
The group also said average prices broke records in Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland and Labrador. British Columbia continued to have the highest average house price at $446,893 in June, though that was down from $454,962 in May. The biggest 12-month jump in average June prices was seen in Saskatchewan, where prices rose 34.9 per cent from June 2006 to $180,934. Alberta has the next-largest increase among the provinces, with a 12-month jump of 24.7 per cent to $364,072.
On July 10, the Bank of Canada boosted its key overnight interest rate by one-quarter of a percentage point to 4.50 per cent. The increase was the first hike by the bank since May 2006, and economists expect the bank will boost rates again in September. "Higher interest rates and additional housing price increases will gradually impact affordability and housing demand over the second half of the year," said CREA economist Gregory Klump.
1 comment:
Hi,
Thank you for providing the data. It certainly is interesting to see the numbers.
I am wondering, is there a way to see the stats as price/square-foot? Do you know where I could find this information? Per area and as a whole Lower Mainland would be nice.
Thanks.
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