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Canada a nation of homeowners, bank report says

By THE CANADIAN PRESS

Thu. Jun 18 - 12:58 PM

OTTAWA — Canada has become a nation of home owners, according to the Bank of Nova Scotia.

A new Scotiabank report says a record 68.4 per cent of Canadian households owned their homes in 2006 and the number edged up even further in 2007.

That is a significant increase from the 63.6 per cent that owned their own homes a decade earlier.

As well, nine per cent of Canadian households now own a second home, such as a cottage, resort condominium or other vacation residence, up from seven per cent in 1999.

Scotiabank analyst Adrienne Warren says part of the trend toward home ownership stems from the baby boom generation entering peak home-buying years of 45 to 64.

But she adds other age groups have also seen a pick-up in home ownership.

 

 

House ownership more affordable, RBC says

Updated Thu. Apr. 16 2009 11:01 AM ET

The Canadian Press

TORONTO -- Home ownership became more affordable for Canadians in the last quarter of 2008, reversing a trend that began four years earlier, according to Royal Bank of Canada (TSX:RY).

The RBC Affordability measure tracks how much of a typical family's pre-tax income is required to pay for different types of housing and expresses it as a percentage.

From mid-2004 to early 2008, RBC found the cost of home ownership consumed a greater and greater portion of family income.

RBC said that trend reversed in the final three months of 2008 -- a period that many economists say marked the beginning of what's become the deepest recession in decades.

The national rating for a detached bungalow, which RBC uses as a benchmark, fell to 43.7 per cent in the October-December quarter -- down 2.1 percentage points from the July-September quarter.

Other types of housing also become more affordable, RBC said, with standard townhouse costing 35.4 per cent of family income (from 36.9), the standard condo to 30.1 per cent (from 31.4), and the standard two-story home to 50 per cent (from 52.0).

RBC Economics said the biggest factor affecting the improved affordability in the final three months of 2008 was falling mortgage rates, while improved family income also contributed.

Lower house prices were only a factor in Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver, which had been among the hottest real estate markets, the bank said.

"Going forward, low mortgage rates and persisting downward pressure on housing prices will continue to help repair affordability although slowing income growth will act as a restraint," RBC economist Robert Hogue said in a statement.

There were wide variations in affordability depending on the region. A detached bungalow in Vancouver, for example, cost a sky-high 70.3 per cent of family income.

In Toronto, the figure was significantly lower at 51.3 per cent. Calgary's reading was 42.7 per cent, Ottawa was the same at 42.7 per cent, Montreal was 39.4 per cent.

 

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