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Canada is home to two of the world's most overvalued real estate markets

 Toronto home prices almost tripled between 2000 and 2007 (Getty Images)
Toronto home prices almost tripled between 2000 and 2007. (Getty Images)

Toronto is the second-most overvalued real estate market in the world, according to a UBS report.

The Global Real Estate Bubble Index found only Munich is deeper into bubble territory.

“Price bubbles are a regularly recurring phenomenon in property markets. The term ‘bubble’ refers to a substantial and sustained mispricing of an asset, the existence of which cannot be proven unless it bursts,” said the report.

“The UBS Global Real Estate Bubble Index gauges the risk of a property bubble on the basis of such patterns.”

Experts say Toronto’s plight is due to factors like a lack of supply and foreign money. But measures to tackle the issues it faces have largely been unsuccessful in countering rising prices.

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“Real housing prices in the city almost tripled between 2000 and 2017.”

“As in Vancouver, local authorities introduced a foreign buyers’ tax, rent controls and tighter mortgage standards to tackle worsening affordability.”

Vancouver is lower down the list in seventh place, but is still considered a bubble risk.

“In just a couple of quarters, year-on-year price growth rates have reversed from 10 per cent to minus seven per cent,” said the report.

“Sky-high valuations and overstretched affordability have made the market vulnerable to even minor demand shifts.”

Despite the cooldown, Vancouver is still home to Canada’s highest-priced real estate with the average home costing as much as $993,300.

Hong Kong, Amsterdam, Frankfurt, Paris, Zurich, London and San Francisco round out the top 10.

UBS said we could be at the end of the global boom in high-priced real estate markets.

“Price growth rates have continued to slow in a majority of cities,” said the report.

“Average price growth has come to a standstill for the first time since 2012.”

Jessy Bains is a senior reporter at Yahoo Finance Canada. Follow him on Twitter @jessysbains

Yahoo Finance Canada
Yahoo Finance Canada

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