edb3_16 via Getty Images An aerial view of Vancouver's downtown and West End, with Stanley Park in the foreground. Vancouver home sales recorded their lowest levels in a decade in November, amid some analysts' warnings that the market could be headed for something worse than a mild correction.

With buyers absent from the market, the number of homes available for sale has soared, up 40.7 per cent in a year, REBGV said.

The 1,608 home sales in the metro area in November represented a 42.5-per-cent decline from the same month a year earlier, and the lowest level of sales for the month since 2008, the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver said Tuesday.

Vancouver home sales recorded their lowest levels in a decade in November, amid some analysts' warnings that the market could be headed for something worse than a mild correction.

"Home prices have declined between four and seven per cent over the last six months depending on property type. We'll watch conditions in the first quarter of 2019 to see if home buyer demand picks up ahead of the traditionally more active spring market," REBGV president Phil Moore said.

The benchmark price of a detached home was just above $1.5 million in November, down 6.5 per cent from a year earlier. Condo apartments clocked in at $667,800, up 2.3 per cent from a year earlier but down 2.3 per cent from October.

At the pace properties are selling today, the detached-home market is well into buyer's territory, while townhomes and condos have fallen from "seller's markets" to "balanced markets" in the past few months, and appear poised to drop into "buyer's market" territory soon.

A number of industry experts and insiders have suggested that Canada's housing markets have achieved the desired "soft landing"— a slowdown in sales and price growth, making the market more sustainable in the long run.

But these experts seem to have their eye on Toronto, where prices and sales have stabilized in recent months, following a slump that began in 2017.

Vancouver's market, on the other hand, is headed for a "bumpy landing," said Stephen Brown, senior Canada economist at Capital Economics.

"After the stabilisation of the Toronto housing market this year, it's tempting to think that the deterioration in the Vancouver market will end in a soft landing," Brown wrote in a client note last week.

"But Vancouver housing is more overvalued, and there are clear signs of excess supply coming to the market in the next couple of years."

Excessive prices, too much construction

Vancouver has been ranked repeatedly as the least affordable housing market in North America. A 2017 survey from Point2 Homes estimated a typical Vancouver home costs 17.3 times the average income, compared to 7.5 times income in Toronto, and 4.2 times income in Montreal.

Tough new mortgage rules brought into place at the start of the year have had more of an effect on Vancouver, because more buyers there were maxing out their mortgages, Brown wrote.

What's more, Vancouver may be building too many new homes these days, Brown suggested.