Vancouver-area home sales dropped 3.8% in September compared with the same month last year, while listings grew to put modest pressure on pricing, said Greater Vancouver Realtors on Wednesday.
There were 1,852 sales of existing residential homes last month, which is 26% below the 10-year average, and down 2.7%, not seasonally adjusted, from August.
The board says the results show recent interest rate cuts haven’t yet led to the expected rebound in activity, and that sales are still coming in below its forecast.
“September figures don’t offer the signal that many are watching for,” said Andrew Lis, the board’s director of economics and data analytics, in a statement.
The Bank of Canada has already delivered three interest rate cuts this year to bring its policy rate to 4.25%.
“With two more policy rate decisions to go this year, and all signs pointing to further reductions, it’s not inconceivable that demand may still pick up later this fall should buyers step off the sidelines.”
For now though, there are many more sellers entering the market than buyers.
There were 6,144 newly listed properties in September, up 12.8% from last year, to bring the total number of listings to 14,932. The total number of listings makes for a 31% jump from last year, and is sitting 24% above the 10-year seasonal average.
The combination of fewer sales and more listings left the composite benchmark price at $1,179,700, which is down 1.8% from September 2023 and down 1.4% from August.
The benchmark price for detached homes stood at $2.02 million, up 0.5% from last year but down 1.3% from August. The benchmark for apartment homes came in at $762,000, a 0.8% decrease from both last year and August 2024.