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September 2009
Welcome to the September issue of CAAMP Stats.
This information is also posted on the CAAMP website, www.caamp.org

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Bank of Canada Interest Rate
Bank Prime Lending Rate
US Federal Reserve Board Discount Rate
Exchange Rate
Government of Canada Bonds
Total New Housing Starts
Average MLS resale price for local markets
Housing Affordability Index

Bank of Canada Interest Rate

June 4, 2009 0.25%
July 21, 2009 0.25%*
September 10, 2009 Next meeting date

Source: Bank of Canada
*Bank of Canada statement included reference to hold rate to end of second quarter 2010

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Bank Prime Lending Rate

June 5, 2009 2.25%
July 22, 2009 2.25%
September 11, 2009 Next meeting date

Source: Bank of Canada

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US Federal Reserve Board Discount Rate

June 24, 2009 0.00% – 0.25%
August 11, 2009 0.00% – 0.25%
September 22, 2009 Next meeting date

Source: US Federal Reserve

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Exchange Rate $CDN($US)

July 30, 2009 .9223 $CDN($US)
August 14, 2009 .9093 $CDN($US)
August 28, 2009 .9132 $CDN($US)

Source: Bank of Canada

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Government of Canada Bonds

Bond Type July 29, 2009 August 12, 2009 August 26, 2009
1 year Treasury Bill 0.59% 0.57% 0.53%
3 year Benchmark
Bond Yield
1.94% 1.80% 1.79%
5 year Benchmark
Bond Yield
2.66% 2.62% 2.65%
10 year Benchmark
Bond Yield
3.53% 3.52% 3.39%

Source: Bank of Canada

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Total New Housing Starts (Seasonable adjusted and annualized)

Province May
2009
May
2008
June
2009
June
2008
July
2009
July
2008
Newfoundland/Labrador 2,800 2,900 2,900 2,800 2,900 1,800
PEI 800 700 1,000 600 600 400
Nova Scotia 2,900 3,800 2,700 3,900 3,300 3,400
New Brunswick 3,700 5,100 3,300 4,600 3,800 3,200
Quebec 40,100 50,300 37,900 46,500 46,200 43,900
Ontario 44,500 71,200 45,800 82,000 39,100 59,200
Manitoba 3,700 7,200 5,000 5,500 4,000 3,400
Saskatchewan 3,000 6,500 5,100 10,800 3,600 4,700
Alberta 14,200 35,500 20,000 23,600 17,600 29,000
British Columbia 11,700 38,000 14,100 35,600 13,100 37,300
Canada 127,400 221,300 137,800 215,900 134,200 186,500

Source: CMHC Housing Now – August 2009 and August 2008.
This seasonally adjusted data goes through stages of revision at different times of the year.

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Average MLS resale price for local markets

City July 2008 July 2009
Halifax $236,514 $243,524
Saint John, NB $154,273 $156,010
Montréal $272,039 $280,890
Ottawa $295,134 $300,635
Toronto $371,410 $395,414
Hamilton/Burlington $281,580 $296,591
Winnipeg $195,964 $206,135
Saskatoon $292,428 $283,619
Calgary $402,788 $381,740
Edmonton $335,100 $324,744
Vancouver $575,526 $584,105
Victoria $487,864 $475,490

Source: Canadian Real Estate Association

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Housing Affordability Index

Detached Bungalow
  Average Price Qualifying Income Affordability Measure
Province Q1 2009 Y/Y % ch. Q1 2009 Q4 2008 Q1 2009
British Columbia 480,700 -6.4 97,200 65.0 59.0
Alberta 336,100 -9.1 74,200 37.8 33.2
Saskatchewan 291,400 -0.4 67,700 45.3 42.0
Manitoba 219,400 0.7 55,400 38.2 35.3
Ontario 306,400 -2.5 72,700 42.8 38.6
Quebec 191,500 1.5 46,700 34.8 32.3
Atlantic 182,200 5.2 46,200 34.2 31.3
Toronto 417,900 -3.9 93,100 51.4 45.9
Montreal 235,700 0.8 55,300 39.7 36.5
Vancouver 575,200 -9.6 114,300 69.3 62.6
Ottawa 317,500 1.9 77,600 42.8 39.1
Calgary 391,800 -11.5 82,400 40.9 35.1
Edmonton 328,300 -7.1 73,900 38.0 34.0
Canada 293,800 -3.1 67,200 43.4 39.4

 

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Standard Two-Storey
  Average Price Qualifying Income Affordability Measure
Province Q1 2009 Y/Y % ch. Q1 2009 Q4 2008 Q1 2009
British Columbia 530,500 -6.3 107,600 72.7 65.3
Alberta 358,800 -9.7 80,900 42.3 36.2
Saskatchewan 301,000 -5.2 72,100 47.3 44.8
Manitoba 236,300 3.5 59,200 41.4 37.8
Ontario 348,900 -2.0 83,200 49.2 44.2
Quebec 225,100 -1.8 55,400 42.0 38.4
Atlantic 207,400 5.7 54,000 40.0 36.5
Toronto 494,600 -3.3 110,600 61.6 54.6
Montreal 299,100 -1.1 69,300 50.2 45.7
Vancouver 632,900 -9.5 125,800 77.5 68.9
Ottawa 318,500 2.8 81,000 44.3 40.8
Calgary 290,700 -12.4 84,600 42.6 36.0
Edmonton 365,300 -7.7 83,100 44.2 38.2
Canada 330,100 -3.4 76,200 49.7 44.7

Source: RBC Financial Group Housing Affordability Index, July 2009. Index based on a 25% down payment and a 25 year mortgage loan at a five year fixed rate. The higher the index, the more difficult it is to afford home. An affordability index of 50 means that homeownership costs including mortgage payments, utilities and property taxes take up half of a typical household’s monthly pre-tax income.

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