OTTAWA, Ontario, May 8, 2003 — April's seasonally adjusted annual rate1 of 207,800 housing starts remained consistent with strong home building activity in the country, reports Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC).
"Since the beginning of 2002, the Canadian labour market has experienced exceptional strength," said David Weingarden, Senior Economist at CMHC's Market Analysis Centre. "Combined with low mortgage rates and rising house prices, favourable conditions continue in the housing market."
"These economic fundamentals continue to support a buoyant new housing market while low levels of completed and unoccupied units are encouraging builders to remain active. Year-to-date, actual starts exceeded last year's level by 7.0 per cent."
The seasonally adjusted annual rate of urban multiple starts decreased 14.3 per cent to 82,000 units in April compared with 95,700 units in March. Actual urban multiple starts remain high, having increased by 17.4 per cent year-to-date compared with the same period in 2002. This lower level of multiple starts in April reflects a return to levels more in line with recent trends in the Atlantic region.
The seasonally adjusted annual rate of urban single starts rose 3.5 per cent to 96,500 units in April from 93,200 in March. In terms of actual starts, urban single starts year-to-date are 1.6 per cent lower than for the same period of 2002.
Rural starts in April were estimated at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 29,300 units.
1. All starts figures in this release, other than actual starts, are seasonally adjusted annual rates (SAAR) that are monthly figures adjusted to remove normal seasonal variation and multiplied by 12 to reflect annual levels.
2. Figures for the most recent month are preliminary and subject to revisions due to corrections or updates from quarterly enumeration or sampling results.
Information on this release:
Bob Dugan
CMHC
Tel: (613) 748-4009
E-mail: bdugan@cmhc-schl.gc.ca
For regional starts information contact:
Atlantic: Alex MacDonald, CMHC, (902) 426-8964, amacdona@cmhc-schl.gc.ca
Quebec: Kevin Hughes, CMHC, (514) 283-4488, khughes@cmhc-schl.gc.ca
Ontario: Brent Weimer, CMHC, (416) 218-3329, bweimer@cmhc-schl.gc.ca
Prairies: Vinay Bhardwaj, CMHC, (403) 515-3004, vbhardwaj@cmhc-schl.gc.ca
British Columbia: Carol Frketich, CMHC, (604) 737-4067, cfrketic@cmhc-schl.gc.ca

Housing Starts, Actual and SAAR* |
||||
| March 2003 Final |
April 2003 Preliminary |
|||
| Actual | SAAR | Actual | SAAR | |
| Canada, all areas | 13,061 | 220,400 | 19,453 | 207,800 |
| Canada, rural areas | 1,456 | 31,500 | 2,818 | 29,300 |
| Canada, urban centres** | 11,605 | 188,900 | 16,635 | 178,500 |
| Canada, singles, urban centres | 6,019 | 93,200 | 9,273 | 96,500 |
| Canada, multiples, urban centres | 5,586 | 95,700 | 7,632 | 82,000 |
| Atlantic region, urban centres | 371 | 21,800 | 598 | 9,000 |
| Quebec, urban centres | 2,323 | 33,000 | 4,077 | 34,000 |
| Ontario, urban centres | 4,775 | 72,600 | 6,379 | 71,100 |
| Prairie region, urban centres | 2,644 | 40,400 | 3,294 | 39,100 |
| British Columbia, urban centres | 1,492 | 21,100 | 2,287 | 25,300 |
Source: CMHC
*Seasonally adjusted annual rates
** Urban centres with a population of 10,000 persons and over.
Detailed data available upon request.