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EDMONTON – By the end of the year, Edmonton could get something it hasn’t seen for several years — a “normalized” housing market — as homes for sale dry up and prices drop .
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- Z. t/ P% q4 \7 I' e5 c) t& I6 gThat’s the forecast contained in the House Price Survey and Market Survey Forecast released Thursday by Royal LePage Real Estate Services. . u5 k) S5 I5 r6 s- A$ j. j, u' c5 f
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A soaring number of homes put on the market especially by builders and speculators in the last year softened the city’s housing market during the second quarter, the report said.
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$ w" f- t1 { e4 I( c5 D“The high inventory levels will dwindle into the second half of the year, and as affordability improves, subsequent market conditions will continue to normalize,” the report said.
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As of the end of Wednesday, there were 11,184 homes for sale on the Multiple Listing Service, according to the Realtors’ Association of Edmonton. S2 W* E# n# U4 T; Y% g3 Z1 Y- Q
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But Alberta’s two biggest cities still boast some of the most expensive real estate in the country, it noted. ' V/ z% ~7 ] |9 C! Z2 C4 V1 c
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“Despite some mild price erosion during the second quarter in both Calgary and Edmonton, these markets remain strong. Although prices have come down from where they were last year — one of the best years on record — current house prices are far higher than they were three years ago before energy-rich Alberta experienced its boom.”
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The average price for a detached bungalow in Edmonton in April, May and June was $320,000, down about 14.5 per cent from the same period in 2007 ($374,143), Royal LePage said in its survey of Canadian house prices.
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# s! @& W& E+ k0 f2 q; b/ C" GIn the second quarter of 2008, a two-storey house in Edmonton sold for an average price of $348,571, down 12.4 per cent year-over-year from $397,857. * g' y7 m# J3 n, L+ P' m# p
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An average condominium in Edmonton was priced at $226,000, down 14.2 per cent from $263,333 in the comparable 2007 period.
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“A surge in inventory caused Alberta’s white-hot market to record the country’s only major-market price decreases,” the report said. ) v: d0 v) D3 ]; \5 a! @
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Across most of the country, average house prices rose, but more slowly than the spikes seen in 2006 and 2007. # Z5 Q' u- N7 z* }$ G9 o; R- Q
6 t' i- W% q! c" j0 r" X+ v1 H# VRoyal LePage forecasts the national average house price to rise by 3.5 per cent, to $318,000 by year’s end.
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The report predicts home sale transactions to decrease by 11.5 per cent to 461,000 unit sales by year’s end. |
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