Blog Comments Off on Vancouver home supply up as sales drop below historical average in October

The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver says home supply is rising and reaching levels not seen in roughly four years, even as the average price inches up year-over-year.

The board says the composite benchmark price for all homes was $1,062,100 in October, up 1% since October 2017, but down 3.3% over the last three months.

Sales of all types of homes — detached, town homes and condos — in October fell 34.9% compared with the same month last year, dropping 26.8% below the 10-year October sales average.

Meanwhile, nearly 4,900 new properties were listed for sale last month, up 7.4% compared with October last year.

Nearly 13,000 homes are listed in Metro Vancouver or 42.1% more than in October 2017.

Board president Phil Moore says the additional supply gives home buyers more choice and home sellers more competition.

Detached home sales fell 32.2% in October compared with the same month last year, while the benchmark price fell to $1,524,000 marking a 5.1% drop year-over-year and 3.9% fall over the last three months.

Sales of town homes declined 37.5% and condos fell 35.7% year-over-year. The benchmark price for town homes rose 4.4% from last year to $829,200, while condo prices jumped 5.8% to $683,500. Over the past three months, town home prices fell 2.8% and condo prices dropped 3.1.

The three-month price drop “is providing a little relief for those looking to buy compared to the all-time highs we’ve experienced over the last year,” says Moore.

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