We took a look at the Canadian one Tuesday, and for the purposes of comparison with Case-Shiller, we'll be using the Canadian data with a shifted index point so that both have the same scale. For those who haven't seen the Case-Shiller index charted out, here's a look at it.
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Now for the sake of simplicity, I'm just going to take four of those cities, one for the top, one from the bottom and a couple from the middle... and chart them against the HPI's for Vancouver, Calgary, and Toronto, whom seem to be the most talked about real estate markets in the country at the moment.
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In any case, it's not too much of a stretch to reason that the bubble experienced here was just as substantial as that in the United States... we just seemed to have the boom start about 18 months later... and not surprising, the downturn start about 18 months later. For a better look at this we can shift the Canadian data back.
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Judging from the plunges in Miami and Phoenix have taken, it stands to reason that Calgary and Vancouver (and other markets that had big run ups, like Edmonton, Saskatoon and Regina) could very well have very similar busts ahead of them in the next couple years.
Toronto on the other hand didn't have as pronounced a "bubble"... but as you can see with Detroit's situation, that is no guarantee prices there won't plunge. Prices in Detroit are now well below what they were even in 2000, and that's ignoring inflation. But then again Toronto could weather it better and only experience a moderate drop, ala Chicago, whom they've been tracking pretty close through this point.
So for those who still think "we're different" here in Canada, or Alberta, looking at that graph I don't know what to tell ya. Taking into account that it didn't hit us until 18 months later, everything seems to be right on schedule. The boom lasted about the same amount time and was of the same magnitude, the cool down lasted about the same amount of time and was of the same magnitude... so considering we're joined at the hip with the U.S, Occums Razor seems to imply that the big drop is on the horizon.