Fraser Valley real estate market 2022 — highs,
lows, and a return to balance
In a year that saw
prices peak early on, feeding off the momentum of record-breaking sales in
2021, the Fraser Valley real estate market came back down to earth by the
close of 2022, due largely to interest rate increases designed to stave off
inflation.
The Fraser Valley Real
Estate Board (FVREB) processed 716 sales on its Multiple Listing Service®
(MLS®) in December 2022, down 14.7 per cent from the previous month and
down by 60.4 per cent compared to the same month last year, making it the
lowest December sales recorded in the last 10 years.
The Board received 803
new listings in December, a decrease of 52.8 per cent compared to November,
and 37.2 per cent fewer than December of last year. Total active listings
for December stood at 3,923, down by 26.4 per cent compared to November,
but nearly double (100.5%) compared to December 2021.
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The year closed out
with a total of 15,273 sales, just over half of 2021’s record-setting
27,692 and the ninth-lowest annual tally of the past decade. New listings
were down 8.9 per cent at 32,442 compared to 2021.
With a sales-to-active
listings ratio of 18 per cent, the overall market closed out the year in
balance (the market is considered balanced when the sales-to-active
listings ratio is between 12 per cent and 20 per cent.).
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“As the market has
adjusted to rate hikes, we’re starting to see a resumption of interest
among the public,” said Sandra Benz, President of the Fraser Valley Real
Estate Board. “For some time, buyers and sellers alike have delayed
decisions in somewhat of a watch-and-wait mode. This has dampened sales
as well as supply since fewer new listings come onto the market. We
expect activity to pick up in the coming months as this pent up supply
and demand starts to emerge.”
Benz added that, under
more stable market conditions, there will be strong opportunities for
well-priced, well-positioned properties across all categories.
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Home prices peaked in
March of this year, with the Benchmark price for a detached house hitting
a record $1,776,700 before closing out the year at $1,377,200. The
composite Benchmark price (all property types combined) finished the year
under one million at $955,700.
“If the real estate
market has shown us anything this year, it’s that we must be prepared to
adjust and adapt to uncertainty,” said Board CEO Baldev Gill. “Market
reaction to the many variables at play — be they interest rates,
regulatory changes or supply chain issues, for example — is tough to
predict at the best of times. It requires detailed analysis and intimate
knowledge, often down to the street level, to fully evaluate. Only a
professional REALTOR® can provide the kind of intelligence required to
ensure a decision to buy or sell is made with clients’ best interests in
mind.”
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Across the Fraser
Valley in December, the average number of days to sell a single-family
detached home was 42 and a townhome 39 days. Apartments took, on average,
33 days to sell. A year ago, properties were moving, on average, two to
three times more quickly.
MLS® HPI Benchmark Price Activity
- Single Family Detached: At $1,377,200, the
Benchmark price for an FVREB single-family detached home decreased
2.0 per cent compared to November 2022 and decreased 11.3 per cent
compared to December 2021.
- Townhomes: At $787,300, the
Benchmark price for an FVREB townhome decreased 1.5 per
cent compared to November 2022 and decreased 1.6 per cent compared
to December 2021.
- Apartments: At $504,800, the
Benchmark price for an FVREB apartment/condo decreased
2.6 per cent compared to November 2022 and decreased 0.4 per cent
compared to December 2021.
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For the FULL Statistics Package click HERE
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