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ZT: Cost of home ownership continues to rise: RBC: g/ K% x$ z9 M: W$ X$ z1 o
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Canadian Press
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8 U1 K% \" a5 p* C. rWednesday, September 12, 2007
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TORONTO — The cost of owning a home in Canada continued to climb in the second quarter as affordability in Western Canada showed the biggest change, according to a new report by the Royal Bank.
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$ |4 o* r6 H1 L. g3 tSaskatchewan suffered its worst ever quarterly deterioration of affordability on record, according to the bank, as an influx of people caught the housing supply off guard.3 d/ h6 d2 k3 F. T0 L, B
# p- N* I& E6 V# j“In the second quarter, Canada's housing affordability experienced one of the largest and most broadly based quarterly deteriorations since the mid-1990s,” said Derek Holt, assistant chief economist, RBC.
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“Higher house prices, mortgage rates, utilities and property taxes all combined to drive the country-wide deterioration.”7 @/ q( D) j) ]# r" Z
) R! M4 m" x. sThe report measures the proportion of pre-tax household income needed to service the costs of owning a home. The higher the reading, the more costly it is to afford a home) W2 {7 m1 K2 h, n" p
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The bank said a standard condo was the most affordable, requiring about 29 per cent of income compared with 27.5 per cent in the first quarter.
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3 @8 C5 c1 z7 [5 p! fA standard townhouse was next at 33 per cent, up from 31.5 per cent in the first quarter followed by a detached bungalow which increased from 39 per cent to 41 per cent in the second quarter.+ l2 B% B4 z- f3 [# z; P* _
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A standard two-storey home was 46 per cent, up from 44 per cent in the first three months of the year." k. ^/ c" u- z& u/ x+ V
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Saskatchewan, Alberta and B.C. saw the biggest increase in costs in the quarter.
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; f' p& L% _3 J4 PAffordability fell about 20 per cent in Saskatchewan with no signs that prices were letting up yet, but the bank said the high prices were starting to weigh on demand.
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, |/ P( o; J; b* @( I$ T4 z& Z0 q4 wAmong Canada's largest cities, a detached bungalow in Vancouver was the most expensive with the proportion of pre-tax household income needed to own a home coming in at 71 per cent. Toronto and Calgary followed at 45 per cent, Montreal at 36 per cent and Ottawa at 31 per cent.
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; |7 C1 g4 }2 d“Market conditions in Vancouver have loosened up during the year, but conditions remain tilted in favour of a seller's market and are still supportive of fairly strong price gains,” the report said. |
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