses. Even with the retrenchment, condo prices are still about 20 per cent above pre-pandemic levels.

All in all, TD expects condo prices to continue to fall, keeping average home price growth in Toronto and by extension Ontario “subpar” into next year.

But there are risks on both sides. The jobs market could weaken more than expected, and the near record number of condos under construction in the Greater Toronto Area could further swell the supply glut and push prices down even more than TD forecasts, said Sondhi.

On the positive side, sellers could pull their units off the market and tighten supply or pent-up demand could reach a tipping point as rates come down and buyers could rush back to market.

Only time will tell.


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Unemployment rate rises in most large cities

Windsor, Ont., has the highest unemployment rate in Canada, jobs data showed Friday, climbing from 6 per cent last August to 9.2 per cent in the latest reading.

The 3.2 percentage point jump was also the biggest in the country, followed by Oshawa, Ont., where the jobless rate rose from 5.3 per cent last year to 7.8 per cent.

Edmonton registered the second highest rate in Canada at 8.6 per cent, up 2.4 percentage points, followed by Toronto at 8 per cent.

Victoria had the lowest in the country at 3.3 per cent, followed by Quebec City at 4 per cent.

Nationally, the unemployment rate rose to 6.6 per cent in August, the highest since May 2017, outside of the pandemic.


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