Canada Home Sales Fall for First Time in Six Months After Hikes

Canadian home sales fell for the first time in six months as the Bank of Canada’s resumption of its rate-hiking campaign started to dampen the market’s nascent rebound.

(Bloomberg) — Canadian home sales fell for the first time in six months as the Bank of Canada’s resumption of its rate-hiking campaign started to dampen the market’s nascent rebound.

The number of homes trading hands in Canada fell 0.7% in July from the month before, the first decline in transactions since January, according to seasonally adjusted data released Tuesday by the Canadian Real Estate Association.

But a persistent shortage of homes for sale kept inventory tight, pushing benchmark prices up 1.1% to C$754,800 ($561,000) from the previous month, the data show.

Canada’s central bank raised its benchmark interest rate in both June and July as the country faced a stubbornly high rate of inflation and an unexpectedly strong rebound in its housing market.

Canada is grappling with a persistent mismatch between its immigrant-driven population growth and the much slower pace of new home construction, putting upward pressure on prices.

Read More: Homebuyers Who Think Prices Only Go Up Foil BOC Inflation Fight

In July, the number of homes being put on the market rose 5.6% from the previous month, the real estate association data show.

This helped the sales-to-new listings ratio, one measure of market tightness, ease to 59.2%, indicating a loosening of conditions.

Months of inventory — another measure of supply and demand estimating how long it would take the market to work through all the current listings given the pace of sales —  rose to 3.2 from 3.1 in June.

Still, that measure remained below its long-term average and was a full month below where it was at the beginning of this year, the real estate board said.

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