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Luxury home sales plummet
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' \, `% @6 s0 |* UThe Edmonton Journal7 u7 x+ I: j/ j$ ]3 d- O
Published: 2:33 am3 r) a4 u1 T5 V5 q2 M6 W
EDMONTON - Sales of luxury homes in Edmonton dropped 39 per cent in the first seven months of the year compared to 2007, says a report released Thursday.3 c! o$ A7 F; `8 X8 X0 D. e. x
2 \' r$ F9 @. n2 XReal estate group Re/Max said 110 homes priced at $850,000 or more sold in the period during 2007 but the number dropped to 67 this year.
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0 S! _( Z$ a5 R3 o0 fSales over the $1-million mark dipped to 40 from 45. There are currently 218 properties for sale that top the $850,000-mark and average number of days on the market jumped to 72 in 2008 from 59 last year.
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, J6 j% b0 r7 E% i' |Font:****Re/Max blamed a slowing economy and overheated real estate market for the downward trend.
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) p+ W" E, x5 h& Z( YThe top price for an MLS sale this year was $2.25 million, while the highest-priced listing is a $6.9-million property in Crestwood. A $1.39-million property in Strathcona is the highest price condo on the market.
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$ @' ~4 ]6 [5 e' yRe/Max predicts prices will soften this year and a rebound isn't expected until late 2009 when excess housing inventory is sold.6 ^" x0 J6 a$ s0 H7 o# H0 F
0 q( W3 y, K$ YIn Calgary, where Re/Max defines a luxury home as costing $1 million or more, sales dropped 17 per cent to 258 from 312 units. And there's lots of choice for high-end buyers -- 395 properties are currently listed.
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# J) p: X1 g# _$ L% }2 c- k4 Q7 M6 UBesides Edmonton and Calgary, sales fell in Toronto, Hamilton and Kelowna. Those cities bucked the national trend that saw sales rise in 10 of the 15 major Canadian markets tracked.
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However, the real estate organization said strength in this market segment is not expected to last.
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"The market for luxury homes is usually the first to show pressure cracks, but the reverse is actually true this year, with pent-up demand (due to trade-up activity), less speculation and job transfers all factors contributing to stability in this segment," Michael Polzler, Re/Max's executive vice-president for Ontario and Atlantic Canada, said in statement.( v: g5 Z) [3 [1 K4 f! j
6 V, A& s& t9 U) ?6 F. j% h3 [But financial market conditions and more higher-end homes being put up for sale are expected to curtail both sales volumes and price levels in the coming months, Re/Max said.# |- `% A* w: h$ B6 ]( i h( T
. ?" P. d3 z* SElton Ash, Re/Max's executive vice-president for Western Canada, said, "We are seeing a return to more balanced conditions. This situation is expected to have an impact on high-end values in coming months, especially in areas that have experienced consistent double-digit growth."# V b' h; z$ m% R9 M
0 x9 N) R+ }$ g! T7 wIn terms of growth in upper-end homes sales, Regina saw the most proportionally this year at 306 per cent. Winnipeg was next at 89 per cent, followed by St. John's, N.L., at 78 per cent." R# e, J( Q' W' g( P" l( _0 R
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Each market has a different price point that marks what Re/Max defined as the start of the luxury-home category.
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It ranges from about $2 million in Greater Vancouver to $1 million in Calgary to $750,000 in Ottawa, and $400,000 in St. John's and Halifax.% A8 ] r* d- I. x2 B5 I! T. P E
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, O- H0 M9 B- T) E% W! {! c* N1 S© The Edmonton Journal 2008 |
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