A fresh flood of homes on the market sent resale listings to their second consecutive record level in May, while sales activity and price gains both cooled.
There were 54,029 new listings of resale housing units in major markets last month, a 2.2-per-cent increase over the seasonally adjusted record hit in April, according to data released yesterday by the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA).
On an unadjusted basis, listings rose to 67,628 units, up 7 per cent from May, 2007.
Unlike listings, year-over-year sales levels fell in 18 of the 20 markets in the study for which data were available. Information was not available for the Quebec markets because geographical areas in the province are being redefined.
Unit sales across Canada dropped by 17 per cent this May from the year before on an unadjusted basis, and by 0.5 per cent compared with April, 2008, on a seasonally adjusted basis.
Prices edged up 1 per cent in May from the year before to $337,071, a new record for the average price, but the smallest such increase in more than seven years.
"Rising food, fuel and home prices are denting consumer confidence. Increasingly cautious home buyers may keep listings on the market longer before being sold, which increases the importance of realistic pricing," Gregory Klump, chief economist at CREA, said in a statement.
The most dramatic surges in new listings occurred in Saskatoon and Regina, a marked reversal from earlier in the year when they were the country's tightest markets in terms of supply.
New resale listings rose by 58 per cent in Regina and 44 per cent in Saskatoon year over year in May. During the same month, year-over-year sales fell in those markets by 28 per cent and 37 per cent.
This pattern has already been seen in other markets, including Calgary and Edmonton.
Listings in those markets are now retreating from the peak levels reached in March as the market readjusts.
"It is now becoming increasingly More from Globe Report on Business