TORONTO - The strong housing market of the last few years has now cooled down
as supply and demand have come more into balance, but prices will still rise this
year, though not by double digit figures of the past, says CEO Phil Soper of Royal
LePage Real Estate Services.

Through the rest of this year and into next, he said, Royal LePage's second-quarter
statistics released Thursday suggest that average prices will creep up by about 3.5
per cent.

"When you're looking at the real estate market, it's important to look at not just
house price changes, but also the changes in activity levels," he said.

"There are significantly fewer homes trading hands now than there have been in the
boom years of this decade," he said. "It's a moderate market."

Royal LePage's report followed one from the Canadian Real Estate Association on
Tuesday indicating that average house prices in June fell 0.4 per cent compared with
a year ago for the first time since early 1999.

CREA's figures suggested that house prices were "basically flat" in June, said
Soper, adding they were somewhat skewed by the fact that the association was
unable to include Montreal in their results due to a reporting foul up.

He estimated Montreal is about 10 per cent of the country.

"If you look at our numbers, Montreal had a price increase year-to-date in the four
per cent range," Soper said.

While prices are forecast to move higher, the country's largest real estate company
predicts the number of transactions this year will fall by 11.5 per cent to 461,000
units.

Along with an easing of pent-up demand, it also attributed the slowdown to jitters
among prospective buyers because of economic uncertainty following layoffs in the
manufacturing and forestry sectors due to the subprime mortgage fiasco in the
United States and worldwide credit crunch.

Avery Shenfeld, senior economist at CIBC World Markets, said earlier this week
that there has been a noticeable softening of the housing market over the past few
months.

"Some of that is coming in cities where prices had gone through the roof in the
previous one or two years," he said.

In the second quarter, the average price of detached bungalows rose by 5.6 per cent
from a year earlier to $351,587. Two-storey properties increased 5.2 per cent to
$418,943.

"After several years characterized by a persistent shortage of listings, home buyers
have felt the pressure of bidding wars and take-it-or-leave-it counter offers ease
during 2008," Soper said.

"Home sellers have had to come to grips with the longer time it is taking to sell
properties, but can take comfort in a market that continues to support reasonable
price increases."

The survey of 17 cities across the country found lower prices in two major markets -
Edmonton and Calgary.

In Edmonton, the average price for a bungalow dropped 14.5 per cent while an
average Calgary two-storey dropped six per cent.

The greatest price increase was in Regina, which has seen home values surge as
higher commodity prices have driven the regional economy.

In Regina, all types of housing saw higher prices, even though inventory of homes
increased five-fold, the survey said.

Across the country, said Soper, some regions are slightly oversupplied right now with
houses, in particular Calgary and Edmonton. Meanwhile, supply shortages are still
being reported in Regina, Saskatoon, St. John's and Winnipeg.

For most of Canada, however, the number of people looking for homes is
approximately equal to the number of homes available for sale.

"The housing market is a cyclical one," said Soper. "We've gone through an
extended period of excess demand which has caused prices to rise at an unusually
high rate."

"What we're seeing at the end of the cycle is that there are fewer numbers of new
buyers in the market because they've got their homes."