Nearly 10% of mortgages issued in Vancouver and Toronto in 2016 went to non-permanent foreign residents aged under 25 years old, according to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Agency (CMHC).
The federal housing agency noted that this upward trend has been consistent over a two-year period, which could mean that “younger NPR (non-permanent residents) may be receiving parental support to purchase homes.”
The CMHC’s latest study, which covered the mortgage issuance of the nation’s five largest banks, found that 3.9% of mortgages issued in Vancouver were held by non-permanent residents in 2016, increasing from 3.3% in 2014.
Meanwhile, 2.7% of mortgages issued in Toronto in 2016 were held by foreigners, growing from 2.1% in 2015 and 2.0% in 2014.
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While these represent just a small fraction of overall mortgage issuance, the rapid growth of purchase-capable foreigners aged 18 to 44 is shifting the buying and ownership demographics in Canada.
“Among the small group of mortgage holders under the age of 25, non-permanent residents represented an even larger share in Vancouver and Toronto at nearly 10 percent of total mortgages issued in 2016,” the CMHC report stated, as quoted by Reuters.
Foreigners, particularly Chinese nationals, tended to gravitate towards high-end properties, the report added. Single detached homes purchased by non-permanent residents were valued at an average of $1.65 million in Vancouver and $1.09 million in Toronto, significantly above the average values purchased by permanent residents ($1.42 million and $902,000, respectively).