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Moishe Alexander’s review of the Kitchener and Guelph Housing Market and CMHC Outlook Report Fall 2008


February 24, 2009 — Moishe Alexander’s review on how the current world economy and Canadian economic turndown is affecting Kitchener and Guelph Housing Market

Moishe Alexander’s Review:

New Home Market

Mixed Picture for Starts

Moishe Alexander says Housing starts in the Kitchener and Guelph CMAs will move in opposite directions in 2009. Housing starts in the Kitchener CMA will increase to 2,650 in 2009, up four per cent from the expected 2,560 starts in 2008. Guelph CMA housing starts will slip by three per cent to 890 in 2009 from the forecasted 920 starts in 2008. Rising house prices, a well supplied resale home market and uncertain economic conditions will combine to keep housing starts lower than levels seen in the first half of the decade. In the medium term, starts will be moving gradually higher in line with demographic requirements. Within the next ten years, the type and location of housing starts will be impacted by provincial and local efforts to use land more intensively.

Moishe Alexander says Single-detached starts in the Kitchener CMA will increase by eight per cent, while Guelph CMA detached starts will slip by two per cent. Detached homes remain the product of choice for many homebuyers. Wealthier move-up buyers will support demand for detached homes. After two years of moderate detached starts due to a lot shortage, increased construction activity in Cambridge will boost Kitchener CMA detached starts above the 2008 level.

Moishe Alexander says Single-detached homes are becoming more expensive. But, as demand for detached homes has eased in the past few years, price growth has slowed. The average price of a newly-completed single-detached home in the Kitchener CMA will reach $360,000 in 2009, up slightly more than one per cent, while Guelph prices will increase by less than two per cent. Looking ahead, higher lot prices and development charges will push up new home prices. The overall Kitchener CMA has a good supply of undeveloped land, but the ability of builders to acquire lots for single-detached homes in certain areas may impact prices moving forward.

Moishe Alexander says Semi-detached homes, townhomes and apartments are a more affordable option to higher priced singledetached homes. In both the Kitchener and Guelph CMAs, construction of these home types has been trending higher. With the emphasis on intensification, they will represent a significant share of future new construction – close to 50 per cent in both CMAs.

Moishe Alexander says Townhome construction activity will remain strong as row houses are a more affordable option for homebuyers who desire groundoriented living. Apartment construction will remain buoyant in both CMAs. In the Kitchener CMA, most developers plan to rent the new apartments due to the strong demand from the student population and younger workers for this type of housing. In the Guelph CMA, the focus of builders has shifted to condominium apartments as retirees, empty-nesters and firsttime buyers are attracted to the condominium apartment lifestyle.

Resale Home Market:

Sales Slowdown

Moishe Alexander says The resale home market in the Kitchener-Guelph area will continue to moderate in 2009. Sales of existing homes through the Kitchener-Waterloo Real Estate Board will reach 6,100 units in 2009, down six per cent from the expected 6,500 sales in 2008. Sales through the Guelph and District Real Estate Board will decline by seven per cent to 2,700 units. Rising house prices, uncertainty about the economy and the satiation of demand will dampen existing home sales in 2009. With the more diverse financing options available after 2006, many first-time buyers were able to enter the resale market earlier than would normally have been expected resulting in less first time buyer activity moving forward.  The price advantage of resale over new, more selection, and continued population growth will combine to keep existing home sales at strong levels, but below record 2007 levels.  Move-up buyer activity will support existing home sales through 2009. A well supplied existing home market will influence many homebuyers to inbegin the search for their new home in the resale market.

The supply of resale homes will move higher again in 2009. New listings are expected to reach near record levels which have not been seen since 1990. Rising home equity due to rising prices continue to encourage some homeowners to list their homes for sale so that they can move into a home more suited to their needs.

Moishe Alexander says The average price of a resale home through the KW Board will increase by two per cent in 2009 to reach $277,000. Guelph prices will reach $276,000, an increase of two per cent. With the number of new listings growing, and demand moderating, the sales-to-new listings ratio (SNLR), a leading indicator of price growth and a measure of market state, will move lower. The lower SNLR will be indicative of more balanced market conditions. As a result, existing home prices will grow at a slower pace.

Economic Trends:

Little Employment Growth

Moishe Alexander says Economic growth in the Kitchener-Guelph area will be flat in 2009.  Employment in the Kitchener CMA will increase by less than one per cent in 2009, while the Guelph CMA will see employment declining by less than one per cent. The unemployment rate is expected to inbegin crease in 2009, but will continue to trend below the Ontario average.  While the expanding service sector has been supporting employment growth in the past, lower consumer spending through 2009 will slow growth in this sector. Several employment sectors from a diverse economy continue to add jobs. Over the next year, job growth will occur in the high tech sector, as well as in the education, trade and construction sectors in the Kitchener CMA. These sectors are creating higher-paying jobs. On the other hand the manufacturing sector, and its largest subsector, the automotive industry, will continue to face challenges.
Moishe Alexander says Overall weekly earnings are forecast to increase by two per cent in both the Kitchener and Guelph CMAs in 2009. Despite the loss of higherpaying manufacturing jobs, many of the growth sectors have jobs which pay above-average wages. Employment growth in sectors such as education and high tech will continue to support housing demand.

Continued Population Growth

Moishe Alexander says Population growth in the Kitchener CMA has slowed due to an outflow of migrants to Western Canada. Net migration into the Kitchener CMA is expected to reach 2,500 persons in 2009. A diverse economy, high employment rate and more affordable house prices are attractive to migrants.  The Kitchener CMA cannot be characterized as a bedroom community.  According to data from the 2006 Census, only 14 per cent of employed persons who lived in the Kitchener CMA worked outside the CMA. Companies in the Guelph CMA, Peel Region and Toronto employ the most Kitchener workers.  On the other hand, companies in the Kitchener CMA employ more than 34,000 non Kitchener CMA residents.  More than 5,000 more people each day travel to the Kitchener CMA for work than leave the CMA. Similar Guelph CMA data shows that more than 25 per cent of employed Guelph residents work outside the CMA. Current gasoline prices will not induce most area commuters to move closer to their work.

Mortgage Rates

Moishe Alexander says Mortgage rates are expected to be relatively stable throughout the last quarter of this year, remaining within 25-50 basis points of their current levels. Posted mortgage rates will decrease slightly in the first half of 2009 as the cost of credit to financial institutions eases. Rising bond yields, however, will nudge mortgage rates marginally higher in the latter half 2009. For the last quarter of 2008 and in 2009, the one year posted mortgage rate will be in the 6.00-6.75 per cent range, while three and five year posted mortgage rates are forecast to be in the 6.50-7.25 per cent range.

You can find the entire report in PDF format through the following link:
http://www.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/odpub/esub/64323/64323_2008_B02.pdf

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Moishe Alexander’s review of the Canada Housing Market and CMHC Outlook Report fall 2008


February 24, 2009 — Moishe Alexander’s review on how the current world economy and Canadian economic turndown is affecting Canada Housing Market

Moishe Alexander’s Review:

Housing Market Starting to Ease

Canada - Credit Rick Harris, Flickr Creative Commons

Canada - Credit Rick Harris, Flickr Creative Commons

Housing starts: The multi-family sector will keep residential construction strong this year despite a slow down in single-detached activity.  Housing starts this year will remain above the 200,000 unit mark for a seventh consecutive year before dipping to 177,975 units in 2009.

Resales: Rising house prices in recent years have cooled resale activity. Sales of existing homes through the Multiple Listing Service®1 (MLS®) are forecast to fall 13.6 per cent this year compared to last year’s record level, then ease an additional 4.2 per cent in 2009.

Resale prices: Record levels of new listings this year have reduced the upward price pressures that prevailed over the previous six years. As sales of existing homes moderate and new listing continue to increase, the average MLS® price growth this year is expected to ease to 0.3 per cent and 0.1 per cent increase in 2009.

Saskatchewan: The natural resource sector will sustain economic growth in Saskatchewan. Net migration turned positive in 2007, after 22 years of negative net flows. The economy and shift in migration are key factors driving provincial housing starts in 2009.

British Columbia: Economic expansion and job creation will outperform the national average both this year and next. Despite the province’s growing population and job numbers, a well-supplied resale home market will offer more choice to home shoppers and moderate new home demand. By 2009, housing starts will have moved back toward their long term average.
National Housing Outlook:

In Detail

Moishe Alexander says Housing starts this year will remain above the 200,000 unit mark for a seventh consecutive year as slowing construction of single-detached homes is partially offset by growth in multiples. Housing starts will fall 7.1 per cent to 212,188 units in 2008, then dip an additional 16.1 per cent to 177,975 units in 2009. Even with the slow down, new home construction in 2008-2009 will remain strong in a historical context.
The new home market is moderating due to three key factors. First, strong house price growth over the last six years has tempered home ownership demand particularly in Western Canada. Second, the record high levels of new listings has increased the competition from the existing home market and reduced spillover demand.  Third, pent-up demand that built up during the 1990s is nearly exhausted and new home construction will become more aligned with long run demographic demand.
Housing starts will moderate in seven of the ten provinces in 2008, particularly in Western Canada. In Alberta, housing starts are expected to decline by a third compared to the previous year and be more in line with activity in 2001. Higher housing starts this year in Ontario, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland will partially offset the moderating pace in the other seven provinces.
As for 2009, national housing starts are forecast to dip below the 200,000 unit mark.

Higher prices moderate demand for single detached housing

Moishe Alexander says The rising house prices of previous years will moderate single-detached housing starts where activity is forecast to dip below the 100,000 unit mark. Single-detached starts will decrease 20.7 per cent to 94,263 units in 2008, then drop an additional 11.3 per cent to 83,600 units next year coming off of 10 years of high levels. For 2009, Alberta will post higher single-detached housing starts, increasing 3.4 per cent, while the remaining provinces will see singles move lower. In Saskatchewan, single starts are expected to fall 23.3 per cent next year, closer to the recent historical average. A slowdown in single-detached starts will also occur in Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, and New Brunswick. Modest decreases in single-detached activity are forecast in British Columbia, Manitoba, and Quebec in 2009.

Multi-family housing increases in popularity

Moishe Alexander says As house prices have moved higher, less expensive multi-family housing (row, semi-detached, and apartment units) has increased in popularity relative to single-detached housing.  This year and next will see multi-family housing starts out number singledetached activity for the first time since 1982. Furthermore, 2008 marks the fifth consecutive year in which multiple starts have surpassed the 100,000 unit mark. Multi-family housing starts are forecast to rise 7.8 per cent to 117,925 units this year, while they are forecast to drop by 20.0 per cent to 94,375 units in 2009. Apartment construction has been growing for 11 consecutive years since bottoming out at just over 23,000 starts in 1996. The resurgence in apartment construction has been pushing multiple starts higher in recent years. Apartment starts are expected to grow 18.1 per cent to 84,725 units in 2008 before declining 21.4 per cent to 66,550 units in 2009.

MLS® sales will ease

Moishe Alexander says Existing home sales activity will ease 13.6 per cent to 452,225 units this year and an additional 4.2 per cent to 433,375 units in 2009 as rising house prices cool home ownership demand.  While sales have been easing throughout the first half of this year, new listings have continued to rise into record territory. Thus, the strong seller’s market that has existed since 2002 have given way to balanced market conditions in most regions across Canada.

Resale markets move back into balance

Moishe Alexander says The strong sellers’ market conditions in recent years were reflected in strong upward pressure on the average price of homes, which increased in the 9 to 11 per cent range in each of the last six years. The first half of this year has seen an easing in MLS® sales and record high levels of new listings; this has brought balance back to the Canadian resale market.  More balanced markets combined with decreased sales activity in the provinces of British Columbia and Alberta, where the provincial average prices are significantly higher than the Canadian average, will cause growth in the average MLS® price to slow in 2008 and 2009.
As more new listings enter the resale market, and sales begin to ease, future price growth will be well below the price increases seen over the previous 6 years. For 2008 and 2009, the MLS® annual average price will rise 0.3 per cent to $306,500 in 2008 and 0.1 per cent to $306,700 in 2009.

Trends Impacting Housing:

Mortgage Rates

Moishe Alexander says The Bank of Canada has cut the Target for the Overnight Rate by a total of 225 basis points since December 2007, bringing the rate down to 2.25 per cent.
Mortgage rates are expected to be relatively stable throughout the last quarter of this year, remaining within 25-50 basis points of their current levels. Posted mortgage rates will decrease slightly in the first half of 2009 as the cost of credit to financial institutions eases. Rising bond yields, however, will nudge mortgage rates marginally higher in the latter half of 2009. For the last quarter of 2008 and in 2009, the one year posted mortgage rate will be in the 6.00-6.75 per cent range, while three and five year posted mortgage rates are forecast to be in the 6.50-7.25 per cent range.

Migration

Moishe Alexander says Net migration (immigration minus emigration) is forecast to increase by 9.2 per cent this year to just over 261,000 people, then remain essentially unchanged in 2009.  Historically high levels of migration will continue to support housing demand.  The majority of newly arrived immigrants initially settle in rental accommodations then move into home ownership over time. Net interprovincial migration to the West, coming at the expense of central Canada, will continue to boost housing demand in these provinces both this year and next.

Employment and Income

Moishe Alexander says Employment in Canada grew by nearly 194,000 people in the first three quarters of this year and was up 1.1 per cent on a year-over-year basis.  Although there is uncertainty, employment growth is expected to be in the 1.4 per cent to 1.8 per cent range this year and in the 0.5 per cent to 1.5 per cent range in 2009. Tight labour market conditions will continue to drive wages and incomes higher.

You can find the entire report in PDF format through the following link:
http://www.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/odpub/esub/61500/61500_2008_Q04.pdf

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Moishe Alexander’s review of the Saskatoon CMA Housing Market and CMHC Outlook Report fall 2008


February 18, 2009 — Moishe Alexander’s review on how the current world economy and Canadian economic turndown is affecting Saskatoon CMA Housing Market

Moishe Alexander’s Review:

New Home Market

Single starts slip in 2008 but maintain historically high levels

Saskatoon, Sask. - Credit Stephen Glauser, Flickr Creative Commons

Saskatoon, Sask. - Credit Stephen Glauser, Flickr Creative Commons

Moishe Alexander says Saskatoon single-detached housing starts will see a slight decline in 2008, slipping to 1,250 starts, 16 per cent less than the 1,485 starts seen in the market of 2007. In 2009, our forecast calls for 1,000 single-detached starts as the market responds to reduced demand, rising inventories, and competition from the resale market. Price escalation from previous years will be a dominant factor leading demand lower. Notwithstanding the expectation of a reduction in starts, this outlook is above the average number of starts seen in the 10 years prior to 2007. The momentum in single starts which built up in 2007 continued into the first five months of 2008 and is slowly abating in the fall.  Investor money has now evaporated.

Wide choice on the resale side is diverting demand from new construction.  Builders are turning to the task of completing and selling the homes presently under construction. Job growth, wage gains and positive net migration will continue to support new housing and ensure a gradual cooling of the market. In August, year-to-date single starts are close to even with last year at this time but monthly starts have been lower than last year for the past three months.

Bedroom communities attracting home buyers

Moishe Alexander says to the end of August, areas surrounding the city of Saskatoon have captured just over 30 per cent of the total housing starts compared to a 26 per cent share at the end of August 2007. The bulk of these starts have occurred in the town of Warman with 247 starts. Total housing starts in Warman include 111 apartment units. Looking at only single-detached units, Warman again captured the bulk of the starts with a 12 per cent share of the total single housing starts in the CMA. Warman is a popular choice for homebuyers because of its close proximity to employment opportunities offered in the north end of Saskatoon.

Single-detached absorptions are climbing as builders complete units and homebuyers occupy these new homes. To the end August, absorptions of units started in 2007 are up 37 per cent compared to this time in 2007. Average absorptions have topped 100 units monthly compared to an average of 84 units monthly throughout 2007.
At the present rate of absorption, the supply of single units at various stages of construction as well as complete and unoccupied is sufficient to last about 12 months. This is down slightly from the August 2007 figure of 13 months. The combined effect of slower starts and increased absorptions has reduced the total supply on a month over month basis over the last three months.

Average price to reach $380,000 in 2008 and $415,000 in 2009

Moishe Alexander says at the end of 2008, we forecast the average price of a new single-detached home will be $380,000 followed by a nine per cent increase to $415,000 in 2009. Expect price increases to moderate in 2009 as increased competition from resale housing takes hold and construction moderates. Labour costs combined with higher land development costs are the primary contributors to the upswing in average price thus far. In recent months, however, labour shortages have tapered off with the recent decline in single-detached starts. The continued moderation in starts in 2009 will result in a weaker pace of price growth moving forward.
Currently, the year-to-date average price of a new single-detached home is over $350,000, up close to 33 per cent over the average price recorded in the first eight months of 2007. There is a shift upwards into higher price ranges. All price ranges above $250,000 have seen an increase in the number of absorptions while lower price ranges have seen declines. So far, in 2008, the $300,000 to $349,999 range has captured most of the absorptions, reaching 24 per cent of the market.  In the $300,000 to $349,999 price range, year-to-date absorptions of 195 units are 150 per cent over last year at this time.

Saskatoon New House Price Index decelerates in 2008 and 2009

Moishe Alexander says Statistics Canada’s New House Price Index (NHPI) measures the increase in the price of a house where the detailed specifications pertaining to each house remain the same between two consecutive periods. We expect gains will be more subdued than 2007 as we move forward. Our forecast calls for a 22 per cent increase in the total NHPI in 2008 followed by a modest 1.5 per cent rise in 2009.

According to homebuilders, the 2007 increases were a reaction to the rapid escalation of existing home prices. Demand had shifted from resale housing and builders raised their prices as supply dwindled.  These market conditions have now reversed course and our forecast anticipates a reduction in price gains as the market softens. A 22 per cent increase in 2008, with a further slowdown in price gains to 1.5 per cent in 2009, reflects these changes in the market.

Multi starts slow in 2009

Moishe Alexander says Momentum will carry multiple starts (including semi-detached, row, and apartment units) to 1,150 units in 2008 as builders exceed the pace recorded in 2007. A rising inventory will force developers to slow production to 800 units in 2009.

To the end of August, multiple starts are up 45 per cent compared to this time in 2007. Apartments have dominated production in 2008 with 589 units started; more than double the 2007 starts level seen at this time last year. Most of these apartments are condominiums designed for seniors and offer such features as elevators and underground parking.  However, new markets have opened for homebuilders involved in row housing condominium development.  Due to the rising price of singledetached housing, some first-time homebuyers have turned to the row and semi-detached dwelling style as a more affordable homeownership alternative. Expect row housing to be the second most popular form of new multiple housing, after apartments in 2009.

Supply of multiple units reaches historically high levels

Moishe Alexander says as of August this year, total supplies of multiples were in excess of 1,400 units at various stages of construction or completed and unoccupied. This figure is more than 55 per cent higher than last year at this time.  As multiple starts will remain at an elevated level in 2008, we expect the supply of multiples to remain in the 1,000-unit range throughout this year with an eventual decline in 2009 as starts fall off and units are completed and absorbed. At current rates of absorption, the supply of all types of multiple units is sufficient to last almost 29 months, close to the 28-month supply seen in August 2007.

Most of the multi supply is in the construction stage with apartment style units dominating the mix. The number of apartments under construction is now almost double the number seen at this time in 2007.  There are just over 360 row units in the construction stage.

Industry reports abundant supply of land

Moishe Alexander says Saskatoon land developers have reported there are 1,850 lots at various stages of development within city limits and an additional 1,200 lots in communities surrounding the city. According to developer’s estimates of land absorption rates, this represents a three-year supply.  Given the length of time required to plan and develop raw land, this suggests a balanced market situation.  However, shortages may develop for lots in more desirable subdivisions or price ranges.

RESALE MARKET

Resale market sales fall off in 2008 and 2009

Moishe Alexander says Saskatoon resales will decline almost 20 per cent by the end of 2008 with a further 11 per cent reduction occurring in 2009. Notwithstanding 2008’s forecast decline, resales will still be in excess of the ten-year average of 3,170 sales. Saskatoon’s resale market is coming off a surge of activity in 2007 that saw sales increase almost 30 per cent over 2006 and resulted in the highest number of resales ever recorded.  By the end of August 2008, year-todate sales were down 18 per cent, while seasonally adjusted monthly sales were down 33 per cent compared to the same month in 2007.

Investor demand played an important role in the 2007 upswing but the bulk of this money is now absent.  The industry reports that sellers are holding firm at prices that were common in 2007. Buyers, on the other hand, have adopted a wait and see approach, hoping for a price adjustment following the steep price gains of the last two years. In-migration, rising weekly earnings and other favourable labour market conditions will support demand for resale housing but the sales trend is clearly slowing.

Saskatoon will see 8,500 listings processed in 2008 followed by 7,000 new listings throughout 2009. In August, year-to-date new listings were up 41 per cent compared to last year at that time. New listings are on the rise as seniors move into newly constructed condominiums and others take possession of their new single-detached units. In addition, some investors are now liquidating their holdings in the resale market. Some of these newly listed properties are recently completed new homes. Thus, builders are finding they are competing against their own product. Faced with this challenge, builders will limit price increases on future building contracts.
The combination of the escalation in new listings and slow sales has led to high active listing inventories. Active listings have more than doubled over the August 2007. Although new listing activity will slow in 2009, we expect active listings will remain elevated moving forward.

A further result of record listings and slow sales is a decline in the sales-to-active listing ratio to 8.3 per cent. The seasonally adjusted trend is down more than 30 percentage points on a year-over-year basis and down close to three percentage points on a month-over-month basis.  These low ratios mean that relatively few buyers face a large number of homes available for purchase. The result is a market that favours the homebuyer.

Average resale price to increase 23 per cent in 2008 and 1.9 per cent in 2009

Moishe Alexander says our forecast calls for average price to reach $287,000 in 2008 and approach the $300,000 mark in 2009 as price gains cool from the 2007 pace. Higher listings and buyer resistance to higher prices will result in the relatively weaker price gains compared with 2007 for the balance of 2008 and 2009. The forecasted increase of 23 per cent in 2008 will be modest by comparison with the 45 per cent jump in 2007 but will still be one of the highest gains on record.

At the end of August, year-to-date average price is still on the rise with a year-to-date increase of 27 per cent.

Seasonally adjusted average price is up 15 per cent compared to the August 2007 figure but down slightly from the July 2008 seasonally adjusted average price.

RENTAL MARKET

Vacant apartments scarce in 2008 and 2009

Moishe Alexander says after falling to a low of 0.6 per cent in 2007, CMHC is forecasting an increase in the average vacancy rate in 2008 to two per cent followed by two per cent in October 2009. The average vacancy rate will vary widely across the city but all areas will see a tight rental market. The April rental market survey found there was an average vacancy rate of less than one per cent in the Saskatoon Census Metropolitan Area. Our forecast of two per cent average vacancy in October 2008 assumes there will be a decline in demand due to tenants moving to home ownership, lower in-migration and tenant households “doubling-up” in the face of mounting rents. In 2009, these conditions will persist, resulting in two per cent average vacancy rate in that year also.

Rents continue to rise in 2008 and 2009

Moishe Alexander says strong rental demand has given property owners and managers an opportunity to maximize rental income. Following an $85 increase to the monthly two-bedroom rent in 2007, our forecast calls for an increase of $167 in the two-bedroom monthly average rent in 2008 and a modest increase of $15 in 2009 bringing the average rent for a twobedroom suite to $860 by October 2008 and $875 in October 2009.  The re-introduction of renovated suites will contribute to the rental hikes. We expect the increase in average rent to slow in 2009 as household income begins to limit further rent hikes.

Both the City of Saskatoon and the Province of Saskatchewan have programs in place to encourage the building of market rental and affordable rental housing.

ECONOMIC OUTLOOK

Employment growth restricted by scarcity of workers

Moishe Alexander says CMHC is forecasting employment gains of 2,300 jobs in 2008 followed by 1,800 in 2009. These increases are considerably more subdued than the surge in employment seen in 2007, which saw 7,500 jobs created.  The escalation in housing prices relative to other western cities will slow in-migration and restrict labour force gains thus limiting employment growth. Unemployment will see a slight increase in 2008, yet remain low by historical and national standards.  Expect the unemployment rate to slip back to four per cent in 2009.  At the end of August, Saskatoon’s goods sector has dominated employment growth. Mining as well as oil and gas extraction have done the heavy lifting. Manufacturing and construction have also contributed.  Service sector employment has fallen off compared to the hectic pace of hiring seen in 2007. Retail trade and education employment numbers have been slipping since the beginning of 2008. Full-time employment has seen an increase so far in 2008 while parttime employment has been sliding.  Both younger and older age groups have benefitted from employment gains so far in 2008. There are early indications that the youngest age group may be seeing declines later in the year as this is the group most commonly associated with part-time work and the service sector.

Building permits show residential construction cooling

Moishe Alexander says the July year-to-date dollar volume of all types of building permits has seen a 51 per cent increase in 2008 compared to this time in 2007. The largest increases have occurred in the industrial sector followed by growth in the commercial sector.  The institutional and governmental permit volume saw the third highest increase. Although residential permits dollars have seen an increase of close to 13 per cent this year, the gains are far behind the 133 per cent increase recorded at this time in 2007. Considering the unit count of building permits issued to July, there has been a 5.8 per cent decline in total residential permits issued so far in 2008. Single-detached permits are up 2.2 per cent but multiple unit permits are down 1.3 per cent. Conversion permits are also down.

You can find the entire report in PDF format through the following link:
http://www.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/odpub/esub/64351/64351_2008_B02.pdf

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