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Supply Remains an Issue Despite Impact of Higher Mortgage Rates

Toronto Regional Real Estate Board
Toronto Regional Real Estate Board

TRREB Calls on Municipal Election Candidates to Remain Focused on Addressing Housing Affordability

TORONTO, Oct. 05, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The Greater Toronto Area (GTA) housing market continued its adjustment to higher borrowing costs in September 2022. Sales for the month reached 5,038, but were down by 44.1 per cent compared to September 2021.

New listings were also down on a year-over-year basis by 16.7 per cent to 11,237. This was the lowest number of new listings reported for the month of September since 2002. This is especially troublesome given that the stock of homes in the GTA increased markedly over the last 20 years.

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Recent polling by Ipsos Public Affairs for TRREB1 suggests that the public agrees the lack of housing supply is a key issue in the GTA. The poll found that 71 per cent of combined Toronto and ‘905’ regions residents believe that municipalities should focus their efforts on increasing the supply of homes for sale and rent rather than trying to reduce demand for housing.

“We must ensure that the temporary dip in housing demand is not allowed to mask the critical shortage of homes available for sale in the GTA. Candidates running in the upcoming Ontario municipal elections must ensure home buyers and renters have adequate housing options in the years to come. Municipal council decisions have a direct impact on housing affordability, in terms of the protracted development approval processes, high development fees and other related policies that preclude timely housing development,” said TRREB President Kevin Crigger.

“Elected councils must also reconsider existing policies that preclude homeowners from listing their homes for sale, including significant added upfront costs like the land transfer tax. Potential new policies like mandatory home energy audits could also create unnecessary interference and delays in the home selling process and dissuade some homeowners from listing their homes for sale,” said TRREB CEO John DiMichele.

“Energy audits should be voluntary, a feeling which is supported 73 per cent of Torontonians and 78 per cent of ‘905’ residents recently polled by Ipsos Public Affairs for TRREB. If councils continue to support policies that restrict new home development and existing home listings, such as exclusionary zoning, housing affordability will be severely hampered over the long term, which will also hamper our region’s future growth,” added DiMichele.

The MLS® Home Price Index (HPI) Composite benchmark was up on a year-over-year basis by 4.3 per cent. Over the same period of time, the average price dipped by 4.3 per cent to $1,086,762. The average price was up compared to August 2022.

“Hovering just below $1.1 million, the average selling price may have found some support during the last couple months of summer. With new listings down quite substantially year-over-year and well-below historic norms, some home buyers are quite possibly experiencing tighter market conditions in some GTA neighbourhoods. October generally represents the peak of the fall market, so it will be important to see where price trends head over the next month,” said TRREB Chief Market Analyst Jason Mercer.

To learn more about the housing affordability issues affecting GTA residents, visit GiveMeOptions.ca

Summary of TRREB MLS® System Sales and Average Price September 1–30, 2022

 

2022

2021

 

Sales

Average Price

New Listings

Sales

Average Price

New Listings

City of Toronto ("416")

1,744

1,061,876

4,493

3,387

1,090,422

5,958

Rest of GTA ("905")

3,294

1,099,938

6,744

5,623

1,161,895

7,536

GTA

5,038

1,086,762

11,237

9,010

1,135,027

13,494


TRREB MLS® System Sales & Average Price by Home Type September 1–30, 2022

 

Sales

Average Price

 

416

905

Total

416

905

Total

Detached

497

1,837

2,334

1,585,589

1,310,639

1,369,186

Yr./Yr. % Change

-44.3%

-38.7%

-40.0%

-11.0%

-9.5%

-10.2%

Semi-Detached

180

321

501

1,210,715

949,142

1,043,120

Yr./Yr. % Change

-44.4%

-35.4%

-39.0%

-7.3%

-4.2%

-6.5%

Townhouse

171

659

830

943,922

890,608

901,592

Yr./Yr. % Change

-53.0%

-44.5%

-46.5%

1.3%

-1.4%

-0.9%

Condo Apartment

875

442

1,317

769,058

655,117

730,818

Yr./Yr. % Change

-51.0%

-49.2%

-50.4%

3.4%

3.3%

3.2%


September 2022 Year-Over-Year Per Cent Change in the MLS® HPI

 

Composite (All Types)

Single-Family Detached

Single-Family
Attached

Townhouse

Apartment

TRREB Total

4.25%

1.85%

3.55%

7.70%

13.31%

Halton Region

0.03%

-0.75%

1.13%

1.22%

5.53%

Peel Region

5.30%

3.39%

3.78%

9.30%

17.57%

City of Toronto

5.21%

1.20%

1.79%

10.71%

12.52%

York Region

6.74%

4.48%

7.86%

9.03%

17.72%

Durham Region

1.76%

1.06%

1.41%

7.47%

15.12%

Orangeville

3.12%

0.87%

2.99%

13.15%

24.41%

South Simcoe County1

0.00%

-0.88%

3.20%

7.36%

19.58%

Source:Toronto Regional Real Estate Board
1South Simcoe includes Adjala-Tosorontio, Bradford West Gwillimbury, Essa, Innisfil and New Tecumseth

Please note the methodology used to calculate MLS® HPI has been changed. For more information, click HERE.

Year-to-Date Summary of TRREB MLS® System Sales and Average Price September 2022

 

2022

2021

 

Sales

Average Price

New Listings

Sales

Average Price

New Listings

City of Toronto ("416")

22,951

1,157,553

46,268

33,744

1,047,312

51,700

Rest of GTA ("905")

39,687

1,245,007

83,234

63,160

1,096,182

87,930

GTA

62,638

1,212,963

129,502

96,904

1,079,164

139,630


YTD TRREB MLS® System Sales & Average Price by Home Type September 2022

 

Sales

Average Price

 

416

905

Total

416

905

Total

Detached

6,234

21,698

27,932

1,837,880

1,504,878

1,579,199

Yr./Yr. % Change

-30.2%

-38.5%

-36.8%

8.0%

12.8%

12.1%

Semi-Detached

2,117

3,718

5,835

1,403,395

1,095,549

1,207,239

Yr./Yr. % Change

-31.8%

-36.5%

-34.8%

9.5%

17.4%

14.5%

Townhouse

2,297

8,245

10,542

1,052,511

997,078

1,009,156

Yr./Yr. % Change

-38.2%

-37.4%

-37.5%

13.6%

17.9%

16.9%

Condo Apartment

12,128

5,633

17,761

791,186

716,562

767,519

Yr./Yr. % Change

-31.8%

-31.2%

-31.6%

12.1%

19.5%

14.1%

Source: Toronto Regional Real Estate Board

Seasonally Adjusted TRREB MLS® Sales and Average Price1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sales

Month-over-Month
% Chg.

Average Price

Month-over-Month %
Chg.

September '21

9,311

-1.1%

$1,140,007

2.0%

October '21

9,925

6.6%

$1,155,104

1.3%

November '21

9,335

-5.9%

$1,181,226

2.3%

December '21

8,983

-3.8%

$1,210,375

2.5%

January '22

8,645

-3.8%

$1,272,097

5.1%

February '22

9,163

6.0%

$1,285,129

1.0%

March '22

7,876

-14.0%

$1,252,680

-2.5%

April '22

6,631

-15.8%

$1,204,076

-3.9%

May '22

6,074

-8.4%

$1,172,093

-2.7%

June '22

5,780

-4.8%

$1,138,924

-2.8%

July '22

5,296

-8.4%

$1,107,613

-2.7%

August '22

5,885

11.1%

$1,130,463

2.1%

September '22

5,248

-10.8%

$1,099,668

-2.7%


Source: Toronto Regional Real Estate Board; CREA Seasonal Adjustment. 1 Preliminary seasonal adjustment undertaken by the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA).  Removing normal seasonal variations allows for more meaningful analysis of monthly changes and underlying trends.

READ THE FULL REPORT.

___________________________
Notes
1 This Ipsos poll was commissioned by TRREB. Polling took place between September 12 to September 27, 2022, and was conducted online via Ipsos’ i-Say panel. There was a total of n=1002 respondents, n=515 GTA 416 and n=486 from GTA 905. The margin of error with this sample size is +/- 3.5 percentage points.

Media Inquiries:
Genevieve Grant, Manager, Public Affairs genevieve.grant@trreb.ca 416-443-8159

The Toronto Regional Real Estate Board is Canada’s largest real estate board with more than 68,000 residential and commercial professionals connecting people, property and communities.

www.trreb.ca/

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