The three charts at right (the first two produced by Ben Rabidoux, the third by BCA Research) are a bit worrisome.
They present three ways of looking at what is arguably a much larger
housing bubble in Canada (relative to the size of its economy) than the
one that eventually brought down the United States economy a few years
ago.
It's unclear at what point this becomes a problem for Canada, however. Recent data have been fairly strong.
"September sales data suggest the wheels of the Canadian
housing market are leaving the tarmac after a brief layover," said BMO
chief economist Douglas Porter in a recent note to clients. "September
resale transactions surged 64% y/y in Vancouver, 30% in Toronto, 19% in
Calgary and 9% in Edmonton. True, sales a year ago were depressed by
stricter mortgage rules, but the level of activity is far from weak,
with Toronto posting the third best September in the past ten years and
8% above the mean, while Vancouver sales are only 7% below normal for
the month ... With interest rates apparently again stuck in a holding
pattern, it could well be blue skies ahead for this flight."
Nonetheless, we can't help but agree with Paul Kedrosky, who alerted us to these charts in a tweet, that they are particularly "eye-popping."
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