Quote:
Originally Posted by Nite
Canadian house prices peaked 2 years ago around 820K CAD and have since fallen ~15%
The current average house price in Canada is 719K CAD or 525K USD
The current average house price in the US is 525K USD
So right now both countries have the same average house prices.
Housing is still a problem in Canada but prices for the most part are no longer rising on average.
Toronto average house prices peaked at 1.2 million CAD 2 years ago, now at 1.0 Million CAD
but there are a huge amount of housing that's not selling at current prices so I expect more price falls in Toronto.
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C'mon, you know that's a disingenuous comparison unless you're also going to compare Canadian salaries in USD. The median pre-tax household income in Canada is US$51,350, versus $74,755 in the US.
Also, it's been mentioned many times before, but despite prices decreasing, affordability has also gotten worse on account of the rising interest rates. Unless you can buy a house in cash, housing costs as a percentage of income were at their highest ever as of Q4 2023:
https://betterdwelling.com/buying-a-...o-correct-rbc/
As noted in the article, affordability
is likely to improve somewhat in the near future (given the massive amount of inventory that nobody can afford at current prices); but not by much, and not for long if & when interest rates drop - and particularly given rising demand for housing, now that 2024 is on track to track to smash even 2023's record-breaking population growth numbers. Rents meanwhile are also continuing to rise country-wide:
https://www.spscanada.com/blog/canad...-january-2024/
Quote:
Originally Posted by Nite
Without immigration Saskatoon would have lost 3000 people
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Good thing we have a choice that lies somewhere between 0 immigrants and 1.3 million+ immigrants per year. Back in the days where we were only growing by a half a million or so every year, Saskatoon's annual growth was averaging around +4,400 (2006-2016).