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For foreign buyers, Vancouver housing is a bargain as city becomes a ‘U.S. dollar play’

In U.S. dollar terms, Vancouver still remains affordable to foreign buyers and in fact is a bargain compared to some other cities in the Pacific Rim.

Vancouver’s eye-popping housing industry is seemingly defying gravity, with sales in January rising nearly 32 percent – the 2nd busiest January on record.

Without affordable housing, Vancouver risks just as one economic ghost town

Arlen Redekop/Postmedia Files

The tech economy in Vancouver and across Canada has never looked brighter. The reality, in certain respects, has not been bleaker.

Continue reading.

With prices in Metro Vancouver slowly creeping up to the $2 million mark, the searing pace of housing within the city has many worried.

But the state of the market makes sense if you look at the market like a U.S. dollar play, say economists Derek Holt and Dov Zigler of Scotiabank. Because a lot of the marketplace has been fuelled by foreign buyers, a lot of whom purchase in U.S. currency, the Canadian dollar price surge constitutes a lot of sense.

The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. estimates that foreign buyers own 3.5 percent of the condos in Metro Vancouver, up from 2.3 per cent in 2014.

But Holt and Zigler called those estimates “ridiculously low ball.”

A much higher foreign investment rate would explain the surging prices and purchasers in the market even as wages remain stagnant in Canada and also the economy slows.
FP0209_Vancouver_Scotia-C-GS

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