Skip to main content

Canadian Economy Springs Back to Life!

Canadian economy to spring back into life

Once again, Canada looks to the US for signs of life and after more than three years, the U.S. is poised for economic recovery.

 As dependent as the country is on the economic health of the United States, and indeed, the rest of the world, the government’s fiscal policy and the Bank of Canada’s astute predictions, have put us in a solid position for future growth, despite the slowdown in the real estate sector and manufacturing sectors.

On a positive note, U.S. housing starts surged 12.1 per cent in December, the fastest since June 2008.  Economic recoveries are usually led by a surge in home building. Banks offer low interest rates, and consumers take advantage to buy big items like houses. Then they buy furniture and other items to put into their homes. Construction companies start to hire, which bumps up consumer demand for goods and services, then economic growth bops along at a nice pace.

The U.S. Fed chairman Ben Bernanke said that 2013 could be a “very good” year. The early signals are good ones, which is also a good sign for the Canadian economy and the jobs market and the real estate market.

In Canadian real estate, there has been a slowdown in a few areas of the country -- Vancouver is one -- with prices and sales cooling, especially in the condo market.  However, the surrounding areas of Vancouver are already showing signs of activity.

Alberta is still expected to see strong growth despite a slight slowdown in major centres. Areas outside Edmonton and Calgary are active as well.

Sakatchewan and Manitoba have not really seen a slow down, but are experiencing a lack of inventory.
Ontario is a smorgasbord of activity – slow in some areas and strong in others. Reports have Toronto’s condo sales slowing, which Finance Minister Jim Flaherty was most concerned about in Toronto as well as in Vancouver.  Mid-month figures released by the Toronto real Estate Board show a 2.5 per cent rise in home sales compared to the year-ago period.

In the Atlantic Provinces Nova Scotia is still strong.  RBC Economics predicts that Newfoundland’s economy will swing from a bottom position in the 2012 provincial growth rankings to top spot in 2013. PEI is expected to remain the same.

It will be important to watch two things. The first is employment gains. More jobs mean an increase in economic growth. Second: real estate sales trends as we move through the first quarter. The stricter guidelines imposed by the government last year had home buyers move to the sidelines. Over the next few months, we’ll be able to see if they remain there or decide to move forward towards purchasing a home.



Jan 31, 2013 From TMG Mortgage Group Blog. 


 Ariana Leroux 
 Licensed Mortgage Agent with TMG
 Leroux Mortgages
 Mobile 780.952.4087
 Email: mortgages@arianaleroux.com
 Web: www.arianaleroux.com




Popular posts from this blog

Budget 2025 & the Alberta Mortgage Market: What Buyers and Homeowners Need to Know

  The federal government has released its 2025 budget, and while the focus is largely on long-term housing supply, there are several key items that matter for buyers, homeowners, and investors in the Edmonton-area markets — including Spruce Grove, Stony Plain, St. Albert, Leduc, Beaumont, and Sherwood Park . Below is a clear, Alberta-specific breakdown of what changed, what didn’t, and how this affects mortgage decisions over the coming year. 1. The Rate Environment: What It Means in Alberta The Bank of Canada recently reduced its policy rate to 2.25% , bringing mortgage prime down to 4.45% . This matters for our markets because: Variable-rate mortgages are becoming competitive again. Payment shock for renewals may ease slightly. But—and this is key— we do not expect dramatic further rate drops due to ongoing inflation pressures. Bottom line: Alberta borrowers now have more flexibility. Variable may start to make sense again, but choosing between fixed and variable...

New and Improved Website Coming Soon... and some updates! :)

I am so happy to announce that I will be having a new website I am designing! What a learning curve I can tell you - I had someone plug in the theme to use and help with some charts and pictures but I am happy to say I have been the one to put it mostly together! I think however I will stick to Mortgage Building vs Web Building! lol, I am way better at the former than the latter that is true. Speaking of mortgages, as you already know the Bank of Canada has already left the overnight rate as is... so what does that mean for you? The lenders are still offering stable rates with nothing really going up to high or down to low... rates have been pretty consistant. The thing that has not remained steady are mortgage products. Most lenders have now all followed suit in regards to using a 3% payment caculation on all unsecured lines of credit and credit cards vs using the provable payment. This makes things I find tight for First Time Buyers when looking at what they qualify for. For exampl...

The Tricky Thing About Rates, When Your Under 80% Loan to Value....

I will dive right in. The rate market is a tricky thing currently for most regular people to understand. They see rates posted online that seem amazing, do their applications and then find out the rate changed somewhere in the process and not for the better. Response, anger - usually at the broker or banker they were dealing. So let me try to break this down a little so that it may begin to make more sense. Since the newest Government changes we have the Stress Test, this one everyone know, except not everyone knows what it means. In a nut shell, any insured mortgage needs to qualify at the Bank of Canada Rate (5.34% as of April 23, 2019) regardless of the actual paid rate on the mortgage. Now here is some information most people do not know, so buckle up as this road gets a bit bumpier. Rates change based insured, insurable or uninsured and then again for insurable your loan to value comes into play for the rate as well. Insured means, CMHC or GE insurance premiums are include...