The Indelible Bonobo Experience

Renaissance Monkey: in-depth expertise in Jack-of-all-trading. I mostly comment on news of interest to me and occasionally engage in debates or troll passive-aggressively. Ask or Submit 2 mah authoritah! ;) !

The correction in Canada’s housing market gathered momentum in December as the number of new listings slipped, prices moderated and the number of homes sold fell 17.4 per cent from a year earlier, the biggest drop-off in six months.

House market continues to cool as sales slump 17.4 per cent from a year ago - Yahoo! Finance Canada

  • The Canadian Real Estate Association said Tuesday that 20,538 homes were sold across the country through its MLS system last month, down from 24,850 in December 2011, and 0.5 per cent lower than in November.
  • The increase in prices also continued to slow, tipping in at only 1.6 per cent from a year ago to $352,800 — about the level of overall inflation.
  • “The housing market is clearly in correction mode,” said Derek Holt, vice-president of economics at Scotia Capital. “But this is certainly nothing even close to the U.S. and European experience and I don’t think we’re headed in that direction, but it’s still sizable.”
  • Prices and sales plummeted in the U.S. and many parts of Europe following the 2008 recession and have yet to fully recover, but analysts say Canada’s fundamentals are markedly different, particularly since lending criteria has been stricter and Canadians hold more equity in their homes.
  • Both Tal and Holt are calling for a national price decline of 10 to 15 per cent in the next few years, which they term a soft landing given how high prices have climbed in the last decade.
  • Tuesday’s report already points to some evidence of softening prices, particularly in Canada’s hottest housing markets, Toronto and Vancouver. Excluding those two markets, the average price would have risen 3.3 per cent over the past year, twice the actual increase.
  • CREA said price gains in Greater Toronto moderated to 4.1 per cent in December, while Greater Vancouver posted a 2.3 per cent decline. The strongest price gain came in Regina — 10.5 per cent — although that increase was the smallest since March.
  • For the past year, a total of 453,372 homes were sold through the Multiple Listing Service system, down 1.1 per cent from 2011, and 1.4 per cent below the 10-year average.
  • New listings were down in half of all local markets in December, CREA said.
  • Nationally, the number of newly listed homes fell 1.3 per cent month-over-month in December following a 1.1 per cent drop in November and 4.1 per cent in October.
  • CREA’s national sales-to-new listings ratio was 50.8 per cent in December compared with 50.4 per cent in November.
Oil rigs extract crude in Taft, California. Monbiot is correct that there has been a small increase in oil production in the United States in recent years. But can that continue, as he infers? Photograph: David McNew/Getty Images (via Monbiot says he was wrong on peak oil but the crisis is undeniable | Jeremy Leggett | Environment | guardian.co.uk)
The many misunderstandings he relays begin with the title. There is more than enough potential oil resource below ground to create the climate disaster he refers to. Peak oil is not about that. It is about when global production falls never again to reach past levels: a disaster, if the descent hits an oil-dependent global economy years ahead of expectations. This descent depends on flow rates in oilfields, not the amount of oil left. What worries those who believe the global oil peak is imminent is the evidence that the oil industry will not be able to maintain growing flow rates for much longer.

Oil rigs extract crude in Taft, California. Monbiot is correct that there has been a small increase in oil production in the United States in recent years. But can that continue, as he infers? Photograph: David McNew/Getty Images (via Monbiot says he was wrong on peak oil but the crisis is undeniable | Jeremy Leggett | Environment | guardian.co.uk)

The many misunderstandings he relays begin with the title. There is more than enough potential oil resource below ground to create the climate disaster he refers to. Peak oil is not about that. It is about when global production falls never again to reach past levels: a disaster, if the descent hits an oil-dependent global economy years ahead of expectations. This descent depends on flow rates in oilfields, not the amount of oil left. What worries those who believe the global oil peak is imminent is the evidence that the oil industry will not be able to maintain growing flow rates for much longer.

According to MedDaily, in the future, people will be around 2m tall, shorter intestines and less teeth due to processed food (cf Philip Stemmer), bigger hands and fingers to interact with electronic devices, and smaller brains because of offloading to computers.
Apparently, we’re as smart as we’re ever going to be - no improvement there.

According to MedDaily, in the future, people will be around 2m tall, shorter intestines and less teeth due to processed food (cf Philip Stemmer), bigger hands and fingers to interact with electronic devices, and smaller brains because of offloading to computers.

Apparently, we’re as smart as we’re ever going to be - no improvement there.

(Source: realitatea.net)