Prices for Ottawa second-quarter home resales rose 2.9 per cent in the second quarter, according to Royal Bank of Canada, which put prices in line with the 10-year average for that metric.
With home prices sticking mostly to the same rises as the national average, save for a moderate decline in condos, this means that affordability remains steady for homebuyers in the national capital, the bank said in a report.
“Home prices increased at essentially the same rate as the average for Canada for most housing types in the latest quarter,” RBC wrote in the report.
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“This meant that housing affordability also eroded by roughly the same (small) magnitude as occurred nationally in the second quarter – with the exception of the condominium apartment category, where affordability slightly improved in Ottawa while remaining flat overall in Canada.”
Two-storey and bungalow housing in Ottawa saw affordability decrease by 0.5 percentage points each (to 38.8 per cent and 37.1 per cent respectively), while condos increased by 0.3 percentage points to 25.2.
The report also found that, nationally, home ownership has become less affordable for the average Canadian, but that hasn’t stopped many from jumping into what may already be an overpriced market.
Royal Bank (TSX:RY) says its housing affordability index reversed course in the second quarter of this year in two of the three categories it measures – bungalows and two-storey homes – after generally improving over the past year.
That means that on average, Canadians were paying more of the pre-tax income to service their homes compared to the first quarter of the year, although the index is still down from a year ago.
The quarterly increase was not spectacular – 0.3 points to 42.7 per cent on a detached bungalow and 0.4 points to 48.4 per cent on a standard two-storey home. The index on a condo was unchanged at 27.9 per cent.
As with past samplings, Vancouver and Toronto continue to stand out as the least affordable cities. During the second quarter, Vancouver’s affordability reading rose 2.2 points to 82.1 on a detached bungalow, while Toronto’s edged up half a point to 54.5.
By contrast, other major municipalities were far more tame and below the national average. On a detached bungalow, Montreal slid slightly to 38.1 per cent, Ottawa was mildly higher at 37.1, Edmonton was at 34.0 despite a 1.8 point gain, and Calgary held steady at 33.0.
The affordability index measures the cost of servicing a home, including mortgage payments, utilities and taxes, in relation to a household’s pre-tax income. The higher the reading, the less affordable is a home to a particular family.
RBC chief economist Craig Wright noted that the deterioration in affordability did not scare many Canadians from jumping feet first into the housing market during the second quarter as sales actually surged by 6.4 per cent, following a general slowdown since last summer’s introduction of stiffer mortgage lending rules.
“We saw a bit of a bounce-back in prices,” said Wright. “We had a series of regulatory changes, but now it looks like the market has adjusted and now seems to be recovering somewhat.”
The report is for the April to June period and does not capture this month’s announced increases of between 0.1 and 0.2 per cent – 10 or 20 basis points_ in posted mortgage rates at several major banks. A 20-basis point hike in rates will increase monthly payments up to $100 on a typical $500,000 mortgage.
“Mortgage rates will be the next challenge,” Mr. Wright added. “The move upward we’ve seen probably suggests that affordability will be a little more challenging (in the third quarter).”
But he noted that despite what has been a hot housing market in Canada, with prices hitting new highs almost monthly, affordability remains close to historic levels in part because interest rates are so low.
The Bank of Canada has long warned Canadians to take a forward-looking approach to home ownership and calculate what will happen to monthly payments once interest rates begin to rise, which it says is inevitable.
But Mr. Wright said the situation of affordability is more complex than simply interest rates. A sharp spike in rates will cause problems, yet most, including the Bank of Canada, currently anticipate the increases will be modest and gradual and won’t likely start occurring until late next year. The central bank has kept its short-term trendsetting rate at one per cent for now.
As well, Mr. Wright points out that the bank will likely only start a monetary policy tightening phase once the economy starts improving, so the higher rates might be offset by an improvement in employment and in incomes, which could offset the negative impact on household finances. Higher rates might also lead to lower real estate prices, which also improves affordability.
–With files from The Canadian Press.