Canada building permits unexpectedly drop in March
FILE PHOTO: New condominium towers are seen under various stages of construction in the Yaletown district of downtown Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada November 19, 2016. REUTERS/Chris Helgren
OTTAWA (Reuters) - The value of Canadian building permits unexpectedly declined in March for the second month in a row as there were fewer plans to build apartments in the provinces of Ontario and British Columbia, data from Statistics Canada showed on Tuesday.
Permits fell 5.8 percent, far short of economists' expectations for a gain of 5.5 percent. The statistics agency revised February's figures down slightly to a decline of 2.8 percent from the initially reported decrease of 2.5 percent.
Residential building permits slumped 8.4 percent due to a 20.9 percent drop in construction plans for multifamily buildings, which include apartments, condominiums and townhouses. The biggest declines were in Ontario and British Columbia, which have both had strong housing markets.
By contrast, plans to build single-family homes increased 3.0 percent, led by Ontario. A lack of supply has been partly blamed for the surge in home prices in Toronto.
Nationally, non-residential permits slipped 0.5 percent on a decline for commercial buildings.
Total building permits were up 7.3 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier, with gains for both single-family and multifamily residences.
(Reporting by Leah Schnurr; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)
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