1. 无忧资讯 /
  2. 本地 /
  3. 道明银行:未来十年房市 多、温涨最多 /

道明银行:未来十年房市 多、温涨最多

加拿大房地产过往十年的鸿运不再,多伦多道明银行(TD Bank)11日公布的一份展望报告认为,本国房地产市场从去年夏季开始的长期趋势将是,将十分缓慢增长,年度涨幅可能只相当于通膨幅度。不过,今后十年里,温哥华和多伦多房价涨幅仍将一马当先。

在过去十年中,仅在2008-09全球经济衰退最激烈的数个月内,加拿大房价略微后退了一点,其余时间内一路高歌猛进,但是这个历久不衰的涨势,终于在去年夏季突然中断。现在,道明银行首席经济师亚历山大预测,今后十年房价平均每年将只有大约2%的涨幅,如果计入通膨因素,等于不再上涨。

3年最多跌8% 专家:没这么惨

亚历山大指出:「我不认为加拿大会有房地产泡沫,在以往低利率情形下,房地产市场异常强劲,当利率在今后三年上涨时,房市将经历冷却期,房价随之疲弱,但不会有永久性震荡,也不是房市急剧下调。」

道明银行的报告分析,联邦政府去年7月开始执行的提升申请房贷门槛政策,只是造成房市步入冷却期的一项因素,其他因素还有人口老化,人口及经济成长均十分缓慢,还有就是利率必将上涨。

道明银行认为,加拿大的房价今后三年内最多可能下跌8%,可是亚历山大感到也许不会真的跌那么多。按照一些比较悲观的经济学家的计算,加拿大房价遭炒高了大约25%。亚历山大说,这是夸大其词,房价最多虚高接近10%。

尽管经济学界一再有人预言加拿大要步美国后尘,即将发生房地产泡沫爆裂危机,亚历山大却坚持说不可能发生,因为房地产泡沫破裂需要两个成因,一是贷款利率大幅度飙升,二是大量人失业,目前看来这两种情形都不太会发生。

房价抗压力高 只有共管公寓跌

半年来,房屋销售量、开建量及建筑许可证价值持续下降,尤其是去年7月收紧房贷申请规则后,但是房价仍极具抗压力,只有温哥华房价及多伦多的共管公寓价格开始下跌。加拿大房地产协会(Canadian Real Estate Association)报告,今年1月全加平均房价为35万4754元,比去年同期高约2%。

然而,无论如何,加拿大的房地产市场正行进在向下走的道路上,今后十年房市将比之前三年显著虚弱。

自1980年以来,加拿大房价平均每年上涨5.4%,其中包括最近十年平均上涨7%。道明银行现在预测,今后两或三年内,平均房价将下跌,2015年后变成每年平均上涨3.5%,平均下来,今后十年内房价年度涨幅为2%。

道明银行的报告说,从投资角度看,房地产难以再赚取过去十年那样的丰厚利润,但因为出售主居所取得的利润不纳税,房地产投资仍较有吸引力。该报告估算,今后20年内,房地产投资的税前回报率为4.4%左右,优于同期的债券回报率。

移民需求量大 有利多市、温市

有点令人吃惊的是,道明银行报告预测,今后十年,温哥华、多伦多、维多利亚(Victoria)、爱民顿(Edmonton)和卡加利(Calgary)房价涨幅将继续高于加拿大的其他地方。虽然最近数月温哥华和多伦多房价下跌,但仍被视为被炒高了一截。道明银行的报告分析说,温哥华和多伦多两地每年吸引的移民多,对住宅需求量高,因而继续推高房价。而亚伯达省的爱民顿和卡加利有油元支持,人口及收入增长均高于全加平均值,也为房市提供了支撑力。

亚历山大指出,影响房价趋势两个最大因素是人口增长和家庭组成,这两大因素都对温哥华和多伦多房市有利。

网友评论

网友评论仅供其表达个人看法,并不表明 51.CA 立场。
全球一直在疯狂超发货币,纸都越来越贵,房子会跌价?没钱的人永远生活在梦想,不差钱的主银行给房贷都不要,好区出来房子隔夜就没,现实就是这样。
回复
这里真热闹。。。哈哈。。。 房价不是你想跌他就跌的。至少几年内不会大跌。大家等着瞧。谁敢和我打个赌?
回复
今后20年,整天提心吊胆的同租客打交道,不停的修理出租房的各种物件,剪草,除雪,还要操心贷款利率,房屋保险。最后税前回报率才落个4.4%。如果这个预测准确的话,只有脑子被门缝挤了的人才去做房地产投资。
回复
五,六十万的小freehold走真快啊。真不明白这么多第一次买的,早干嘛去了,非得现在扎堆。换房倒是不错的时机。
回复
加拿大财政部长真能胡说八道. Right now 5 year rates range from 2.59% to 2.89% depending on the lender and T&C. Lenders include: 1. Td 2.89% 2. Scotia Bank 2.79% (over 500k), 2.84% under 500k 3. Street/FN 2.79% 4. Merix 2.77% 5. RMG 2.74% 6. Industrial Alliance 2.59% - 30 days only,
回复
Lost decade ahead for Canadian housing (ZT) TD predicts two per cent yearly growth After years of growth, economists say the real estate boom is over and predict Canadian housing prices to flatline over the next decade. Meanwhile, another report warns that a severe economic shock, such as the kind that hit Japan in the early 1990s and California and Nevada in 2006, could knock Canadian housing prices down by 44 per cent, according to a formula devised by Moody's Investors Service to rate securities linked to mortgages. TD Economics's study, Long-Run Rate of Return for Canadian Home Prices, predicts a "string of lacklustre performances" over the next few years. The annual rate of return for real estate will be about two per cent over the next decade, meaning that prices will simply match the pace of inflation. "There is some overvaluation in the housing market - home prices have moved away from their underlying economic fundamentals - and that overvaluation has to unwind," said Sonya Gulati, senior economist at TD. This adjustment, however, will be gradual, she added. "With the U.S., it was a housing market bubble and all of a sudden, a pin came and pricked it. It completely burst. The way you want to think about the Canadian housing market is that there's a balloon that's been inflated but instead of a pin coming and pricking the balloon, the air is going to be slowly let out." Canadian residential home prices grew by an average of 5.4 per cent a year between 1980 and 2012, climbing about seven per cent a year in the last decade. The market has cooled over the last six months and will continue its slide over the next few years as tighter mortgage rules, modest economic growth and higher interest rates push prices downward. The economists project a 3.5 per cent annual rate of return on real estate beyond 2015. However, Moody's Investors Service analyzed housing prices in the event of a pin coming along. A 44 per cent decline would be driven primarily by the phenomenal upswing in Canadian home prices over the past decade, Moody's said. Canada joins Spain, as well as the United Kingdom and Australia, in the ratings agency's assessment of countries where growth in housing prices over the past 10 years has driven their values away from sustainable market fundamentals and into "overheated" territory. "As with Australia, Spain and the U.K., we expect house prices in Canada to suffer the most due to the misalignment of current house prices with historic fundamentals," the ratings agency said. Moody's is the second ratings agency in as many weeks to seek input on a proposal to change the methodology used to analyze securities linked to mortgages. Last week, London and New York-based Fitch Ratings unveiled a proposed two-step model that reduces home prices to a "sustainable" value based on a number of factors including data provided by Canadian banks. It then further subjects the homes to a "stressed market" value decline assumption. Fitch said Canadian home prices are overvalued by about 20 per cent. Ratings agencies came under harsh criticism in the aftermath of the financial crisis of 2008 for what was perceived as a failure to predict the U.S. housing market meltdown. Since then, there has been an attempt to strike a balance of thorough analysis with timely analysis, according to Grant Connor, an associate in equity research at National Bank Financial who previously worked on structured finance at Moody's. The model proposed by Moody's on Monday determines house price "stress" rates by looking at variable factors such as house price and income growth over 10 years, and fixed factors such as monetary policy. The "variable" analysis assesses how much current house prices have departed from "sustainable" market fundamentals. The assumption is that, in the event of a severe economic shock, expected demand that has been baked into current house prices will not materialize. In Canada, growth in house prices over the past 10 years has "far outstripped" growth in incomes, according to Moody's. "Think of it like an elastic (being stretched)," explains Connor of National Bank Financial. "The snap back is going to be a lot harder." RateSupermarket.ca's experts predict that mortgage rates will remain unchanged for the foreseeable future. This month, BMO brought back its 2.99 per cent five-year fixed-rate mortgage as concerns of a cooling housing market has banks becoming increasingly competitive. http://www.thestarphoenix.com/business/Lost+decade+ahead+Canadian+housing/8082238/story.html
回复
x
x