A global ranking of luxury housing markets has highlighted the divergence of Canada’s two largest markets.
Vancouver remains at the bottom of the table of 46 cities worldwide compiled using Knight Frank’s global research network while Toronto ranks 13th.
The Prime Global Cities Index tracks the movement in prime residential prices of the 46 cities.
Second quarter stats show Berlin at the top with a 12.7% increase over the past 12 months but no movement in the past 3 months. The top 5 includes Frankfurt (up 12% over 12 months / 0% over 3 months), Moscow (up 9.5% / 1.8%), Manila (up 6.2% / 0.8%), and Geneva (up 6% / 1.7%).
Vancouver sits at the bottom with a 13.6% decrease in prices over 12 months and a decrease of 2.4% over the past 3 months.
It’s the only city among the 46 to post a double-digit decline. Other cities that have lost value over 12 months include Auckland (down 7.5%), London (down 4.9%), and New York (down 3.7%).
Meanwhile, Toronto posted a gain in prices of 3.8% over 12 months and 2.8% over 3 months, making it the highest-ranking city in North America among the 46, beating Miami (1.5% 12-month gain), San Francisco (1.2%), and Los Angeles (0.7%).