Sagging home sales and flat prices have prompted speculation that
the “housing bubble” might be about to burst — a prospect that
immediately catches the attention of British Columbians.
But there is no housing bubble, according to Tsur Somerville, director of the University of B.C.’s Centre for Urban Economics in the Sauder School of Business.
“You
can’t burst a bubble that wasn’t there,” said Somerville. “But you can
have prices above where they should be and it not be a bubble.
For prices to go down significantly, contended Somerville, “You need
people who have to sell, either because the economy has collapsed and
they don’t have any income or developers have built a whole bunch of
units that are unsold and the bank is screaming at them or foreclosing
or something like that.” None of those conditions appears imminent.
Somerville
said it would take “some negative shock,” such as an economic meltdown
or mortgage interest rates jumping from four per cent to nine or 10 per
cent, to trigger lower prices.
“I don’t have a crystal ball but if I had to guess I would be more
likely to guess this kind of lower sales/flat prices is more likely to
continue.”
The B.C. Real Estate Association is more optimistic.
Chief economist Cameron Muir is predicting increased sales in 2013
because of continuing low interest rates, population growth and more
full-time jobs. Employment growth in the Greater Vancouver area
in the first seven months of the year, according to Muir, has been 3.5
to 4 per cent higher than the same period last year.
“I would expect to see sales pick up before the end of the year, at least on a seasonally adjusted basis,” Muir said.
Click here to read the complete article form the Vancouver Province.
Friday, October 19, 2012
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