Condos to remain an attractive option for many home buyers

May 18th, 2007

TD Canada Trust

Canada’s condo markets have delivered a strong performance in recent years, and the economic and financial outlook suggests a continued robust performance in 2007 and 2008.

Like all real estate, the sales and price experience for condos will be heavily influenced by location. Since 2004, housing markets in central and eastern Canada have generally experienced a soft-landing, with activity moderating, but remaining at high levels, and with prices continuing to rise at a solid pace. The outlook is for more of the same over the next 24 months.

In contrast, new and resale housing in the west has been on fire, but soaring prices have eroded affordability in many markets. In 2007/08, housing conditions are likely to cool in the west, but this need not lead to a boom-bust cycle if price growth slows as new supply comes on the market, demand eases and speculation becomes gradually less intense. So while the risks warrant close monitoring, the TD Economics base case projection is for a moderation in western housing activity, but with the price gains, home construction and resale activity all remaining at well above their historical averages.

The regional condo markets are likely to be caught up and parallel these broad regional real estate trends, with the result that condo prices are expected to continue to post double digit gains in the west, but slower than that experienced in 2005/06, while prices in the rest of the country advance at a mid-single digit rate. Looking beyond the near-term outlook, there is fundamental support for condos in the major Canadian markets from structural economic trends, including the aging population and the continued urbanization of the country.

Condos attractive option for many buyers

In March, TD Bank Financial Group conducted a survey of Canadians aged 18 and over who were potential condo buyers. The findings confirmed that condos are viewed as an increasingly attractive option for many Canadians and the sentiments expressed suggest that demand for new and resale condos will remain strong.

39% of those surveyed said they were likely to consider buying a condo as a principal residence and this ratio had risen by 4 percentage points from a similar survey done in June 2006.

The top two reasons for preferring condos were lower maintenance costs and greater affordability, but there was more to the decision as well. The top three amenities were good building security, attractive design and environmentally friendly/energy efficiency. The last item is of particular interest, since the outcome could be interpreted in two different ways.

It might reflect increased environmental awareness, which is consistent with the fact that concerns about the environment are ranking at the top of many public opinion polls. Alternatively, it could reflect a desire to keep monthly expenses on utilities as low as possible. Proximity to public transit, retail outlets and entertainment were also deemed to be attractive to potential buyers.

Surveys can provide interesting anecdotal evidence of changing consumer preferences and tastes, but they can also be misleading at times. So, the natural question is how do the survey results stack up against the current trends and the outlook for condos in Canada?

Condos have delivered a strong performance

The attractiveness of condos is evident in the recent strong activity recorded in the major markets across Canada. From 2001 to 2005, condo starts have posted an average annual increase of more than 16%. And, condos have climbed from close to one-fifth of all new home construction to almost one-third over the past ten years.

Despite the strong supply coming on the market, robust demand has quickly absorbed the additional units. Indeed, with the exception of Montreal, conditions have been consistent with characteristics of a sellers’ market. This can be seen by the fact that sales-to-new listing ratios on apartments, which are dominated by condos, have been well above the 0.55 mark that is traditionally thought of as being the threshold been balanced markets and sellers’ markets.

Consequently, the demand-supply balance has supported solid or strong price gains. There has been a significant regional dimension, with the west posting double digit condo resale price increases over the past few years, whereas price growth has tended to be in the single digits elsewhere.

Looking ahead, there is every reason to expect that the level of activity will remain strong and that prices will continue to advance, but some cooling will likely be evident in regions where affordability is being eroded by price growth.

Low unemployment and stable interest rates are supportive

The key short-term drivers for housing demand are labour market conditions and the level of interest rates. On these two fronts, the outlook is favourable.

Employment growth in Canada is expected to slip from 2.0% in 2006 to 1.8% in 2007 and 1.3% in 2008. However, this continued job creation is expected to keep the national unemployment rate at close to a 30-year low and maintain an the employment-to-population ratio at a record level. The plentiful jobs augur well for personal income, which is expected to rise at roughly 4% per annum over the next two years, but it is also positive for consumer confidence.

There will be a regional dimension, with the lowest unemployment and greatest income gains in the west, but labour market conditions will remain generally solid in central and Atlantic Canada as well, and there is upside potential in these regions when exports to the U.S. firm, which is expected to occur in 2008.

The interest rate outlook suggests that mortgage borrowing costs will remain stable and low by historical standards. The prospects for variable mortgage rates are tied to developments in the prime lending rate, which is, in turn, determined by changes in the Bank of Canada overnight rate (see chart above).

The Canadian economy is delivering a sub-par pace of economic growth, but it is also operating at virtually full capacity. In this environment, the Bank is expected to leave monetary policy unchanged. A stable overnight rate would imply no change in the prime lending rate.

However, there are risks on both the upside and the downside to this outlook. If inflation accelerates, the unemployment declines further or the domestic economy proves stronger than anticipated, the Bank of Canada could decide to raise rates. On the flip side, if the U.S. housing market correction leads to a U.S. recession, the negative impact on the Canadian economy might force the Bank to cut rates.

On balance, the recent economic data suggest that the odds of rate hikes are greater than rate cuts, but the main issue for real estate markets is that the extent of any change in monetary policy from current levels is likely to prove limited because inflation is unlikely to get out of hand, while any unexpected headwinds from U.S. weakness will only gradually diminish the tightness in Canadian labour markets.

With respect to long-term borrowing costs, the 5-year fixed mortgage rate tracks changes in 5-year government bond yields quite closely (see chart below). Bond markets have fully priced our expectation of soft national economic growth in the near term, but improving in 2008, and the continuation of relatively subdued inflation.

Accordingly, bond yields are expected to remain near current levels and rise only modestly in 2008. For example, the yield on the 5-year federal government bond is projected to rise only 50 basis point (half a percentage point) over the next 18 months, suggesting a similar increase in mortgage rates. Again, there are risks on both sides of the forecast, but the scope for either interest rate increases or decreases appears limited. As a result, the level of borrowing costs should remain favourable for real estate.

Declining affordability will cool some regional markets

While the economic and financial fundamentals are expected to be supportive, declining affordability is expected to pose a headwind in some cities.

From a national point of view, housing affordability has deteriorated over the past couple of years, reflecting the solid price gains that have outstripped personal income growth. Housing affordability does impact real estate sales, but there is a lag. The implication is that buyer demand is eventually damped, and this ultimately leads to slower price growth, but the impact takes as much as a year to be fully felt.

The current level of affordability is not a major problem, but the recent erosion does point to softer price growth ahead. Indeed, the current share of personal income going to home ownership costs points to a slowing in national average resales and a moderation in price growth from 10% to approximately a 5.5% pace over the next year. As one might expect, the erosion in affordability has been most pronounced in the western markets that have experienced the strongest price gains. So, we anticipate that the bulk of the cooling in prices will occur in these markets

The performance of condos is likely to be influenced by the general trends in real estate. The pace of condo starts is expected to decline by close to 6% over the next 18 months and resale price growth should cool in the west, but remain quite elevated. In central and eastern Canada, the markets are already much more balanced and the level of activity and price growth is far more sustainable, suggesting little reason for major market changes. Accordingly, Toronto condo prices are projected to average 4.2% growth in 2007/08, little changed from the 4.6% in 2005/06.

Condo affordability remains superior

One should also stress that while the erosion in affordability in some major markets will act as a constraint, condos are significantly more affordable than alternative real estate options. To illustrate, condo prices are almost half of the average price of detached bungalows in Vancouver. They are a roughly one-third less than the average price in Calgary and Toronto.

Obviously, one must factor in the financial burden of condo fees when making comparisons, but the fees often cover items that homeowners would have to pay themselves in non-condo dwellings.

So, the conclusion is still that condos tend to be much more affordable than detached dwellings in most cities. And, given the rapid price increases in detached dwellings sustained over the last few years, condos may be the only option for some potential homeowners – and many first time buyers – in selected markets.

So, while affordability may temper market performance, the drag should prove less of an obstacle for condos. The TD survey clearly indicates that potential condo buyers are acutely aware of the lower price tag associated with these dwellings.

Condos to benefit from long-term structural trends

Looking beyond the near-term outlook, the prospects also look good for condos over the long haul due to a number of structural trends.

Canada has an aging population, associated with the graying of the baby boom generation. The median age in Canada was 37 in 2001 and it is projected to climb to between 45 and 50 years of age by 2056. This could create headwinds for real estate, which is influenced by demographic demand for housing, but the aging population could prove positive for condos.

First, Canadians are living longer, healthier lives with the result that homeownership rates amongst older individuals is rising, as they are staying in their homes longer. Second, older Canadians might have a preference for condos, as some homeowners downsize in favour of properties with less maintenance costs.

While the changing demographic profile points to slower population growth, it is also evident that cities will continue to expand faster than rural communities. As an illustration of how dramatic this trend has been, in 1901 37% of Canadians lived in urban centres. By 1951, the ratio had climbed to 62%. In 2006, it reached 80%.

However, land scarcity is becoming a more pressing issue is some urban areas. Commute times have been rising in recent years, but are reaching a breaking point in some cities, as traffic densities have surged. This is contributing to an urban renewal, which is expected to intensify in the years to come. While condos are not solely located in cities, as evidenced by their presense in some resort settings, the bulk of condos are concentrated in urban centres, making them highly likely to benefit from the urbanization trend.

Immigration will play an increasingly important role in terms of contributing to population growth, and this could also prove favourable for condos. New arrivals, which are a growing share of first time home buyers, do not spread themselves equally across the country. For example, 88% of immigrants in 2004 settled in Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia.

And, 80% of the immigrants to Ontario took up residency in the Greater Toronto Area. In fact, 72% of all immigrants were destined for Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver. Since these cities are also the largest condo markets, demand for this type of dwelling is likely to remain well supported over the coming decades.

Conclusions

The bottom line is that the TD condo survey appears to correspond well with the economic trends. Condos are an attractive alternative to buying a detached dwelling and affordability is often far greater. Some cooling is expected in Canada’s major condo markets, but conditions should remain healthy and the level of activity will be high. The moderation will be concentrated in the west, but this represents a retreat from unsustainable levels.

Meanwhile, there is significant additional supply in the pipeline for Toronto condos from projects that are already underway, but are not yet completed. This could impact price growth, but so long as employment remains solid and interest rates do not rise significantly from current levels, there should be no problem absorbing the additional units. So, the risks do not outweigh the short-term and long-term drivers for condos that all look to remain supportive.

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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information

Condos to remain an attractive option for home buyers, says TD Economics

May 18th, 2007

* Canada’s major condo markets expected to deliver strong performance in 2007/2008

* Hot western market expected to cool somewhat, eastern markets likely to see solid price gains

* Condo affordability still far ahead of detached homes

TORONTO, May 17 (Canada News Wire) - Canada’s major condo markets should continue to deliver strong economic performance in 2007/08, due to strong economic trends including a robust labour market, supportive interest rates and an aging population, according to a special report by TD Economics. Despite the number of new condos coming on the market, robust demand appears to be absorbing the additional units, creating a sellers’ market in most urban centres.

Entitled “Condos To Remain An Attractive Option for Many Home Buyers,” the report follows an Ipsos-Reid survey of potential condo buyers in five cities commissioned by TD Canada Trust in March of this year. The survey found 39% of Canadians would consider buying a new or resale condo, a 4% rise from a similar survey in June 2006.

“The bottom line is that the TD condo survey corresponds well with economic trends,” says Craig Alexander, Deputy Chief Economist, TD Economics, and the report author. “Several short- and long-term indicators support the large and growing popularity of the condo lifestyle. The hottest markets, notably Calgary and Vancouver, will see some cooling off from dramatic and unsustainable highs last year, but overall conditions will remain healthy and activity will be high.”

A Sellers’ Market

From 2001 to 2005, condo starts have posted an annual average increase of more than 16%. Over the past decade, condos have climbed from nearly one-fifth to nearly one-third of all new home construction. Despite this marked growth in supply, the sales-to-new listings ratio on apartments, which are dominated by condos, has been well above the traditional threshold for a sellers’ market since 2001.

Strong price gains, especially in western markets, have outpaced growth in personal income and led to a deterioration in condo affordability nationwide. While this decline will eventually dampen demand and lead to
slower price growth in future, it is not a major problem for the condo market since condos are, and will remain, considerably more affordable than houses.

Over the next 18 months, the pace of condo starts is expected to decline by close to 6% and resale prices should cool out west while still remaining quite elevated. Calgary will see price growth drop from 26.6% in 2005/06 to 15% in 2007/08. Edmonton will slip from 16.6% to 12.5% over the same time frame, and Vancouver from 16.3% to 10.5%.

Central and eastern markets are more balanced and will not experience major changes. Toronto condo price growth will slip marginally from 4.6% in 2005/06 to 4.2% in 2007/08, Ottawa price gains will rise slightly from 3.6% to 4.5% and Montreal price growth will soften from 6.4% to 3.5%.

“Our survey findings and the special report by TD Economics underscore the continued rise in popularity of condos among Canada’s city dwellers, despite the expectation of softening in some markets,” says Joan Dal Bianco, Vice President, Real Estate Secured Lending. “This is good news for builders, buyers and sellers as sustained growth brings greater choices for homeowners and reduces economic risks from boom and bust cycles.”

Key Supportive Trends

TD Economics found a number of short- and long-term drivers of the condo market:

* Continued job creation will keep national unemployment at a 30-year low and maintain the employment-to-population ratio at a record level.

* Personal income will rise at roughly 4% per annum for the next two years, and consumer confidence should remain robust.

* Employment and income gains will be strongest out west, but Central and Eastern Canada will also experience solid labour market conditions.

* Mortgage borrowing costs will remain stable and low by historical standards.

* Five-year government bond yields, which track closely to five-year fixed mortgage rates, are expected to remain near current levels and rise only modestly in 2008. Thus borrowing costs should remain favourable for real estate.

Other trends

* Given rapid increases in the price of detached dwellings in most cities, condos may be the only option for some homeowners - especially first-time buyers - in selected markets.

* Canada’s aging population, who are also living longer and healthier lives, will prove positive for condos as seniors downsize in favour of properties requiring less maintenance.

* While overall population growth may slow, cities will continue to expand faster than rural communities. In 1901, 37% of Canadians lived in cities; in 2006 it reached 80%. Land scarcity and growing gridlock are contributing to an urban renewal trend that is fuelling the growth of condos in or near urban centres.

* Immigration will play an increasingly important role in population growth. Seven out of ten new arrivals in the past three years have settled in Toronto, Montreal or Vancouver - the cities with the largest condo markets. Their continued preference for these cities will support condo growth in the coming decades.

“Some cooling is expected in Canada’s major condo markets, but conditions should remain healthy and the level of activity will be high,” concludes Craig Alexander.

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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information

Home, green home

May 17th, 2007

Whether it’s a condo in Toronto, a suburban house or a country property, the environment is increasingly top-of-mind with homebuyers and builders

By Sherry Noik-Bent - National Post

It is often said that we haven’t inherited the Earth from our fathers, we’re borrowing it from our children. Today, with a heightened awareness of environmental concerns, homebuilders are making a commitment to create cleaner, more energy-efficient homes.

The movement toward environmentally friendly building is swiftly gaining ground in this country and it is homebuyers who may come out the biggest winners.

Sustainable housing is booming, with options like solar panels, geothermal heating and cooling, energy-efficient light bulbs and even windmills coming in to widespread use in new homes.

“‘Green buildings’ is really just a word for high-performance buildings,” says Thomas Mueller, president of the Canada Green Building Council.

“You get a better building in terms of performance, durability, health, energy, water and so… a better building that provides a better value for the customer.”

The council is a non-profit coalition of building professionals that kick-started this green revolution. Since its inception in December, 2002, the organization has rapidly signed on 1,100 member firms and organizations including architects and engineers, contractors, builders and even municipalities (the City of Vancouver was first; the City of Toronto came later).

The council’s board of directors is made up of private and public-sector building representatives. And its LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) program has quickly become the gold — and silver and platinum — standard for green building.

LEED is the latest buzzword in building. And with a growing number of projects seeking certification — 278 registered in Canada, 16 of them condo and/or loft projects in the GTA — it’s something Canadian homebuyers are going to hear more and more about.

Modified from the original U.S. version for our climates, LEED Canada is a system of rating buildings for their environmental impact and performance using a points system. The points result in ratings from “certified” to “silver” to “gold” to “platinum.” The 72 techno-speak criteria on the Project Checklist — things like “erosion and sedimentation control” and “ozone protection” — will likely be of little interest to consumers. But the end result is a definitive green-print for developers to follow and a mark homebuyers can count on.

“Green buildings were around before, but the LEED rating system really presents a common framework and a common language so we can say what a green building really is,” elaborates Mr. Mueller.

With LEED, builders must meet certain prerequisites, then accumulate credits in six categories: sustainable site, water efficiency, energy and atmosphere, materials and resources, indoor environmental quality, innovation and design process. Any combination of points between 26 and 32 results in a “certified” assignation. Between 33 and 38 nets “silver”; 39-51 receives “gold”; and 52-70 scores “platinum.”

Though inspection and certification happen post-construction, buyers can be assured a building will meet at least the minimum LEED standard if it has registered, because registration denotes a commitment (see a list of registered projects by type or province at cagbc.org).

What builders — and homebuyers — are realizing is that an environmentally friendly building doesn’t have to look like an eccentric space-age edifice or a primitive tree house.

Take the Radiance at Minto Gardens, a 33-storey condo in North York. Last month, it became the first residential high-rise to be LEED Canada certified, garnering a silver rating.

“The biggest ‘green’ feature of this building is that it looks like any other building,” says Andrew Pride, Minto’s vice-president of energy management.

Furthermore, while residents go about their normal lives, Minto’s innovations bring them significant savings and — here’s the best part — doesn’t require any extra effort on their part. Quite the opposite, in fact.

By using energy-efficient hallway lighting and installing motion sensors in the stairwells — triggered, like a refrigerator bulb, the instant the door is opened — the building’s common-area energy consumption in its first year of occupancy was 33% lower than in a non-green building, saving an estimated $200,000 on maintenance fees.

Inside the 377 condos, Minto has introduced energy-efficient thermostats, specially designed HRV (heat recovery ventilator) fan coils, and the very popular “all off” switch by the entrance that kills all the lights and exhaust fans at once.

But where the residents are most empowered is in the individual metering of hydro and hot and cold water. “This allows you to control your own cost,” says Mr. Pride. In “a typical condo, water is included in the condo fees, so your neighbour’s water use is your cost.” When consumers are able to see a breakdown of their consumption, they are more inclined to take simple measures, such as not running the tap when they brush their teeth and not running the dishwasher with just a few plates. The result has been a 55% reduction in water use — the equivalent of a one-litre bottle every second — compared with a similar-sized condo, and a savings of approximately $55,000 a year.

No detail has been overlooked in constructing a more efficient, healthy building that will appeal to homeowners and also provide city-wide environmental benefits like reduced emissions, waste and rainwater runoff.

But with higher building costs, what’s the incentive for developers?

“This building’s [cost is] somewhere around 3% to 4% higher than an equivalent condo in Toronto,” says Mr. Pride. “We absorbed it. It was part of what we wanted to build and what we wanted to demonstrate.”

Still, that’s not a viable long-term business plan for Minto. So until costs come down on going green, the company is exploring new ways to make up the difference, such as a “green loan” — a loan by Minto to the condo corporation that is paid back over time by a portion of the residents’ maintenance fees.

“There is a difference,” says Mr. Pride, “and there is a choice.”

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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information