New home prices in Canada kept climbing in January, rising 0.4 percent  from the previous month as expected, according to Statistics Canada on  Thursday.
On a monthly basis, the housing-only component of the new housing  price index rose by 0.5 percent and the land-only component edged up 0.1  percent.
New home prices firmed 0.1 percent in January from a year earlier,  the first year-over-year rise since December 2008.
Despite nationwide gains, prices have been falling in Western Canada,  which saw huge price spikes prior to the recent economic crisis.
"Declines slowed in most of Western Canada's metropolitan regions as  new housing prices returned to the price levels observed prior to the  highs registered at the end of 2007 and the beginning of 2008," Statscan  said.
The Canadian housing market slumped during the recession last year  but never underwent a U.S.-style collapse. Strong sales and price gains  in recent months have led to worries of a made-in-Canada housing bubble  and prompted the government to tighten mortgage lending rules in  February.
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