Calgary real estate board sees overall market stabilizing this year
CALGARY — After more than two years of gloom and uncertainty, the Calgary Real Estate Board is predicting that the city’s housing market will stabilize this year as steady oil prices lift the spectre of layoffs and companies start to reinvest in growth.
“Overall we expect to start to see that turn in the market where it stabilizes,” CREB chief economist Ann-Marie Lurie said. “One of the key factors influencing this is there are no further layoffs expected in the energy sector.”
The housing forecast is the latest sign of cautious optimism emerging in Alberta, as the province looks to emerge from two years of recession caused by a plunge in oil prices in 2014.
CREB said in its 2017 forecast Wednesday that detached house prices are projected to climb by 0.8 per cent in 2017 after falling 4.7 per cent since the downturn started.


