Genworth Condo Outlook Winter 2015

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METROPOLITAN CONDO OUTLOOK WINTER 2015 Insights Into the Apartment Condominium Market in Eight Large Canadian Metropolitan Areas.

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Here is a report put out by Genworth and the Conference Board of Canada that provides insight into the Apartment Condominium Market in 8 large metropolitan areas in Canadian cities.

Transcript of Genworth Condo Outlook Winter 2015

  • METROPOLITAN CONDO OUTLOOK WINTER 2015

    Insights Into the Apartment Condominium Market in Eight Large Canadian Metropolitan Areas.

  • About Genworth CanadaGenworth MI Canada Inc. (TSX: MIC) through its subsidi-ary, Genworth Financial Mortgage Insurance Company Canada (Genworth Canada), is the largest private residen-tial mortgage insurer in Canada. The Company provides mortgage default insurance to Canadian residential mort-gage lenders, making homeownership more accessible to first-time homebuyers. Genworth Canada differentiates itself through customer service excellence, innovative processing technology, and a robust risk management framework. For almost two decades, Genworth Canada has supported the housing market by providing thought leader-ship and a focus on the safety and soundness of the mort-gage finance system. As at December 31, 2014, Genworth Canada had $5.8 billion total assets and $3.3 billion total shareholders equity.

    Find out more at www.genworth.ca.

    PrefaceThis report from The Conference Board of Canada and Genworth Canada offers an in-depth analysis of the con-dominium market for eight large Canadian census metro-politan areas (CMAs). The report covers a wide range of condominium market statistics, such as starts, completions, absorptions, and prices. The main goal of this publication is to analyze the recent trends in the condo market in each of the eight CMAs, as well as where each of the eight markets is heading over the next five years.

    The eight census metropolitan areas covered are Qubec City, Montral, Ottawa, Toronto, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver, and Victoria.

    This report is published twice a year, in summer and winter.

    Metropolitan Condo Outlook: Insights Into the Apartment Condominium Market in Eight Large Canadian Metropolitan Areasby Jane McIntyre and Robin Wiebe

    About The Conference Board of CanadaWe are:

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    Forecasts and research often involve numerous assumptions and data sources, and are subject to inherent risks and uncertainties. This information is not intended as specific investment, accounting, legal, or tax advice.

  • Contents

    Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

    Metropolitan Insights . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3Qubec City . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

    Montral. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

    Ottawa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

    Toronto . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12

    Calgary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

    Edmonton. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

    Vancouver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21

    Victoria. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

    Definitions and Concepts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

    Standard Geographical Classification (SGC) 2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28Metropolitan Areas With Their Component Census Subdivisions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

  • The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    Recent weakness in oil prices is now the big issue confronting Canadas economy. The Conference Board has downgraded its forecast for national gross domestic product growth to just 1.9

    per cent in 2015, from 2.4 per cent in 2014. Business

    investment will be the weakest part of the Canadian

    economy in 2015, particularly since the sharp decline in

    energy-related profits will curb oil companies capital

    budgets. Unsurprisingly, employment will remain soft.

    After an uninspiring gain of 121,000 jobs in 2014, the

    labour market is expected to add just 187,000 positions

    in 2015, a 1 per cent gain. Slightly better opportunities

    await in 2016 when employment grows by 1.5 per cent,

    or 270,000 jobs. The unemployment rate will average

    6.8 per cent this year and 6.6 per cent in 2016. Still,

    demographics remain broadly supportive: the popula-

    tion continues to grow by more than 1 per cent per year,

    and the proportion of empty-nesters older than 55 years,

    who have frequently embraced condominium living,

    continues to rise.

    While the health of apartment condominium markets

    varies significantly by region, nowhere do we see a bub-

    ble about to burst. This is particularly true in Toronto.

    We have consistently forecast a soft landing for this

    citys apartment condominium market, and incoming

    data continue to support this view. On the other hand,

    the decline in oil prices has dramatically changed

    conditions in Alberta. Calgarys previously drum-tight

    market is now expected to soften considerably. In

    Overview

    Apartment Condo Indicators

    Starts Resale sales Resale price ($)*

    2014 2015f 2016f 2014 2015f 2016f 2014 2015f 2016f

    Qubec City 1,031 1,081 1,113 1,485 1,534 1,565 227,172 229,006 232,293

    33.3 4.8 3.0 2.7 3.3 2.0 0.9 0.8 1.4

    Montral 10,360 9,210 9,309 10,945 11,123 11,493 270,368 277,168 283,286

    18.7 11.1 1.1 3.0 1.6 3.3 2.2 2.5 2.2

    Ottawa 1,418 1,559 1,573 1,349 1,368 1,409 261,041 264,509 271,304

    37.5 9.9 0.9 9.6 1.4 3.0 0.7 1.3 2.6

    Toronto 12,862 12,032 12,468 22,169 22,269 22,457 319,503 325,668 331,214

    26.3 6.5 3.6 10.4 0.5 0.8 3.5 1.9 1.7

    Calgary 6,079 3,322 2,785 5,529 3,908 3,843 276,000 266,991 264,142

    122.2 45.3 16.2 21.7 29.3 1.7 8.4 3.3 1.1

    Edmonton 1,646 1,165 1,047 3,187 2,364 2,405 219,392 209,359 208,173

    47.3 29.2 10.1 6.9 25.8 1.7 1.7 4.6 0.6

    Vancouver 8,666 8,933 9,344 13,469 13,793 13,987 377,929 385,859 396,694

    5.7 3.1 4.6 14.1 2.4 1.4 2.8 2.1 2.8

    Victoria 274 372 383 1,639 1,729 1,773 274,675 287,166 293,642

    61.5 35.6 3.2 13.0 5.5 2.6 2.4 4.5 2.3

    *Average resale prices are used for Qubec City and Montral; median resale prices are used for the rest of the metropolitan areas. Resale and average prices in Montral and Qubec City include all condominium styles, not just apartments.f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database; Canadian Real Estate Association; Quebec Federation of Real Estate Boards.

  • 2 | Metropolitan Condo OutlookWinter 2015

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    Edmonton, the market was not as strained, but slow-

    ing is also expected. Vancouvers apartment market is

    improving, but remains burdened by high inventories

    of unsold units and subject to the vagaries of offshore

    demand. An improving job market in Victoria will sup-

    port healthier demand for all forms of housing. Soft

    economies are limiting residential demand in Ottawa,

    Montral, and Qubec City. Apartment markets in the

    latter two areas look overbuilt. Since many condomin-

    iums are sold to first-time buyers, the tightening of

    mortgage rules over the past few years has probably

    crimped demand for these units.

    All cities are expected to enjoy population increases

    during the next few years. Toronto is forecast to enjoy

    the largest absolute increase, of at least 100,000 resi-

    dents per year. Meanwhile, Victoria has the largest

    share of 55-plus residents, at 35 per cent, but growth

    in this population segment will be strongest in Calgary

    and Edmonton.

    Mixed economic conditions will produce varying hous-

    ing market outcomes. Real GDP will probably decline

    in Calgary and Edmonton this year, while advancing

    1.5per cent or more elsewhere. Toronto (2.8 per cent)

    and Vancouver (2.7 per cent) are expected to see rela-

    tively strong growth this year. Employment conditions

    will follow a similar pattern. Unsurprisingly, job mar-

    kets in Calgary and Edmonton will weaken. Elsewhere,

    gains are expected to range from 0.4 per cent in Ottawa

    to 1.8per cent in Toronto.

    Apartment sales rose in most cities last year, led by

    a 22 per cent gain in Calgary. Volumes declined in

    Montral and Ottawa. For 2015, the suddenly weak

    economic conditions in Calgary and Edmonton will

    pull sales sharply lower, with modest increases in other

    cities. A 5.5 per cent hike in Victoria leads expected

    gainers, although this citys volume remains well off

    its peak years in the mid-2000s. Sales will inch higher

    inToronto.

    Active listings rose everywhere last year except

    Edmonton and Victoria, which both saw double-digit

    percentage losses. Listings rose 22 per cent in Calgary,

    but no other city had an increase above 10 per cent.

    In 2015, the Alberta cities are forecast to see listings

    swell as their markets slow. In the other six cities, most

    changes will be modest, although listings are forecast

    to drop 11 per cent in Ottawa. Last years listings gains

    were at least partially responsible for a falling sales-to-

    active-listing ratio in our three easternmost cities and

    Calgary. Edmontons ratio rose sharply for the second

    straight year, but will surrender these gains this year.

    Calgarys ratio is also expected to drop significantly.

    Torontos ratio jumped nearly 3 percentage points on

    the strength of a healthy sales gain. Montral, Qubec

    City, and Ottawa were buyers markets last year; the

    rest enjoyed balanced conditions. For 2015, we expect

    balanced markets in Toronto, Vancouver, and Victoria.

    Buyers conditions will prevail elsewhere. Price chan-

    ges will be similarly mixed. The median apartment

    price will decline in both Calgary and Edmonton, and

    the average price will rise only fractionally in Qubec

    City. Ottawas price growth will also be languid.

    Average apartment price growth will accelerate in

    Montral, but this seems due to aggressive incentives

    being offered to sell new units. Victorias median price

    will rise the fastest among our eight cities, as it finally

    shakes off past declines. Prices will advance roughly

    2per cent in both Toronto and Vancouver.

    Although absorption of new units rose in 2014 in five

    of our eight markets and was above the previous dec-

    ades average in six of the eight, even a small dip in

    the pace of new-unit take-up could quickly result in a

    big inventory run-up. Indeed, inventories of apartment

    condominiums and units under construction are high

    in many markets, notably Toronto, where builders will

    cut starts this year. Montral is already oversupplied,

    and so starts will drop there as well. Albertas softening

    economy will sharply curtail starts in Calgary and

    Edmonton. Gains are expected in Qubec City, Ottawa,

    Vancouver, and Victoria, but starts in these four cities

    will remain well off peak levels.

    Rising apartment prices will lift monthly mortgage

    charges everywhere except the Alberta cities. Victorias

    relatively large price gain will boost this charge by

    7.3 per cent, the biggest increase among our cities.

    Where carrying charges rise, they will do so faster than

    incomes, lifting their relative bite. This years ratio of

    carrying costs to incomes will be highest in Vancouver,

    at 21.6 per cent, and lowest, 9.8 per cent, in Edmonton.

  • Winter 2015Metropolitan Condo Outlook | 3

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    U nit sales of apartment condominiums are expected to rise by 3.3 per cent this year, up for the second year in a row. This growth fol-lows several years of declining sales, as buyers dealt with tighter mortgage rules and slower economic growth. Resale price growth will be modest in 2015, but will strengthen to 1.4 per cent next year as demand grows and the market tightens. Although rising inventories have kept builders at bay for the past couple of years, the new apartment con-dominium market is also expected to see increased activity this year, with starts up 4.8 per cent.

    Unit sales of existing apartment condominiums

    increased 2.7 per cent in 2014, after falling in five of

    the six previous years. The downturn in the resale mar-

    ket had been driven by slower economic growth and

    tighter mortgage rules. Buyers also felt the pinch of

    deteriorating affordability after several years of strong

    price growth. Indeed, by 2013, the average price of a

    condominium in the Qubec City resale market topped

    $225,000, a near doubling in just 10 years. However,

    while sales fell, strong prices kept sellers interested.

    Active listings jumped an average of 29.2 per cent per

    year from 2010 to 2013, lowering the sales-to-active-

    listings ratio to 5.6 per cent, down from 19 per cent in

    2009 and its lowest level since 1999. Accordingly,

    the resale market moved from a sellers position

    to a buyers one.

    With the resale market in buyers territory, price growth

    finally began to soften in 2013 and 2014, down to an

    annual average of 1.5 per cent. At the same time, eco-

    nomic growth and employment improved. As a result,

    buyers came back to Qubec Citys resale apartment

    condominium market last year. Even though active list-

    ings began falling in the second quarter of 2014, they

    still increased by 5.4 per cent for the year as a whole.

    As a result, the sales-to-active-listings ratio was roughly

    the same as in 2013.

    Metropolitan Insights

    Qubec City

    Share of Population by Age Cohort(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

    1995 2007 2019f0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    1524 2539 4054 5574 75+

    Apartment Condo Construction(starts, units; share, per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    5001,0001,5002,0002,5003,000

    0102030405060

    Apartment condo starts (left)Condo starts as a share of multiple starts (right)

  • 4 | Metropolitan Condo OutlookWinter 2015

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    Unit sales continued to be strong through the fourth

    quarter of 2014. But with weaker employment growth

    forecast for 2015, unit sales of apartment condomin-

    iums are expected to slow through the first six months

    of this year, before rising again in the last half, to finish

    the year up 3.3 per cent in 2015. Meanwhile, another

    year of modest price increases (resale condominium

    prices are forecast to grow by only 0.8 per cent), will

    further discourage sellers from entering the market.

    Active listings are expected to fall by 4.3 per cent

    thisyear.

    As the economy gains momentum next year, unit sales

    are expected to rise further, growing by an average of

    2.1 per cent annually over 2016 to 2019. But as sell-

    ers contend with still-high inventory levels, listings are

    forecast to drop by 10.4 per cent in 2016 and by 8 per

    cent on an average annual basis from 2017 to 2019.

    This will push the sales-to-active-listings ratio back

    up to 9 per cent by 2019. In turn, price growth will

    improve to an average of 2.1 per cent per year through

    201619.

    In the new apartment condominium market, starts

    reached a record 2,530 units in 2012, following an

    average annual increase of 28.9 per cent since 2008.

    Affordability and Apartment Condo Sales(share, per cent; sales, units)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Quebec Federation of Real Estate Boards.

    2001 03 05 07 09 11 13 15f 17f 19f10

    12

    14

    16

    18

    20

    1,000

    1,200

    1,400

    1,600

    1,800

    2,000

    Share of household income spent on mortgage (left)Existing apartment condo sales (right)

    Sales to Active Listings and Price Change(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Quebec Federation of Real Estate Boards.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    0

    4

    8

    12

    16

    20

    Sales-to-active-listings ratio (left)Average price growth (right)

    Ratio of Condominium Starts to Population Growth(starts per one person increase in population)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    0.050.100.150.200.250.300.35

    Current year 20year average

    Employment Growth(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f101234567

  • Winter 2015Metropolitan Condo Outlook | 5

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    Even though absorptions rose at the same time, supply

    still outstripped demand. As a result, inventories began

    to rise rapidly. In response, builders reduced starts of

    apartment condominiums by 38.9 per cent in 2013 and

    a further 33.3 per cent last year, bringing them back

    down to just over 1,000 units last year, closer to their

    long-term average. Inventories subsequently began to

    fall in 2014, even as absorptions slipped as well.

    Builders finished off 2014 by increasing starts of apart-

    ment condominiums in the last quarter of the year.

    With inventories still on a downward trend and demand

    picking up in the resale market, starts are expected to

    rise modestly through the rest of this year as well. In

    total, starts are forecast to increase by 4.8 per cent in

    2014 and by 3 per cent in 2016. Although absorptions

    are expected to fall this year and next, they will still

    outnumber completions. Accordingly, inventories will

    continue to edge down. Stable economic conditions will

    help keep builders in the new apartment condominium

    market through the following few years. Starts are

    expected to rise by an average of 3 per cent annually

    from 2017 to 2019, modest enough to keep inventories

    in check.

    Resale Condominium Apartment Market

    2012 2013 2014 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f

    Unit sales 1,725 1,446 1,485 1,534 1,565 1,597 1,630 1,6693.8 16.2 2.7 3.3 2.0 2.0 2.1 2.4

    Active listings 1,533 2,145 2,261 2,164 1,939 1,740 1,592 1,51228.0 40.0 5.4 4.3 10.4 10.3 8.5 5.0

    Months supply 10.7 17.8 18.3 16.9 14.9 13.1 11.7 10.9

    Average price ($) 220,860 225,195 227,172 229,006 232,293 235,812 241,507 247,0927.4 2.0 0.9 0.8 1.4 1.5 2.4 2.3

    f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Quebec Federation of Real Estate Boards; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    New Condominium Apartment Market

    2012 2013 2014 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f

    Starts 2,530 1,546 1,031 1,081 1,113 1,150 1,183 1,21828.6 38.9 33.3 4.8 3.0 3.3 2.9 2.9

    Under construction 1,664 1,558 928 1,043 1,020 1,018 1,018 1,02414.5 6.4 40.4 12.4 2.2 0.2 0.0 0.6

    Completions 2,620 1,756 1,722 1,078 1,122 1,150 1,183 1,20772.8 33.0 1.9 37.4 4.1 2.5 2.8 2.0

    Complete and not absorbed 640 692 595 290 205 193 193 19891.3 8.1 14.0 51.3 29.4 5.6 0.0 2.3

    Absorptions 2,044 2,127 1,778 1,320 1,181 1,159 1,180 1,20243.3 4.0 16.4 25.8 10.5 1.9 1.9 1.9

    Months supply 3.8 3.9 4.0 2.6 2.1 2.0 2.0 2.0

    f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Quebec Federation of Real Estate Boards; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

  • 6 | Metropolitan Condo OutlookWinter 2015

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    A weak economy and relatively poor affordability are hampering residential demand in Montral. Both the citys overall resale market and its apart-ment condominium segment have recently experienced buyers conditions. Apartment price growth has also been sluggish. The new apartment market is also oversupplied, after a burst of starts earlier this decade and again last year. The resulting large number of units under construction will keep burgeoning builder stocks of unsold units high over the next few years. A moderate correction in both markets cannot be ruled out.

    Housing markets are languishing in Montrals tepid

    economy. Although local GDP is forecast to rise by a

    13-year high of 2.2 per cent in 2015, this will still lag

    the national average. The local labour market continues

    to be soft, with a 0.4 per cent employment drop and an

    8.2 per cent unemployment rate in 2014 and only weak

    job growth and a modest unemployment rate decline

    on tap for 2015. Montrals population growth remains

    decent, but has decelerated and is expected to keep

    slowing. Rising interest rates in the medium term will

    also temper demand.

    Sales of existing apartment condominium units fell

    3per cent in 2014, the third straight annual decline.

    This brought the annual total below 11,000 units for the

    first time since 2006. Sales did strengthen slightly over

    last summer, but a weak fourth quarter suggests only

    slight improvement in 2015. We expect sales to rise

    roughly 2 per cent in 2015 and similarly between 2016

    and 2019. This will leave apartment sales below their

    all-time high of nearly 12,800 units, set in 2011.

    Active apartment listings rose nearly 9 per cent in 2014.

    Although this was strong growth by our eight-city stan-

    dard, it was actually a local slowdown from increases

    averaging nearly 21 per cent during the previous three

    years. Such gains pushed listings to a record above

    Montral

    Share of Population by Age Cohort(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

    1995 2007 2019f0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    1524 2539 4054 5574 75+

    Apartment Condo Construction(starts, units; share, per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    3,000

    6,000

    9,000

    12,000

    15,000

    40

    50

    60

    70

    80

    90

    Apartment condo starts (left)Condo starts as a share of multiple starts (right)

  • Winter 2015Metropolitan Condo Outlook | 7

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    13,000 units. For 2015, a fractional increase will bump

    listings to a fresh high of nearly 13,100 units. Listings

    are forecast to hover near this level during the subse-

    quent few years.

    Easing sales and soaring listings in recent years cut the

    sales-to-active-listings ratio to only 7 per cent in 2014,

    less than half this decades peak of nearly 16 per cent

    hit in 2010 and signalling a buyers market. Since sales

    are forecast to rise only slightly faster than listings, the

    ratio will change little in 2015. Only slight increases are

    forecast in the medium term as listings hover and sales

    rise slowly.

    Despite the buyers conditions facing Montral con-

    dominiums, their average price advanced 2.2 per cent

    last year. This was historically soft, since condominium

    prices rose by an average of nearly 5 per cent annually

    during the prior decade, but still improved upon a 1per

    cent dip in 2013. We expect similarly modest price

    gains over the next few years, starting with a 2.5 per

    cent rise in 2015.

    Although principle and interest payments on the average

    apartment last year trailed Toronto, Calgary, Vancouver,

    and Victoria among the eight cities covered in this

    report, typically low household incomes in Montral

    made this payment consume 17.4 per cent of average

    Affordability and Apartment Condo Sales(share, per cent; sales, units)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Quebec Federation of Real Estate Boards.

    2001 03 05 07 09 11 13 15f 17f 19f12

    14

    16

    18

    20

    22

    6,000

    8,000

    10,000

    12,000

    14,000

    16,000

    Share of household income spent on mortgage (left)Existing apartment condo sales (right)

    Sales to Active Listings and Price Change(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Quebec Federation of Real Estate Boards.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f5

    101520253035

    50510152025

    Sales-to-active-listings ratio (left)Average price growth (right)

    Ratio of Condominium Starts to Population Growth(starts per one person increase in population)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    0.050.100.150.200.250.300.35

    Current year 20year average

    Employment Growth(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f1

    0

    1

    2

    3

    4

  • 8 | Metropolitan Condo OutlookWinter 2015

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    income, below only Vancouver. Continued price growth

    and interest rate increases will lift this proportion to

    17.9 per cent in 2015, again trailing onlyVancouver.

    Apartment absorptions soared 18 per cent to a record

    high near 11,000 units in 2014, but over 11,700 apart-

    ments were completed. This was the fourth straight

    year in which completions had outpaced absorptions,

    so builders unsold stocks hit a record 2,459 units in

    2014, twice the 2010 level. For 2015, we expect absorp-

    tions to exceed completions, so inventories will dip but

    remain high at about 2,430 units. Stocks will ease only

    slightly over the next few years.

    In many cities, such high stocks would discourage

    developers, but not in Montral, where building per-

    mits for apartment units are rising significantly. Media

    reports suggest builders are offering a complete set of

    appliances to spur sales. Apartment starts rose 19 per

    cent in 2014, albeit following declines in 2012 and

    2013. Still, starts will slow later this year as invento-

    ries bite and end 2015 down 11 per cent at just over

    9,200units. Persistently high unsold stocks will keep

    starts contained over the following few years.

    Resale Condominium Apartment Market

    2012 2013 2014 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f

    Unit sales 12,469 11,288 10,945 11,123 11,493 11,703 11,890 11,9512.3 9.5 3.0 1.6 3.3 1.8 1.6 0.5

    Active listings 9,856 11,974 13,022 13,095 12,904 12,952 13,090 13,04318.7 21.5 8.8 0.6 1.5 0.4 1.1 0.4

    Months supply 9.5 12.7 14.3 14.1 13.5 13.3 13.2 13.1

    Average price ($) 267,175 264,498 270,368 277,168 283,286 289,665 296,062 302,2244.0 1.0 2.2 2.5 2.2 2.3 2.2 2.1

    f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Quebec Federation of Real Estate Boards; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    New Condominium Apartment Market

    2012 2013 2014 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f

    Starts 11,801 8,728 10,360 9,210 9,309 9,337 9,375 9,3896.2 26.0 18.7 11.1 1.1 0.3 0.4 0.1

    Under construction 13,012 12,673 11,663 10,981 11,092 11,117 11,117 11,13422.9 2.6 8.0 5.8 1.0 0.2 0.0 0.2

    Completions 10,361 9,585 11,732 8,924 9,243 9,351 9,353 9,3889.9 7.5 22.4 23.9 3.6 1.2 0.0 0.4

    Complete and not absorbed 1,663 1,886 2,459 2,432 2,311 2,218 2,174 2,14521.1 13.4 30.4 1.1 5.0 4.0 2.0 1.3

    Absorptions 10,263 9,325 10,970 9,390 9,209 9,448 9,382 9,41915.6 9.1 17.6 14.4 1.9 2.6 0.7 0.4

    Months supply 1.9 2.4 2.7 3.1 3.0 2.8 2.8 2.7

    f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Quebec Federation of Real Estate Boards; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

  • Winter 2015Metropolitan Condo Outlook | 9

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    A moderately improved economy will be enough to help boost unit sales of apartment condominiums in Ottawa by 1.4 per cent in 2014. Price growth will also strengthen. In the new apartment condominium market, starts fell in both 2013 and 2014, but are expected to rise by 9.9 per cent in 2014 as several projects get under way.

    Last year marked the fourth year in a row of declining

    sales in Ottawas resale apartment condominium mar-

    ket. Indeed, after reaching a record 1,835 units in 2010,

    sales then fell by an annual average of 7.3 per cent from

    2011 to 2014, down to 1,349 units last year. Buyers

    were deterred by a weakening economy, tighter mort-

    gage rules, and deteriorating affordability. In fact, real

    gross domestic product in Ottawa has grown very little

    recent years, averaging increases of just 0.5 per cent per

    year between 2012 and 2014. Much of this weakness

    has stemmed from significant cuts in the federal public

    servicethe regions biggest employer. At the same

    time, resale apartment condominium prices have nearly

    tripled over the past 15 years.

    While the slow economy detracted buyers, it also led to

    a sharp increase in the number of sellers. Active listings

    rose by 26.5 per cent on an average annual basis from

    2010 to 2014, hitting a record 1,130 units last year.

    As a result, the sales-to-active-listings ratio dropped

    substantially, falling from 27 per cent in 2010 to 10 per

    cent in 2014, thereby transforming the market from a

    sellers position to a buyers one. In turn, prices began

    to weaken, falling 4.5 per cent in 2013 and rising only

    0.7 per cent last year.

    With growth in Ottawas economy expected to improve

    this year (real GDP is forecast at 1.5 per cent for 2015),

    buyers will slowly come back to the resale apartment

    condominium market. Unit sales of apartment condo-

    miniums are forecast to rise by 1.4 per cent this year

    Ottawa

    Share of Population by Age Cohort(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

    1995 2007 2019f0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    1524 2539 4054 5574 75+

    Apartment Condo Construction(starts, units; share, per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    5001,0001,5002,0002,5003,000

    06121824303642

    Apartment condo starts (left)Condo starts as a share of multiple starts (right)

  • 10 | Metropolitan Condo OutlookWinter 2015

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    and by an average of 2.2 per cent per year from 2016 to

    2019. Despite these gains, sales are expected to remain

    below the 2010 peak over the entire forecast.

    Meanwhile, after their impressive run-up, active listings

    are expected to fall in the coming years, as sellers take

    a breather now that price growth has slowed. Active

    listings are set to decline all the way through to 2018,

    before stabilizing at 840 units in 2019. But this is still

    more than double the level of listings in 2009, revealing

    the growing importance of the condominium market to

    Ottawa. The combination of higher sales and weaker

    listings will push the sales-to-active-listings ratio up

    to 14.9 per cent by 2019still well below the ratios

    37.9per cent average between 2002 and 2010, when

    condo price inflation surged. As result, we expect prices

    to increase by just 1.3 per cent in 2015 and by 2.4 per

    cent per year from 2016 to 2019.

    Although the resale market was already slowing by

    2012, the new apartment condominium market contin-

    ued to be active, as builders broke ground on a record

    2,277 units that year. Strong absorptions in the previ-

    ous two years, an average of more than 1,400 units

    per year, were enough to encourage builders, even

    as inventories were creeping up. However, although

    absorptions remained elevated in 2013, inventories

    Affordability and Apartment Condo Sales(share, per cent; sales, units)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association.

    2001 03 05 07 09 11 13 15f 17f 19f8

    10

    12

    14

    16

    18

    1,000

    1,200

    1,400

    1,600

    1,800

    2,000

    Share of household income spent on mortgage (left)Existing apartment condo sales (right)

    Sales to Active Listings and Price Change(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    20

    40

    60

    80

    10

    0

    10

    20

    30

    Sales-to-active-listings ratio (left)Median price growth (right)

    Ratio of Condominium Starts to Population Growth(starts per one person increase in population)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    0.020.040.060.080.100.120.14

    Current year 20year average

    Employment Growth(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f3210123456

  • Winter 2015Metropolitan Condo Outlook | 11

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    jumped by almost 60 per cent. This prompted builders

    to reduce starts by 0.4 per cent that year and 37.5 per

    cent in2014.

    Although inventories remained high in 2014, Ottawa

    apartment building permits nearly doubled during

    the six months to December 2014 compared with

    their year-earlier levels. As a result, the new apart-

    ment condominium market is set to pick up again in

    2015, with starts forecast to increase by 9.9 per cent.

    In fact, construction is already under way on a num-

    ber of new buildings this year, including The Bowery

    condominiums and Claridges Icon condominiums in

    Little Italy. The Icon condominium building will be

    Ottawas tallest. But this title may not last long. A new

    development proposed by Richcraft Homes, also in the

    Little Italy neighbourhood, would see the construc-

    tion of three new towers, the biggest of which would

    be 55 storeys tall. Starts are expected to keep rising

    from 2016 to 2019, growing by a forecast average of

    1.2per cent per year. Absorptions are set to decline

    this year and next, albeit from a 2014 record high, and

    then begin to rise through the next few years, helping to

    whittle down inventories.

    Resale Condominium Apartment Market

    2012 2013 2014 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f

    Unit sales 1,546 1,493 1,349 1,368 1,409 1,437 1,465 1,49511.2 3.4 9.6 1.4 3.0 2.0 1.9 2.0

    Active listings 881 1,082 1,130 1,004 902 830 826 83825.8 22.8 4.4 11.1 10.1 8.0 0.5 1.5

    Months supply 6.8 8.7 10.1 8.8 7.7 6.9 6.8 6.7

    Median price ($) 271,331 259,171 261,041 264,509 271,304 277,490 284,024 291,1053.8 4.5 0.7 1.3 2.6 2.3 2.4 2.5

    f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    New Condominium Apartment Market

    2012 2013 2014 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f

    Starts 2,277 2,268 1,418 1,559 1,573 1,602 1,624 1,63268.2 0.4 37.5 9.9 0.9 1.9 1.4 0.5

    Under construction 2,663 3,354 3,131 2,670 2,657 2,666 2,666 2,67340.1 25.9 6.6 14.7 0.5 0.3 0.0 0.3

    Completions 1,458 1,334 2,412 1,541 1,572 1,601 1,620 1,6247.0 8.5 80.8 36.1 2.0 1.8 1.2 0.2

    Complete and not absorbed 165 259 218 306 256 245 240 2384.6 57.1 15.9 40.5 16.2 4.2 2.2 1.0

    Absorptions 1,346 1,336 2,303 1,590 1,582 1,618 1,634 1,6241.8 0.7 72.3 30.9 0.5 2.3 1.0 0.6

    Months supply 1.5 2.3 1.1 2.3 1.9 1.8 1.8 1.8

    f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

  • 12 | Metropolitan Condo OutlookWinter 2015

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    T orontos decent economic prospects, its rapid population growth, and the desirability of living downtown or near public transit routes all suggest that a severe correction in Torontos apartment condomin-ium market is unlikely. While the large number of units under construction poses a risk, new-unit take-up exceeded completions last year and is expected to match them this year. Resale volumes are solid and prices continue to rise. A soft landing remains our call for this market segment, although brief periods of inflation-adjusted price drops are possible.

    Torontos economy remains healthy and should be

    buoyed by U.S. economic recovery and the softer

    Canadian dollar. Its GDP growth is forecast to hit a

    five-year high of 2.8 per cent this year, spurring faster

    employment growth. Population hikes have averaged

    nearly 94,000 people annually over the past five years

    and are expected to exceed 100,000 annually starting in

    2015. Moreover, the population of condo-loving empty-

    nesters aged 55 or more rose an average of 3.3 per cent

    annually over the past decade, twice the pace of overall

    population growth. Resulting healthy condominium

    demand will be amplified in 2015 by persistently low

    mortgage interest rates.

    Forecasts of a collapsing apartment condominium

    market were not fulfilled in 2014 as sales of existing

    units rose 10 per cent. Last years 22,169 transactions

    approached Torontos all-time high of 22,900 units in

    2011. And sales picked up in last years second half,

    setting a healthy stage for 2015. Sales are indeed fore-

    cast to inch higher in 2015, then average 1.4 per cent

    annual growth between 2016 and 2019. This will lift

    apartment sales to a fresh record in 2018.

    The number of active apartment listings rose for the

    fifth straight year in 2014, although the last two annual

    gains have been below 1 per cent. Still, these increases

    lifted listings to a record high of 6,200 units. For 2015,

    Toronto

    Share of Population by Age Cohort(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

    1995 2007 2019f0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    1524 2539 4054 5574 75+

    Apartment Condo Construction(starts, units; share, per cent)

    f = forecast Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f5,000

    10,000

    15,000

    20,000

    25,000

    30,000

    30

    40

    50

    60

    70

    80

    Apartment condo starts (left)Condo starts as a share of multiple starts (right)

  • Winter 2015Metropolitan Condo Outlook | 13

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    we expect a more solid 4 per cent rise as ongoing sales

    increases assure potential vendors of a welcoming

    market. Last years big increase in sales overwhelmed

    the modest rise in listings, pushing the sales-to-active-

    listings ratio to a three-year high of 29.8 per cent and

    the market to balance. The smaller sales gain and larger

    listings increase in 2015 will trim the ratio to 28.8 per

    cent, still in balanced-market territory. This balance is

    forecast to continue through the next few years as the

    ratio drifts slightly higher.

    Torontos median apartment price advanced 3.5 per cent

    last year as the market tightened. This was the fastest

    increase since 2011 and followed gains just above 1 per

    cent in both 2012 and 2013. This price has not fallen

    on an annual basis since 1995 and has averaged nearly

    6 per cent annual growth since then. We expect much

    slower price gains over the next few years, starting with

    a 1.9per cent rise in 2015.

    Torontos condominium affordability is mixed.

    Although principle and interest payments on the

    median apartment condominium trail only Vancouver

    among the eight cities covered in this report, relatively

    high local incomes mean this payment required just

    15.7per cent of average local household income last

    year, below the figure in Montral, Vancouver, and

    Affordability and Apartment Condo Sales(share, per cent; sales, units)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association.

    2001 03 05 07 09 11 13 15f 17f 19f10

    15

    20

    25

    10,000

    15,000

    20,000

    25,000

    Share of household income spent on mortgage (left)Existing apartment condo sales (right)

    Sales to Active Listings and Price Change(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f20253035404550

    024681012

    Sales-to-active-listings ratio (left)Median price growth (right)

    Ratio of Condominium Starts to Population Growth(starts per one person increase in population)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    0.050.100.150.200.250.30

    Current year 20year average

    Employment Growth(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f2

    1

    0

    1

    2

    3

    4

    5

  • 14 | Metropolitan Condo OutlookWinter 2015

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    Victoria. Slowing price gains and projected moderate

    mortgage rate hikes in 2015 will keep payments local

    bite at 16.1per cent, again ranking Toronto fourth.

    The high number of apartment units under construction

    in Toronto is central to some analysts forecasts of an

    impending big correction in this market. But volumes

    fell 3 per cent to over 1,600 units between the first

    quarter and the fourth quarter of 2014 and are fore-

    cast to drop further. And apartment absorptions have

    recently outpaced completions, helping to cut unsold

    builder stocks by 16 per cent between their nine-year

    high of 1,070 units in last years second quarter to

    below 900 units in last years fourth quarter. Continued

    strong absorptions over the next few years will further

    trim inventories.

    Builders have pulled back. Apartment starts in Toronto

    fell sharply in both 2013 and 2104 and are forecast

    to dip again this year. Our forecast 2015 volume of

    just above 12,000 starts is less than half the peak of

    27,413units hit in 2012. But we expect this to be the

    trough. Falling inventories will rekindle builder enthusi-

    asm, lifting starts to just over 13,300 units by 2019.

    Resale Condominium Apartment Market

    2012 2013 2014 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f

    Unit sales 20,167 20,084 22,169 22,269 22,457 22,806 23,164 23,51611.9 0.4 10.4 0.5 0.8 1.6 1.6 1.5

    Active listings 6,133 6,173 6,200 6,442 6,754 6,833 6,822 6,74318.9 0.7 0.4 3.9 4.9 1.2 0.2 1.1

    Months supply 3.6 3.7 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.6 3.5 3.4

    Median price ($) 305,246 308,742 319,503 325,668 331,214 336,685 342,042 347,8301.4 1.1 3.5 1.9 1.7 1.7 1.6 1.7

    f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    New Condominium Apartment Market

    2012 2013 2014 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f

    Starts 27,413 17,450 12,862 12,032 12,468 12,771 13,069 13,33142.8 36.3 26.3 6.5 3.6 2.4 2.3 2.0

    Under construction 44,213 51,355 54,270 50,829 48,053 45,556 42,855 40,00135.3 16.2 5.7 6.3 5.5 5.2 5.9 6.7

    Completions 12,389 14,470 13,258 15,891 14,878 15,335 15,861 16,16430.7 16.8 8.4 19.9 6.4 3.1 3.4 1.9

    Complete and not absorbed 829 1,032 961 898 800 728 652 61014.4 24.6 6.9 6.5 11.0 9.0 10.4 6.4

    Absorptions 12,349 14,307 13,432 15,886 14,986 15,428 15,939 16,18130.6 15.9 6.1 18.3 5.7 3.0 3.3 1.5

    Months supply 0.8 0.9 0.9 0.7 0.6 0.6 0.5 0.5

    f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

  • Winter 2015Metropolitan Condo Outlook | 15

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    T he sharp drop in oil prices has quickly and dra-matically sliced demand for all forms of housing in Calgary. The market for existing apartment condo-miniums, which had flirted with sellers conditions in 2013 and 2014, is correcting sharply, and oversupply looms. The same is true in the new condominium market, where completions will overwhelm absorptions, prompting a big increase in starts-killing inventories. Forecasting a bottom for these markets is tricky, though, since it depends heavily on future oil prices.

    Calgarys recent economic performance, including

    4.5 per cent GDP growth in 2014, now seems sud-

    denly irrelevant to housing markets in the wake of the

    big drop in oil prices. The 2009 correction is a better

    benchmark; it featured a 4 per cent drop in GDP that

    year and a 2 per cent employment decline in 200910.

    While Calgarys immediate future looks rocky, its

    medium-term path will be determined by oils future

    price, for which forecasts vary widely, although the

    Conference Board believes that oil prices have likely

    bottomed out.

    Calgarys current downward economic lurch will put an

    abrupt end to four years of annual gains in apartment

    condominium sales, including a 22per cent rise in 2014

    that lifted volumes to a record high. Frankly, once fear

    grips a market, as it evidently has in Calgary, calling the

    market bottom is difficult. Based on the 2009 decline,

    though, a sales drop near 30per cent in 2015 and a fur-

    ther 12 per cent drop in 2016 seems a reasonable call.

    As with sales, the recent market shift renders recent

    trends in active listings of apartment condominiums

    largely irrelevant. A big increase in this supply is inevi-

    table, although last years volume of close to 1,200

    units makes a quintupling of listings like that between

    2006 and 2008 simply unrealistic. Still, we expect list-

    ings to approach 1,400 units this year, implying roughly

    Calgary

    Share of Population by Age Cohort(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

    1995 2007 2019f0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    1524 2539 4054 5574 75+

    Apartment Condo Construction(starts, units; share, per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    1,0002,0003,0004,0005,0006,0007,000

    2030405060708090

    Apartment condo starts (left)Condo starts as a share of multiple starts (right)

  • 16 | Metropolitan Condo OutlookWinter 2015

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    an 18 per cent gain. A similar increase could occur in

    2016 should oil prices remain low. The combination of

    falling sales and rising listings will trim the sales-to-

    active-listings ratio to about 24 per cent for 2015. This

    would be a big drop from ratios of 40 per cent posted

    in each of 2013 and 2014post-recession highsand

    would signal buyers conditions in Calgary. The fore-

    cast figure would nonetheless remain above the 2008

    low of 16 per cent.

    The significant market slackening we expect means that

    last years 8.4 per cent price increasea seven-year

    highwill not be replicated. Now the question is: how

    big a price drop will occur? Calgarys median apart-

    ment price dropped 12 per cent between 2007 and 2009

    and regained its pre-recession level only last year. It is

    therefore not unreasonable to expect two years of eas-

    ing apartment prices if oil prices remain soft.

    Falling housing prices do have one bright spot: carrying

    costs on the median apartment unit will fall in 2015.

    Calgarys previously excellent housing affordability,

    partly resulting from the price drop from the previ-

    ous downturn, was eroding with recent years price

    growth. Calgarys mortgage charges trailed only those

    in Toronto and Vancouver last year. Our forecast price

    Affordability and Apartment Condo Sales(share, per cent; sales, units)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association.

    2001 03 05 07 09 11 13 15f 17f 19f8

    10

    12

    14

    16

    2,000

    3,000

    4,000

    5,000

    6,000

    Share of household income spent on mortgage (left)Existing apartment condo sales (right)

    Sales to Active Listings and Price Change(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    40

    80

    120

    160

    20

    0

    20

    40

    60

    Sales-to-active-listings ratio (left)Median price growth (right)

    Ratio of Condominium Starts to Population Growth(starts per one person increase in population)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    0.05

    0.10

    0.15

    0.20

    Current year 20year average

    Employment Growth(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f2

    0

    2

    4

    6

    8

    10

  • Winter 2015Metropolitan Condo Outlook | 17

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    drop implies that carrying charges are forecast to drop

    1 per cent in 2015, placing Calgary fourth among the

    eight cities covered in this report.

    Slowing housing demand also threatens Calgarys

    new construction market. New-unit absorptions hit a

    post-downturn high of nearly 3,100 units in 2014, cut-

    ting the inventory of newly completed and unoccupied

    apartments to a single unit during the fourth quarter

    of 2014. Although absorptions will remain high, likely

    because of heavy pre-sales, soaring completions will

    overwhelm them, significantly swelling unsold builder

    stocks. Over 7,000 units were under construction in the

    fourth quarter of 2014, nearly twice the 20-year aver-

    age. Easing apartment building permits late last year

    already pointed to softening apartment starts in 2015;

    now builders are likely to trim construction even fur-

    ther. We expect Calgary apartment starts to ease 45per

    cent to roughly 3,300 units in 2015 and a further 16

    per cent to 2,800 units in 2016. Over the following

    few years, recovering oil prices will improve Calgarys

    housing demand, leading to falling builder stocks and

    then higher starts. We expect starts to rise 13 per cent

    annually between 2017 and 2019.

    Resale Condominium Apartment Market

    2012 2013 2014 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f

    Unit sales 3,967 4,545 5,529 3,908 3,843 3,908 3,977 4,04515.2 14.6 21.7 29.3 1.7 1.7 1.8 1.7

    Active listings 1,263 948 1,160 1,365 1,641 1,438 1,361 1,36930.4 25.0 22.5 17.6 20.3 12.4 5.4 0.6

    Months supply 3.8 2.5 2.5 4.2 5.1 4.4 4.1 4.1

    Median price ($) 244,362 254,633 276,000 266,991 264,142 270,514 277,105 283,7613.0 4.2 8.4 3.3 1.1 2.4 2.4 2.4

    f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    New Condominium Apartment Market

    2012 2013 2014 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f

    Starts 3,360 2,736 6,079 3,322 2,785 2,825 2,885 2,95978.2 18.6 122.2 45.3 16.2 1.4 2.1 2.5

    Under construction 4,344 4,396 6,510 6,492 5,331 4,739 4,367 4,05337.0 1.2 48.1 0.3 17.9 11.1 7.8 7.2

    Completions 1,648 2,667 3,055 4,364 3,762 3,250 3,241 3,248142.0 61.8 14.5 42.8 13.8 13.6 0.3 0.2

    Complete and not absorbed 297 208 8 417 472 226 156 14636.4 29.9 96.4 5461.6 13.1 52.2 31.0 6.0

    Absorptions 1,669 2,928 3,091 3,755 4,040 3,396 3,275 3,25668.7 75.4 5.5 21.5 7.6 16.0 3.6 0.6

    Months supply 2.1 0.9 0.0 1.3 1.4 0.8 0.6 0.5

    f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

  • 18 | Metropolitan Condo OutlookWinter 2015

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    T he sharp drop in oil prices will slice residential demand in Edmonton. This includes the markets for both new and existing apartment condomin-iums, which had been gradually improving. Last years return to balanced conditions in the apartment market could be short-lived, with a buyers state set to take hold this year. The new condominium market is also poised to slow. We expect falling absorptions to swell unsold inventories and trim starts. The depth and duration of housing market softness depends significantly on future oil prices, which are difficult to forecast.

    The recent stretch of very strong economic growth will

    halt abruptly in Edmonton this year because of the big

    drop in oil prices. GDP will likely fall this year, after

    five straight annual advances exceeding 5 per cent.

    Recently strong job markets are also set to throttle

    back. All this suggests a significant slowing in resi-

    dential demand, so oversupply looms for both new and

    existing housing markets.

    Existing apartment sales rose 7 per cent to nearly

    3,200units in 2014, following a 14 per cent rise in

    2013. However, the collapse in oil prices makes recent

    history irrelevant to this years housing market. Sales

    are retracting sharply and are forecast to end 2015

    down 26 per cent at just below 2,400 units. This years

    forecast decline can be compared to a 35 per cent drop

    in 2008 in the midst of the previous downturn. We

    believe oil prices have likely bottomed out and will rise

    slowly over the rest of the year. This should help con-

    dominium sales rise 2 per cent next year. However, this

    years projected sales decline makes the peak volume

    above 4,600 units in 2007 essentially unreachable over

    the next few years.

    Listings are rising sharply as sales ease and are poised

    to end 2015 up 24 per cent. Still, listings drops of

    12per cent in 2013 and 16 per cent in 2014 trimmed

    Edmonton

    Share of Population by Age Cohort(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

    1995 2007 2019f0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    1524 2539 4054 5574 75+

    Apartment Condo Construction(starts, units; share, per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    1,000

    2,000

    3,000

    4,000

    10

    25

    40

    55

    70

    Apartment condo starts (left)Condo starts as a share of multiple starts (right)

  • Winter 2015Metropolitan Condo Outlook | 19

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    the average 2014 volume below 1,000 units for the first

    time since 2006, so our forecast upswing will leave

    listings well below their 2008 peak above 1,900units.

    Falling sales and rising listings will cut the sales-to-

    active-listings ratio to a buyers market reading of

    17per cent this year, following its rise to a balanced-

    market level of 28 per cent in 2014. This ratio is fore-

    cast to inch higher over the next few years, but remain

    in buyers market territory. The markets sudden soften-

    ing will prompt a decline in Edmontons median apart-

    ment price following two years of small gains including

    a 1.7 per cent rise in 2014. We expect this price to

    dip nearly 5 per cent in 2015 and a further 1 per cent

    in 2016. Even before this drop, however, the median

    apartment price was well below its 2007 peak of just

    above $234,000. The relatively soft market we expect

    over the next few years will cap annual price gains at

    23percent.

    Easing prices in 2015 will help maintain excellent

    local housing affordability. Edmontons median apart-

    ment condominium price remains the lowest among the

    eight cities covered in this report. Meanwhile, average

    household incomes here are relatively high, trailing

    only Calgary among this reports cities. This implies

    that principle and interest payments on the median

    apartment condo are the lowest among this reports cit-

    ies and also that these charges consume only 10.1 per

    cent of household incomes on average, also the lowest

    Affordability and Apartment Condo Sales(share, per cent; sales, units)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association.

    2001 03 05 07 09 11 13 15f 17f 19f4

    8

    12

    16

    20

    1,000

    2,000

    3,000

    4,000

    5,000

    Share of household income spent on mortgage (left)Existing apartment condo sales (right)

    Sales to Active Listings and Price Change(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    20406080

    100120

    1001020304050

    Sales-to-active-listings ratio (left)Median price growth (right)

    Ratio of Condominium Starts to Population Growth(starts per one person increase in population)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    0.05

    0.10

    0.15

    0.20Current year 20year average

    Employment Growth(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f2

    0

    2

    4

    6

    8

  • 20 | Metropolitan Condo OutlookWinter 2015

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    among this reports cities. Edmontons price drop will

    help trim carrying charges by about 2 per cent this year

    and decrease such costs bite of household incomes to

    9.8 per cent. Affordability will deteriorate slightly over

    the next few years as interest rates rise, particularly in

    2016 and 2017.

    Edmontons new condominium market will also be

    sideswiped by the areas weaker economy. A big jump

    in completions this year, combined with small decreases

    in absorptions, will push inventories to 340 units this

    year and nearly 600 units in 2016. Such backlogs are

    reminiscent of, yet below, inventories in 2010 and 2011,

    following the 2009 recession. By 2018, falling comple-

    tions and steady absorptions will trim builder stocks to

    match their 2014 post-recession low.

    Rising unsold inventories will curtail new projects.

    Apartment condominium starts had already retreated

    from their post-recession peak above 3,100 units in

    2013, dropping nearly 50 per cent in 2014. This year,

    they are poised to drop a further 29 per cent. By 2016,

    starts will be only a third of the 2013 volume. Only

    small hikes in new construction activity are expected

    during the subsequent few years.

    Resale Condominium Apartment Market

    2012 2013 2014 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f

    Unit sales 2,625 2,981 3,187 2,364 2,405 2,443 2,497 2,5633.6 13.6 6.9 25.8 1.7 1.6 2.2 2.6

    Active listings 1,301 1,140 958 1,192 1,272 1,194 1,148 1,1292.2 12.4 16.0 24.4 6.8 6.2 3.8 1.7

    Months supply 5.9 4.6 3.6 6.1 6.3 5.9 5.5 5.3

    Median price ($) 209,688 215,825 219,392 209,359 208,173 213,871 219,507 224,2290.6 2.9 1.7 4.6 0.6 2.7 2.6 2.2

    f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    New Condominium Apartment Market

    2012 2013 2014 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f

    Starts 1,983 3,121 1,646 1,165 1,047 1,079 1,108 1,13242.5 57.4 47.3 29.2 10.1 3.0 2.7 2.2

    Under construction 2,964 4,714 4,249 3,754 3,241 2,971 2,741 2,5270.3 59.1 9.9 11.7 13.7 8.3 7.7 7.8

    Completions 1,475 1,489 1,303 1,797 1,436 1,320 1,330 1,33612.9 0.9 12.5 37.9 20.1 8.0 0.8 0.4

    Complete and not absorbed 529 335 222 339 579 383 223 15320.4 36.6 33.7 52.5 70.8 33.8 41.7 31.5

    Absorptions 1,594 1,672 1,445 1,435 1,431 1,528 1,467 1,37319.0 4.9 13.5 0.8 0.3 6.8 4.0 6.4

    Months supply 4.0 2.4 1.8 2.8 4.9 3.0 1.8 1.3

    f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

  • Winter 2015Metropolitan Condo Outlook | 21

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    B road-based recovery in Vancouvers housing mar-ket continues to buoy the apartment condominium segment. Resale volumes moved higher last year and should inch up again in 2015. This should underpin another year of modest price growth, as the market is roughly balanced. High inventories of unsold units have been slow to erode, so new construction will remain sub-dued this year, but easing stocks will ultimately pull starts higher. Offshore demand remains a wildcard here. If it fal-ters, the areas poor affordability will be exposed, because many pricey condominiums are simply unaffordable at local wage levels.

    Vancouvers apartment condominium market is

    strengthening, along with its overall housing market,

    but remains softer than in the peak times during the

    previous decade. Slowing offshore demand could pose

    a threat. Much of this demand comes from China,

    where several Vancouver realtors have opened offices.

    Many forecasters expect Chinas economic growth to

    ease over the next few years, something that would

    obviously dampen demand from its nationals. Even

    so, apartments will remain a vital housing solution in

    Vancouver, given their relative affordability.

    Existing apartment condominium sales moved higher as

    2014 progressed and ended the year up 14 per cent, at

    their highest level since 2009. Last years gain followed

    a 10.5 per cent hike in 2013. This growth is unsustain-

    able, and we expect sales to rise 2.4 per cent this year.

    Subsequent annual increases will put sales at nearly

    14,800 units by 2019. Although this volume will be

    above the 10-year average, it will not exceed the 2005

    all-time peak.

    Although active listings of apartment condominiums

    remain relatively high, they fell in the fourth quarter

    last year and are forecast to drop another 2 per cent in

    2015. This will combine with rising sales to tighten

    Vancouver

    Share of Population by Age Cohort(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

    1995 2007 2019f0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    1524 2539 4054 5574 75+

    Apartment Condo Construction(starts, units; share, per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    3,000

    6,000

    9,000

    12,000

    15,000

    30

    40

    50

    60

    70

    80

    Apartment condo starts (left)Condo starts as a share of multiple starts (right)

  • 22 | Metropolitan Condo OutlookWinter 2015

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    the market. Rising sales and falling listings lifted the

    sales-to-active-listings ratio to a balanced-market read-

    ing of 19.6 per cent in 2014, the highest since 2009.

    The small listings decline and modest sales increase we

    expect in 2015 will lift the ratio to 20.4 per cent, and

    then roughly equivalent gains in sales and listings over

    the next few years should leave the ratio little changed.

    Last years healthier market lifted the median apartment

    price 2.8 per cent, the most since 2010. We expect bal-

    anced markets and price growth of between 2 and 3 per

    cent over the next few years, starting with a 2.1 per cent

    advance in 2015.

    Despite rising absorptions of new apartment condomini-

    ums, unsold builder stocks remain high and are cap-

    ping the increase in apartment starts. Such inventories

    peaked in 2010 and have been slow to dissipate, even

    though new-unit take-up rose over 20 per cent in each

    of 2012 and 2013 and a further 5.5 per cent in 2014.

    Indeed, annualized absorptions of roughly 9,860 units

    last fall were the highest quarterly total since 2009.

    Starts have accordingly struggled, falling slightly in

    each of the past two years, including a 6 per cent drop

    in 2014. Still, last years level of nearly 8,700 units

    exceeded the previous decades average. For 2015, we

    expect another 5 per cent absorption gain to trim inven-

    tories 6 per cent and give developers confidence to start

    Affordability and Apartment Condo Sales(share, per cent; sales, units)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association.

    2001 03 05 07 09 11 13 15f 17f 19f10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    8,000

    11,000

    14,000

    17,000

    20,000

    Share of household income spent on mortgage (left)Existing apartment condo sales (right)

    Sales to Active Listings and Price Change(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    10

    20

    30

    40

    50

    5

    0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    Sales-to-active-listings ratio (left)Median price growth (right)

    Ratio of Condominium Starts to Population Growth(starts per one person increase in population)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    0.1

    0.2

    0.3

    0.4

    0.5

    Current year 20year average

    Employment Growth(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f1

    0

    1

    2

    3

    4

  • Winter 2015Metropolitan Condo Outlook | 23

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    just over 8,900 units, a 3 per cent gain. Similar moder-

    ate absorption increases will continue to whittle builder

    stocks over the next few years, underpinning annual

    starts increases of between 2 and 5 per cent. But even

    our forecast of nearly 10,200 starts in 2019 remains

    below the peak output of 12,376 units hit in 2007.

    Demographics are generally supportive; the average

    ratio of housing starts to population growth during the

    past five years was similar to its 25-year average, and

    Vancouvers proportion of empty-nest seniors continues

    to grow.

    Extremely poor affordability is a symptom of

    Vancouvers emergence as a world city. This implies

    significant foreign investment and a de-coupling of

    the local housing market from the areas economy.

    Vancouvers $378,000 median condominium price last

    year was almost 20 per cent higher than in second-place

    Toronto. Principle and interest charges on this unit

    required 21 per cent of household incomes last year,

    almost 4 percentage points above runner-up Montral

    and will hit nearly 22 per cent in 2015 as the median

    condominium price drifts higher. Vancouver mortgage

    payments will thus remain tops among our reports

    eight cities, both absolutely and relative to incomes.

    Resale Condominium Apartment Market

    2012 2013 2014 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f

    Unit sales 10,681 11,802 13,469 13,793 13,987 14,278 14,516 14,78417.5 10.5 14.1 2.4 1.4 2.1 1.7 1.8

    Active listings 6,260 5,673 5,741 5,640 5,782 5,905 6,037 6,09811.1 9.4 1.2 1.8 2.5 2.1 2.2 1.0

    Months supply 7.0 5.8 5.1 4.9 5.0 5.0 5.0 4.9

    Median price ($) 366,263 367,688 377,929 385,859 396,694 408,347 419,323 430,7991.7 0.4 2.8 2.1 2.8 2.9 2.7 2.7

    f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    New Condominium Apartment Market

    2012 2013 2014 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f

    Starts 9,616 9,185 8,666 8,933 9,344 9,663 9,995 10,17834.0 4.5 5.7 3.1 4.6 3.4 3.4 1.8

    Under construction 13,092 13,857 14,840 14,650 14,692 14,672 14,711 14,70930.7 5.8 7.1 1.3 0.3 0.1 0.3 0.0

    Completions 6,441 8,591 8,034 8,937 9,360 9,670 9,964 10,17639.0 33.4 6.5 11.2 4.7 3.3 3.0 2.1

    Complete and not absorbed 1,547 1,743 1,667 1,564 1,561 1,554 1,493 1,4643.4 12.7 4.4 6.2 0.2 0.4 4.0 1.9

    Absorptions 6,511 8,060 8,502 8,904 9,302 9,791 9,968 10,21925.4 23.8 5.5 4.7 4.5 5.3 1.8 2.5

    Months supply 2.9 2.6 2.4 2.1 2.0 1.9 1.8 1.7

    f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

  • 24 | Metropolitan Condo OutlookWinter 2015

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    T his year, Victorias first employment gains since 2012 may finally signal sustained, albeit modest, improvement for an apartment condominium mar-ket previously shackled by a soft economy, tepid population growth, and poor affordability. The apartment resale market firmed in 2014 and is expected to strengthen further this year. Transactions will remain muted by recent standards though, and prices will stay below their peak. On the new construction side, last years big drop in starts will eventu-ally trim high inventories and allow modest construction increases over the next few years.

    Victorias flat GDP and falling employment have

    limited demand for all forms of housing. But modest

    economic and job growth, along with the persistence

    of relatively low interest rates, should finally improve

    consumer interest; this, combined with the clearing of

    apartment condominium inventory backlogs following a

    large decline in starts last year, suggests this market has

    finally bottomed. Shoots of recovery will emerge this

    year and then strengthen.

    Existing apartment condominium sales shook off four

    straight annual declines to rise 13 per cent in 2014.

    Sales strengthened throughout the year, and fourth-

    quarter volumes were the highest quarterly level in

    over three years. Despite these gains, last years total of

    1,639 sales remained well off the 2,400-unit peak hit in

    2007. We expect sales to rise a further 5 per cent this

    year and by an average of roughly 3 per cent annually

    thereafter. This would put 2019 transactions just above

    the annual average of nearly 1,900 units traded here

    during the past decade.

    The falling number of active apartment listings in 2013

    was likely due mainly to the expiry of listings or their

    withdrawal from the market by frustrated potential

    vendors. But rising sales failed to prevent a further

    11 per cent drop last year. We think listings will rise

    Victoria

    Share of Population by Age Cohort(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

    1995 2007 2019f0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    1524 2539 4054 5574 75+

    Apartment Condo Construction(starts, units; share, per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    300

    600

    900

    1,200

    1,500

    0

    20

    40

    60

    80

    100

    Apartment condo starts (left)Condo starts as a share of multiple starts (right)

  • Winter 2015Metropolitan Condo Outlook | 25

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    slightly in 2015 as the 2014 sales increase attracts sup-

    ply. Slight sales increases between 2016 and 2019 will

    boost active listings an average near 4 per cent annually.

    Last years falling listings and rising sales lifted the

    sales-to-active-listings ratio nearly 4 percentage points

    to 16.5 per cent, signalling a balanced market. This

    annual total included a nearly 18 per cent fourth-quarter

    reading, providing a solid spring-board into 2015. This

    year will feature slightly faster growth in sales than in

    new listings, so the annual ratio will edge up to 16.7

    per cent. The markets move into balance last year

    produced a 2.4 per cent gain in Victorias median apart-

    ment resale price, the first annual increase since 2010.

    For 2015, the recently tighter market will produce a

    faster 4.5 per cent price increase. We expect the sales-

    to-active-listings ratio to remain between 15 and 16

    per cent over the next few years, supporting annual

    price increases near 2 per cent. The gains of 2014 and

    2015 will lift Victorias median price close to its 2010

    peak of nearly $291,000, but this threshold will not be

    crossed until2016.

    Apartment condominium starts fell 61.5 per cent to a

    five-year low of 274 units in 2014, collapsing under

    the weight of the previous years weak absorptions and

    burgeoning inventories. But a pickup in absorptions to

    a five-year high of 679 units in 2014 points to better

    times ahead. Although absorptions are forecast to ease

    in 2015 and again in 2016, this is more due to sagging

    Affordability and Apartment Condo Sales(share, per cent; sales, units)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association.

    2001 03 05 07 09 11 13 15f 17f 19f10

    15

    20

    25

    1,000

    1,500

    2,000

    2,500

    Share of household income spent on mortgage (left)Existing apartment condo sales (right)

    Sales to Active Listings and Price Change(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    10

    20

    30

    40

    50

    20

    10

    0

    10

    20

    30

    Sales-to-active-listings ratio (left)Median price growth (right)

    Ratio of Condominium Starts to Population Growth(starts per one person increase in population)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f0

    0.10.20.30.40.50.60.70.8

    Current year 20year average

    Employment Growth(per cent)

    f = forecastSources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.

    2000 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16f 18f4

    2

    0

    2

    4

    6

  • 26 | Metropolitan Condo OutlookWinter 2015

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    completions following last years starts drop than to

    sagging demand. Indeed, completions are forecast to

    drop 40 per cent to below 400 units in 2015 and remain

    there in 2016. The 2014 run-up in absorptions helped

    shave builders unsold stocks in 2014, and falling

    completions will continue trimming them. Accordingly,

    condominium starts are forecast to rise every year dur-

    ing our forecast, although increases will be modest and

    resulting volumes well off peak levels. We expect only

    about 400 apartment condominium starts by 2019a

    fraction of the all-time high above 1,400 units in both

    2006 and 2007.

    Poor affordability continues to hamper demand for

    apartment condominiums in Victoria. Principle and

    interest payments on Victorias median unit consumed

    16.9 per cent of average household income in 2014;

    this is forecast to rise to 17.8 per cent in 2015. Only

    Montral and Vancouver have a higher proportion

    among the eight cities covered in this report. This limits

    interest from retirees, who would otherwise find the

    areas mild climate and picturesque surroundings mag-

    netic. Indeed, the relative growth of Victorias 55-plus

    population has been the slowest among this reports cit-

    ies in 8 of the past 10 years.

    Resale Condominium Apartment Market

    2012 2013 2014 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f

    Unit sales 1,548 1,450 1,639 1,729 1,773 1,829 1,884 1,9356.1 6.3 13.0 5.5 2.6 3.1 3.0 2.7

    Active listings 1,032 929 827 864 928 986 1,018 1,0450.8 10.0 10.9 4.4 7.4 6.2 3.2 2.7

    Months supply 8.0 7.7 6.1 6.0 6.3 6.5 6.5 6.5

    Median price ($) 268,633 268,321 274,675 287,166 293,642 299,858 306,032 313,0436.5 0.1 2.4 4.5 2.3 2.1 2.1 2.3

    f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

    New Condominium Apartment Market

    2012 2013 2014 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f 2019f

    Starts 608 711 274 372 383 391 398 40619.4 16.9 61.5 35.6 3.2 2.0 1.7 2.2

    Under construction 833 816 804 563 556 547 540 5385.6 2.0 1.5 30.0 1.2 1.5 1.2 0.5

    Completions 525 514 611 369 391 399 404 40616.2 2.1 18.9 39.6 5.9 2.1 1.2 0.6

    Complete and not absorbed 308 371 344 257 180 158 147 1422.2 20.3 7.2 25.3 30.1 12.1 6.8 3.7

    Absorptions 590 395 679 485 419 414 412 41132.8 33.0 72.0 28.6 13.6 1.1 0.5 0.3

    Months supply 6.3 11.3 6.1 6.4 5.1 4.6 4.3 4.1

    f = forecastItalics indicate percentage change.Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canadian Real Estate Association; CMHC Housing Time Series Database.

  • The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    Housing startsRefers to the beginning of construction

    work on a building, usually when the concrete has been

    poured for the entire footing around the structure, or at

    an equivalent stage where a basement will not be part

    of the structure.

    Under constructionUnits started but not completed.

    CompletionsRefers to units where all the proposed

    construction work has been performed or, in some

    cases, where 90per cent of construction work has been

    completed and the structure is fit for occupancy.

    Complete and not absorbedRefers to newly completed

    units that remain unoccupied.

    AbsorptionsNewly completed units sold or rented.

    Units pre-sold or pre-leased are not included until the

    completion stage.

    Short-term supplyThe number of months needed

    to absorb unoccupied units. It is defined as the ratio

    between unoccupied units and absorbed units (average

    for the last 12 months). Short-term supply is included

    in the tables in this report as months supply.

    Long-term supplyThe number of months needed to

    absorb units under construction and those complete

    and unoccupied (total supply). It is defined as the ratio

    between total supply and absorbed units (average for the

    last 12 months).

    Median resale priceThe median price of all resale apart-

    ment condominium units sold on the MLS. The average

    price is used for Montral and Qubec City. Data do not

    generally include figures for new construction sales.

    Sources: Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation; Canadian Real Estate Association; The Conference Board of Canada.

    Definitions and Concepts

  • 28 | Metropolitan Condo OutlookWinter 2015

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    Standard Geographical Classification (SGC) 2006

    METROPOLITAN AREAS WITH THEIR COMPONENT CENSUS SUBDIVISIONS

    Qubec City

    Beaumont Municipality

    Boischatel Municipality

    Chteau-Richer City

    Fossambault-sur-le-Lac City

    Lac-Beauport Municipality

    Lac-Delage City

    Lac-Saint-Joseph City

    LAncienne-Lorette City

    LAnge-Gardien Parish (Municipality of)

    Lvis City

    Notre-Dame-des-Anges Parish (Municipality of)

    Qubec City

    Saint-Augustin-de-Desmaures City

    Sainte-Brigitte-de-Laval Municipality

    Sainte-Catherine-de-la-Jacques-Cartier City

    Sainte-Famille Parish (Municipality of)

    Sainte-Ptronille Village

    Saint-Franois-de-lle-dOrlans Municipality

    Saint-Gabriel-de-Valcartier Municipality

    Saint-Henri Municipality

    Saint-Jean-de-lle-dOrlans Municipality

    Saint-Lambert-de-Lauzon Parish (Municipality of)

    Saint-Laurent-de-lle-dOrlans Municipality

    Saint-Pierre-de-lle-dOrlans Municipality

    Shannon Municipality

    Stoneham-et-Tewkesbury United Townships (Municipality of)

    Wendake Indian reserve

    Montral

    Baie-dUrf City

    Beaconsfield City

    Beauharnois City

    Beloeil City

    Blainville City

    Boisbriand City

    Bois-des-Filion City

    Boucherville City

    Brossard City

    Candiac City

    Carignan City

    Chambly City

    Charlemagne City

    Chteauguay City

    Coteau-du-Lac Municipality

    Cte-Saint-Luc City

    Delson City

    Deux-Montagnes City

    Dollard-des-Ormeaux City

    Dorval Cit

    Gore Township (Municipality of)

    Hampstead City

    Hudson City

    Kahnawake Indian reserve

    Kanesatake Indian settlement

    Kirkland City

    La Prairie City

    LAssomption City

    Laval City

    Lavaltrie City

    Lpiphanie Parish (Municipality of)

    Lpiphanie City

    Lry City

    Les Cdres Municipality

    Les Coteaux Municipality

    Lle-Cadieux City

    Lle-Dorval City

    Lle-Perrot City

    Longueuil City

    Lorraine City

    Mascouche City

    McMasterville Municipality

    Mercier City

    Mirabel City

    Montral City

    Montral-Est City

    Montral-Ouest City

    Name Type Name Type

  • Winter 2015Metropolitan Condo Outlook | 29

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    Mont-Royal City

    Mont-Saint-Hilaire City

    Notre-Dame-de-lle-Perrot City

    Oka Municipality

    Otterburn Park City

    Pincourt City

    Pointe-Calumet Municipality

    Pointe-Claire City

    Pointe-des-Cascades Village

    Repentigny City

    Richelieu City

    Rosemre City

    Saint-Amable Municipality

    Saint-Basile-le-Grand City

    Saint-Bruno-de-MontarCity City

    Saint-Colomban Parish (Municipality of)

    Saint-Constant City

    Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue City

    Sainte-Anne-des-Plaines City

    Sainte-Catherine City

    Sainte-Julie City

    Sainte-Marthe-sur-le-Lac City

    Sainte-Thrse City

    Saint-Eustache City

    Saint-Isidore Parish (Municipality of)

    Saint-Jrme City

    Saint-Joseph-du-Lac Municipality

    Saint-Lambert City

    Saint-Lazare City

    Saint-Mathias-sur-Richelieu Municipality

    Saint-Mathieu Municipality

    Saint-Mathieu-de-Beloeil Municipality

    Saint-Philippe Municipality

    Saint-Placide Municipality

    Saint-Sulpice Parish (Municipality of)

    Saint-Zotique Village

    Senneville Village

    Terrasse-Vaudreuil Municipality

    Terrebonne City

    Varennes City

    Vaudreuil-Dorion City

    Vaudreuil-sur-le-Lac Village

    Verchres Municipality

    Westmount City

    Ottawa

    Clarence-Rockland City

    Ottawa City

    Russell Township

    Toronto

    Ajax Town

    Aurora Town

    Bradford West Gwillimbury Town

    Brampton City

    Caledon Town

    Chippewas of Georgina Island First Nation

    Indian reserve

    East Gwillimbury Town

    Georgina Town

    Halton Hills Town

    King Township

    Markham Town

    Milton Town

    Mississauga City

    Mono Town

    New Tecumseth Town

    Newmarket Town

    Oakville Town

    Orangeville Town

    Pickering City

    Richmond Hill Town

    Toronto City

    Uxbridge Township

    Vaughan City

    Whitchurch-Stouffville Town

    Calgary

    Airdrie City

    Beiseker Village

    Calgary City

    Chestermere Town

    Cochrane Town

    Crossfield Town

    Irricana Village

    Rocky View No. 44 Municipal district

    Tsuu Tina Nation 145 (Sarcee 145) Indian reserve

    Name Type Name Type

  • 30 | Metropolitan Condo OutlookWinter 2015

    The Conference Board of Canada/Genworth Canada

    Edmonton

    Alexander 134 Indian reserve

    Beaumont Town

    Betula Beach Summer village

    Bon Accord Town

    Bruderheim Town

    Calmar Town

    Devon Town

    Edmonton City