Here’s Why Alberta’s Housing Market Has Taken Off In The Past:
- Industry. Industry will drive the economy with …
- Jobs. With industry leading the initiative in the economy, this creates jobs. And that creates …
- Wage growth. With more jobs than people, companies need to lure people with higher wages. Once people hear of this happening there is …
- Net migration. People move to the areas where there are good prospects of employment and higher wages. This gives them …
- Consumer confidence. With a positive outlook on future earning potential, people feel confident to spend on big ticket items which means …
- People purchase homes. This absorbs housing supply, stabilizing the market, even pushing prices higher.
I started this all off with industry. It’s like the first bit of snow falling in a point-release avalanche.
There is a new (budding) industry in Alberta that is trying it’s best to pick up some economic slack: Cannabis.
Here is a chart of employment in the Cannabis industry:
The truth is, Alberta’s oil and gas sector is the main driver of industry development. No secret here.
(This might be a secret to different parts of Canada, which is a lesson they might be wise to learn?)
I think the opportunity in this kind of cyclical industry is it creates space for people, great people, to explore employment is other industries.
Long term I think this diversifies our economy, employment, and limits our exposure to sever peaks-and-valleys in the economic cycle.
That all said, let’s take a look at recently released jobs and wage growth data from Statistics Canada.
This matters to you because it’s a piece of Canada’s large economic puzzle AND data our Central Bankers consider when deciding on interest rate policy.
JOBS:
- Alberta added 24,000 full time jobs in November. Most of these jobs cam from Health Care and Social Assistance. I think this is helpful to spur consumer spending.
- Alberta has added 59,000 full time jobs in the last 12 months.
- Alberta unemployment fell to 6.3% (down 1%). Calgary’s unemployment rate is 7.5% (up 0.1% y/y).
- Alberta’s labour participation rate fell by 0.2 which is a factor in measuring unemployment.
People not actively looking for work (participating) are not factored into the total unemployment numbers.
WAGES:
- National wage growth of permanent full time employees grew by 1.2% y/y.
- National wage growth month-over-month fell 1.5% for the sixth month in a row.
- The most recent AB wage data I could source was from August which was up 3% y-o-y.
Conclusion:
On a National level, there is positive employment news with 94,000 full time permanent jobs created (over expectations). And our National unemployment rate is also at a 40 year low of 5.6%.
Current market consensus for a January 9th Bank of Canada interest rate hike is about 24% (low).
Thank you again for reading as I hope these macroeconomic data points are helpful to you in relating back to demand for Calgary Real Estate.
I also hope having awareness in anticipation of future Bank of Canada interest rate policy decisions, with relevant data, is useful to you.
Thank you again for reading,
Chad Moore