- Prior month -0.4%
- Canada new housing Price Index -0.3%
Recent Canada housing data has been mixed but still soft overall.
- Housing starts: Fell 6% in May to 261,377 annualized units, though the drop was smaller than expected.
- Building permits: April permits fell 7.6%, with residential permits down 5.5%, led by weakness in multi-family projects.
- Resale housing: May home sales reportedly improved, rising 5.5% month-over-month, but the market still looks uneven, with affordability and confidence issues limiting the rebound.
Bottom line: Canada’s housing sector is showing some signs of stabilization in resale activity, but construction momentum remains uneven and future supply indicators are still soft.
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Canada New Housing Price Index (NHPI) measures changes in the prices builders charge for newly constructed homes in Canada.
It provides insight into:
- Housing demand – Higher prices can signal stronger demand.
- Construction costs – Rising labor and material costs can push prices higher.
- Inflation trends – Housing is an important part of the economy.
For traders, the NHPI is generally a second-tier economic indicator. A stronger reading can be modestly supportive of the Canadian dollar, while a weaker reading may point to softness in the housing market and broader economy.