Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Unprecedented

I have never seen so many banks come out with warnings about one asset class.

One by one the economics departments of the big banks are coming to same conclusion that we came to on the blogosphere...that RE is in a bubble and is not sustainable.

Here is the latest from TD (via Reuters and then Yahoo). By the way I think they are optimistic with their forecasts. An asset class that has gone up sooo much doesn't usually just correct gently- unless of course the government interferes again.


Canadian home prices to fall in 2011: TD report
Wed May 5, 1:46 PM


(Reuters)TORONTO (Reuters) - Canadian home prices will likely fall modestly in 2011 as rising interest rates reduce people's ability to buy, Toronto-Dominion Bank said on Wednesday.

The bank's economics group said the outlook for next year has reversed course from earlier forecasts for rising prices, partly because government bond yields have risen faster than expected. Also, markets now expect the Bank of Canada to start raising interest rates in June rather than July.

It said listings this year have been stronger than it had thought, and market balance, as a result, will be "somewhat softer" next year.

In its previous forecast, TD said it expected home prices to rise 10 percent this year, and a small bump in of 1.6 percent in 2011.

TD's forecast for 2010 is largely unchanged at 475,000 transactions with an average price of about C$350,000 ($339,806).

Its updated view for 2011 calls for a modest pullback of 2.7 percent to C$339,700, with seven out of 10 provinces experiencing lower prices. Nationally, sales of existing homes are expected to slip in 2011 to 420,000 units.

British Columbia and Ontario are expected to have the steepest declines, down 3.4 percent and 3 percent, respectively. The three Prairie provinces may have small increases of between 0.5 percent and 1.2 percent, TD said.

($1=$1.03 Canadian)

(Reporting by Ka Yan Ng; editing by Peter Galloway