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Toronto real estate: Wet, cold month leaves home-sellers looking for ray of sunshine

Tra­di­tional spring mar­ket for Toronto real estate feels added damp­en­ing effect — weather.

Susan Pigg – Toronto Star

In a city stacked with cookie-cutter con­dos, Chris Parry has a rare win­dow on the world.

The 400-square-foot rooftop patio is Parry’s favourite “room” in his west-end con­do­minium town­house and one of its biggest sell­ing features.

Until this week, things had been a lit­tle wet and frosty on his third-floor perch — so wet that it’s the first April he hasn’t been able to oil the wood deck­ing, put out plants and hang his hammock.

More impor­tantly, Parry has been delayed by weeks in list­ing his place at King and Nia­gara Sts. for sale, all because of the weather.

The rooftop is one of the biggest upgrades in my unit and one of the rea­sons I bought the place,” says Parry. “If I didn’t want to show it off, the place would have been listed two months.”

Thanks to one of the dingi­est Aprils in recent mem­ory, this much-anticipated spring real estate mar­ket has been, at least until now, far more soggy than sunny.

Com­ment: But now the weather is bet­ter and buy­ers are out in droves. Just had 50 peo­ple come through my open house!

Across the GTA, proud home­own­ers like Mel Mills have been fran­ti­cally watch­ing the Weather Chan­nel and press­ing their real­tors to hold off list­ing — in Mills’ case, until he could open the pool at his Glen Abbey home and the expen­sive land­scap­ing on his ravine lot was in bloom.

In the end, Mills had to make do with buds and slapped up a for sale sign last week. He was finally able to fin­ish off exte­rior paint­ing late this week, just as the buds were giv­ing way to a few blooms.

We really shouldn’t have listed it yet,” says Mills. “When all the leaves and flow­ers are in, our back­yard is com­pletely secluded. None of that is show­ing off. We’re miss­ing out on one of the big sell­ing fea­tures of our home.”

Weather is always “a very large fac­tor” in kick-starting the peak spring house-buying spree, says Queen’s Uni­ver­sity real estate pro­fes­sor John Andrew.

Com­ment: Which is why last spring was so crazy, the weather was nice start­ing in Feb­ru­ary. Hard to com­pare a 20-degree March with one cov­ered in snow. Add in tighter mort­gage rules and it is easy to see why March 2012 had 17% more sales than March 2013. Then in April the weather got bet­ter and the dif­fer­ence was only 0.4%. Yet most of the press would have you believe that the sales dif­fer­ence was the begin­ning of the apocalypse.

Many sell­ers aren’t keen to list until they can make top dol­lar from the tens of thou­sands they’ve plowed into decks, pools and back­yards. Buy­ers aren’t inter­ested in house hunt­ing, and chances are slim they’ll trip across a great house unex­pect­edly while out on their bike when it’s cold and wet.

Even if things start to pick up this week­end, April is done,” says Andrew. “A lot of peo­ple, like me, were wait­ing to see if there was bit of turn-around with this spring mar­ket” in the face of house, and espe­cially condo, sales that started slump­ing last summer.

I think April is going to be flat for sales, but hope­fully May traf­fic will pick up.”

Sales, and prices, did pick up as expected in April over March, as is the sea­sonal norm, says Jason Mer­cer, senior mar­ket ana­lyst for TREB, but list­ings con­tinue to lag.

Com­ment: April and May are the tra­di­tional busy months. Some arti­cles, in an effort to make things look bad, even claimed that Feb­ru­ary was the start of the “tra­di­tional” spring mar­ket – and thus, since sales were down, it meant the mar­ket was about to crash. Actu­ally, Feb­ru­ary is nor­mally a dead month and this past one had a bliz­zard every other day. So yeah, I think that was a more rea­son­able explanation.

Toronto Real Estate Board num­bers show that list­ings were actu­ally up as of mid-April by about 15%, with 8,770 new prop­er­ties for sale across the GTA com­pared to 7,580 a year ear­lier. (Sales were down almost 6% year over year, and prices up 3.2%.) But it won’t be clear until full-month sta­tis­tics are released in the next few days what a damp­en­ing effect, if any, the lack of sun­shine and even lin­ger­ing snow flur­ries played in what’s tra­di­tion­ally one of the busiest home-buying months of the year.

Real­tors like Adri­enne Far­quhar have been work­ing with clients for weeks now to get inte­ri­ors ready to go and antic­i­pates a flurry of new list­ings over the next two weeks as the weather improves.

I see this spring mar­ket extend­ing far fur­ther into June, more aggres­sively and pos­i­tively than in the past,” says Far­quhar. “It might just be a later spring mar­ket than usual.”

Com­ment: Makes sense to me.

Diane Black, whose Stage­sense com­pany works with real­tors and sell­ers, largely in the Mis­sis­sauga and Oakville areas, to get homes ready for sale, describes this as “one of the worst springs I’ve seen.”

Every­one was opti­mistic that we would see an upswing in the mar­ket in Jan­u­ary and Feb­ru­ary, but it didn’t really hap­pen. Then we got hit by the weather,” says Black.

Our curb appeal, in some ways, has to be higher because there’s more of it” on big­ger sub­ur­ban lots. “But it also becomes more of an eye­sore when trees and shrubs haven’t filled in. Of course, you can use pic­tures to show what it usu­ally looks like, but that’s not quite the same.”

This may all seem like small, silly stuff, but in the age of the “HGTV effect” — buy­ers who won’t set­tle for any­thing but a knock­out, no-work home — it all adds up in the final sale price.

We know that buy­ers make their deci­sions quickly, and that the first deci­sion is made online,” says Black. “You can get a great feel for the inside of a house on MLS now, but the exte­rior is a big rea­son they are com­ing out to see the house.”

Com­ment: And this is just one year, as was last year, as next year will be. They are all dif­fer­ent, for dif­fer­ent rea­sons. Don’t read too much into the variations!

—————————————————————————————————–
Con­tact the Jef­frey Team for more infor­ma­tion – 416−388−1960

Lau­rin & Natalie Jef­frey are Toronto Real­tors with Cen­tury 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these arti­cles, they just repro­duce them here for peo­ple
who are inter­ested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.

—————————————————————————————————–

New community being built from ground up for Pan Am Games new

Simone Abra­ham­sohn – Prop­erty Biz Canada

As the city pre­pares to host the Toronto 2015 Pan Am Games, the future Athlete’s Vil­lage will be cre­ated on sched­ule – and on bud­get, accord­ing to Jason Lester, Pres­i­dent of Dundee Kilmer Devel­op­ments Ltd, the com­pany man­ag­ing the project.

What’s excit­ing, is that the plan was already 20 years in the mak­ing,” says Lester. “But, the Games just gave it momen­tum it didn’t have yet before.”

Accord­ing to Meg Davis, Vice-President of Water­front Toronto, the plans for the Athlete’s Vil­lage were requested by the province, once the bid for the area renewal – and 32-hectare revi­tal­iza­tion – was already underway.

We got a call asking,’Can you fit the ath­letes vil­lage into the West Don Lands block plan?’ Basi­cally, it meant advanc­ing the West Don Lands [devel­op­ment] by about five or 10 years, get­ting it to mar­ket that much sooner.”

The Canary Dis­trict is a 35-acre post-industrial site, stretch­ing from Cherry St. to Bayview Ave., with an extended Front St. being the cen­tre of the area.

From 0 to 12,000 by 2020

After almost no activ­ity for 20 years, (and hav­ing a pop­u­la­tion of 0 in 2011) the emerg­ing new dis­trict has been steadily form­ing since the ground break­ing in the fall of 2011. About 700 work­ers fill the site each day, cre­at­ing the soon-to-be com­mu­nity and most expen­sive com­po­nent of the $1.4-billion Games.

After orig­i­nally being cleared to become a hous­ing project called “Ataratiri”, in the 1980s, (pri­vate investors retreated, hes­i­tant due to flood­ing risk), that project was can­celled in the early 90s after a real estate crash. The new neigh­bour­hood will have a pop­u­la­tion of approx­i­mately 12,000 by 2020.

Over 50 per­cent sold, the con­do­minium com­mu­nity has attracted var­i­ous stake­hold­ers, includ­ing the City of Toronto, Water­front Toronto and Infra­struc­ture Ontario.

Res­i­den­tial build­ings along Front Street will range between 11 and 15 storeys high, while heights on nar­rower Mill Street will drop down to eight storeys. Addi­tion­ally, four archi­tec­tural firms were asked to design the build­ings within the ath­letes’ vil­lage, to avoid a homoge­nous look and achieve what Dundee Kilmer calls “cohe­sive diversity.”

Avoid­ing con­tract over­runs of the past

A fund­ing model has been imple­mented through a fixed price con­tract between Dundee Kilmer and Infra­struc­ture Ontario, so that the $514-million provin­cial cost for the vil­lage won’t increase. They want to ensure the bud­get does not esca­late as it did in the past, such as Vancouver’s Olympic village.

We do a lot of upfront due dili­gence so [devel­op­ers] know exactly what they’re get­ting into. Everything’s out on the table, so that when they sign the agree­ment they are agree­ing to a spe­cific date and … a spe­cific price,” says Mandy Downes of Infra­struc­ture Ontario.

They don’t get paid until the work gets done, so there is a big finan­cial incen­tive for them to com­plete it on time. They take the risk so that the province and the tax­pay­ers are not on the hook for things we are not in con­trol of.”

The up-and-coming new “Urban Vil­lage” will include a new street­car line, cre­ated on a rebuilt Cherry Street, con­nect­ing to the dis­trict from King Street, and through to the neigh­bour­ing Dis­tillery District.

The eight build­ings cur­rently in devel­op­ment will tem­porar­ily be home to approx­i­mately 10,000 Ath­letes from 41 coun­tries dur­ing the Games, (while the sport­ing events will actu­ally take place else­where, such as Toronto, Markham and Mis­sis­sauga) and will be 100% com­plete once new tenants/owners move in in early 2016.

Plan includes afford­able housing

The area will include the first res­i­dence for George Brown Col­lege, (hous­ing 500 stu­dents), along with an adjoin­ing YMCA, hous­ing a pool and fit­ness cen­tre, 253 units of afford­able hous­ing (a project in affil­i­a­tion with the Fred Vic­tor Cen­tre), includ­ing stu­dios as well as 2-bedroom plus den apart­ments, and town­homes, some as large as 1,475 square feet. Prices start at $200,000.

The almost-800 con­do­mini­ums, 28 town­homes and 12 retail store and office spaces will be fully oper­a­tional after the Games. The res­i­den­tial build­ings along the extended Front Street East will have more than 40,000 square feet of retail space for rent.

Front Street will extend with four traf­fic lanes and lead to a River­front park. The $15 mil­lion, 18-acre park, known cur­rently just as Don River Park, will open to the pub­lic this summer.

There’s always a chance it might be changed to a politician’s name in the future,” says Lester.

It will act almost like a trail­head to the ravine sys­tem on the east side of Toronto, as well as to the water­front to the south. It’s quick access to the trail sys­tem for bik­ing and walk­ers,” he said.

There’s prob­a­bly more park­land as a ratio to the com­mu­nity being built in this neigh­bour­hood than any other com­mu­nity in down­town Toronto.”

Refur­bish­ing land­mark Canary Restaurant

Included in the plans to revive the East end neigh­bour­hood is the refur­bish­ing of the old Canary Restau­rant, sit­u­ated at the cor­ner of Front Street East and Cheery Street from the mid-1960s to 2007.

The 19th Cen­tury Her­itage build­ing, dat­ing back to 1859, expe­ri­enced sev­eral incar­na­tions, includ­ing being the Palace Street School and then the Cherry Street Hotel, before becom­ing the Canary Restaurant.

As indus­tries moved out and var­i­ous Water­front revival plans were put on hold, the kitschy diner remained a fix­ture. The diner, at one point a pop­u­lar spot for film crews, will serve as a sym­bol of the new area’s revitalization.

It kind of gives you a layer, an anchor in time,” said Bruce Kuwabara of KPMB, the archi­tec­tural firm involved in the project.

I think what it does, is it ampli­fies the mean­ing and pro­vokes a dis­cus­sion about his­tory. Lit­tle kids will say, ‘Why is this called the Canary Dis­trict? I like the name, but why?’ And then there’ll be a story to be told.”

—————————————————————————————————–
Con­tact the Jef­frey Team for more infor­ma­tion – 416−388−1960

Lau­rin & Natalie Jef­frey are Toronto Real­tors with Cen­tury 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these arti­cles, they just repro­duce them here for peo­ple
who are inter­ested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.

—————————————————————————————————–


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  • How sellers and buyers are honing their tactics as home sales slow

    Car­olyn Ire­land – The Globe and Mail

    Tomis­lav Hrkac worked on the trans­for­ma­tion of his 100-year-old Edwar­dian house for eight-and-a-half years. If clashes were still erupt­ing over Toronto houses in this quirky spring mar­ket, he wanted a bout in front of his place.

    With a care­ful strat­egy in place, he got his wish last week: The house at 61 Peter­bor­ough Ave. near Corso Italia was listed with an ask­ing price of $599,900 and received nine offers before sell­ing for $728,000, or $128,100 above the ask­ing price.

    Even before offer night, three bul­lies had tried to mus­cle in and two neigh­bours had tried to siphon off prospec­tive buy­ers. It seems that “all’s fair” is the over­ar­ch­ing sen­ti­ment this spring.

    Com­pe­ti­tion is def­i­nitely less per­va­sive, agents say. The Toronto Real Estate Board reported Wednes­day that sales in Toronto were down 17% in March. But when con­tests do break out, the action can be intense.

    Com­ment: Thank dog we are not see­ing 70% houses in some neigh­bour­hoods going for over ask­ing like they did last year, that was nuts. A lit­tle more sub­dued now, though not what I would call calm or easy.

    Sell­ers, like Mr. Hrkac, who want to foment com­pe­ti­tion need bet­ter prepa­ra­tion and tac­tics than they did last year at this time when a tum­ble­down semi next to the rail­way tracks would sell with 18 offers.

    Com­ment: Not really. It is not so much prepa­ra­tion as hav­ing 18 crazy peo­ple ready to cage fight to the death over a dump.

    But Mr. Hrkac’s effort paid off with the high­est recorded sell­ing price on the street – even with triplexes and invest­ment prop­er­ties in the mix, says real estate agent Christo­pher Bresolin of Cen­tury 21 St. Andrew’s Realty Inc.

    He worked with Mr. Hrkac to craft a plan that would bring as many poten­tial buy­ers as pos­si­ble to the prop­erty near St. Clair and Dufferin.

    I was hop­ing that it was a prod­uct that some­one could fall in love with,” says Mr. Hrkac, a civil engi­neer who’s been around real estate enough to adopt the agents’ habit of using the word ‘prod­uct’ in place of ‘house.’

    We low­balled our price.”

    Because they put out the “for sale” sign dur­ing stu­dents’ March break, when many buy­ers and their agents are away, they held offers at bay for nine days instead of the usual seven.

    That was def­i­nitely a wise strat­egy on our part,” Mr. Bresolin says, because some peo­ple did book appoint­ments to see the house as soon as they returned from vacation.

    The risk, says Mr. Bresolin, was that the prospec­tive buy­ers who saw the house on the first day would lose interest.

    You might not be as excited or inter­ested and you’ll be con­cerned there will be more com­pe­ti­tion as well.”

    They cleaned and bur­nished the house to get it look­ing its best and also set out a detailed descrip­tion of the ren­o­va­tion with per­mits, pho­tographs and draw­ings on display.

    They pro­vided a home inspec­tion so that there were no poten­tial gaps for poten­tial buy­ers to fill in. Mr. Hrkac earned more brag­ging rights by mak­ing the house so energy effi­cient that he received a gov­ern­ment grant.

    Com­ment: While the owner cre­ated an awe­some house, he needed the advice of a real­tor to get top dol­lar. Sure, he would have done well sell­ing it alone, but he would not likely have set the street’s price record. From plan­ning when to list and when to take bids, cre­at­ing the story, tak­ing March break into account – this is where our knowl­edge and expe­ri­ence come into play.

    We made a bit of a story,” says Mr. Hrkac.

    They had three bul­lies step up to make offers before the des­ig­nated date and quickly shut them all down.

    Mr. Hrkac admits it was nerve-wracking for him and his wife to turn away the entic­ing offers on the table. Mr. Bresolin pressed him to hold off until the sched­uled offer night.

    It’s tough when a seller knows that some­thing is there,” he acknowledges.

    Nor­mally it’s part of the bully strat­egy to refuse to par­tic­i­pate in a bid­ding contest.

    Usu­ally they say they won’t come back on the offer date and ‘good luck to you’,” says Mr. Bresolin.

    In this case, two of the three bul­lies did return.

    But those weren’t the only curves thrown at the family.

    No sooner had they put out the “for sale” sign than another house a cou­ple of streets over did the same – and made their date and time for offers exactly the same. Then the house next door to Mr. Hrkac’s was sud­denly up for sale – with offers to be received 24 hours before.

    It throws you off a lit­tle bit,” admits Mr. Hrkac. “For us this was a big deal,” he says of his family’s investment.

    Through all of it, they stuck with their plan.

    The buyer is of exactly the type they expected: an empty nester who wants a house that can be moved into with­out the added has­sle of a long renovation.

    Every­thing is turnkey,” says Mr. Bresolin. “It’s a masterpiece.”

    Still, even he was aston­ished when the prop­erty sold for 22% above the ask­ing price.

    It’s amaz­ing that we were able to get this type of money for a two-bedroom, two-bathroom home.”

    Now Mr. Hrkac is expe­ri­enc­ing the mar­ket from the other per­spec­tive: he is a buyer fac­ing the chal­lenge of find­ing a new fam­ily house.

    Right now prod­uct is slim,” he says.

    Com­ment: Urgh, not a smart move. Know­ing you have a great house that will sell in min­utes, he should have bought first. Now he has a time crunch to find some­thing new. When you have some­thing hard to sell, sell first. If it is an easy sell, then buy first.

    He nego­ti­ated a bit of breath­ing room with a clos­ing date more than three months away, but he also knows that he may have to rent accom­mo­da­tions for a while.

    He’s look­ing for a house with three bed­rooms and a larger lot. Despite more than nine months of slip­ping sales in Toronto, prices have remained steady and Mr. Hrkac says he is not tempted to wait for a pos­si­ble steeper decline.

    Com­ment: Steeper decline in what, sales? How will that help? Decline in prices just ain’t going to hap­pen. He counted on high prices to sell and get a ton of money for his house, but then wants prices to drop for him to buy? That makes no sense…

    I’m def­i­nitely not inter­ested in sit­ting out for very long,” he says. “I really don’t see prices dropping.”

    Noam Mus­cov­itch knows all about the angst of buy­ers. The agent with Royal LeP­age Real Estate Ser­vices Ltd. found him­self sit­ting out­side a mid-century bun­ga­low last week when he was com­pet­ing on behalf of his clients with 10 other agents.

    On a lot with 78 feet of frontage, the house had an ask­ing price of $1.088-million. Cars lined the street near York Mills and Leslie as the rivals all vied for the ren­o­vated bun­ga­low with lots of light and air under cathe­dral ceilings.

    It was like a park­ing lot out there,” says Mr. Mus­cov­itch. “It was kind of ridiculous.”

    He had reg­is­tered a bid on behalf of his clients early on the offer date because he had to be on the road for much of the day. At the time, one com­pet­ing offer was already in place.

    He says some bid­ders reg­is­ter early on in order to deter others.

    A lot of peo­ple don’t want to get into a mul­ti­ple offer situation.”

    When he checked in just before 8 p.m., he found out that the num­ber had gone up to five.

    With every addi­tional offer, his clients became more jit­tery, he recalls.

    In all, 11 groups ended up vying for the house. Later that night, each party was given a chance to improve their offer in a sec­ond round of bid­ding and the num­ber dropped down to nine.

    Mr. Muscovitch’s clients were a cou­ple engaged to be mar­ried. They loved the house and tried to think of some cre­ative ways to increase their chances of win­ning the com­pe­ti­tion. Mr. Mus­cov­itch advised them to be very flex­i­ble about going along with the seller’s sched­ule. He let the seller know that the pair had no plans to demol­ish it as had been the fate of so many oth­ers in the area.

    He also employed the del­i­cate strat­egy of point­ing out to the sell­ers that his buy­ers had done their research on the house and were knowl­edge­able about pos­si­ble defects. Home­own­ers some­times worry that a deal will fall through later on if buy­ers get cold feet.

    Com­ment: Huh? When there are 9 offers on the table, it really only comes down to price. Why would the sell­ers care a whit that the buy­ers knew about pos­si­ble defects? If they buy with no con­di­tions, then that is that. If they get cold feet, they lose their deposit. You have noth­ing, noth­ing, as a buyer in a bid­ding war. The seller has all the power and will sim­ply take the high­est price with no con­di­tions. If it was you, why would you do any different?

    We under­stand any issues. We’re aware and we’re okay with them – and that’s good for you,” he says of his mes­sage to the sellers.

    At the same time, his clients wanted the home­own­ers to know they loved the house the way it was.

    You’re not try­ing to offend them, that’s for sure.”

    All the while, he was mak­ing fre­quent calls to the cou­ple, who had brought one of their moth­ers along to a nearby McDonald’s “because you can stay there for a long period of time,” says the agent.

    You need to have them close in case there are changes.”

    About mid­night, Mr. Mus­cov­itch began to have a good feel­ing when he began to see the red lights of one car after another revers­ing back down the street.

    Then finally I got the call,” he says.

    In the end, he thinks their strat­egy beat all of the oth­ers partly because the buy­ers made an emo­tional con­nec­tion with the sellers.

    I think they responded to the fact that the young cou­ple didn’t want to do any­thing to the house.”

    Com­ment: And they had the high­est price. Emo­tional con­nec­tions mean noth­ing, I am sorry to say. I wish they did… I had clients make a great con­nec­tion with a seller. Then another bid came along. All the good­will we had went out the win­dow and it came down to sim­ple dol­lars. We beat the other side by only $1,000 but we had to pay more – emo­tional con­nec­tion or not.

    Micro-hoods: Where to find afford­able homes in Toronto

    Young buy­ers flock­ing to Lit­tle India

    The South Asian flavour of Toronto’s Lit­tle India is in transition.

    The area cen­tered on Ger­rard Street East is attract­ing young buy­ers who have been priced out of the phe­nom­e­nally pop­u­lar Leslieville. Mean­while, the tra­di­tional immi­grant Indian, Pak­istani, Bangladeshi and Sri Lankan com­mu­ni­ties have been steadily migrat­ing to Bramp­ton, Mis­sis­sauga, Scar­bor­ough and other com­mu­ni­ties out­side the city cen­tre. Many busi­ness own­ers moved away decades ago but even the Ger­rard Bazaar’s sari shops and restau­rants are often shut­tered these days.

    Other entre­pre­neurs are ren­o­vat­ing their premises in order to bet­ter com­pete with the sub­ur­ban shop­ping centres.

    At the same time, the rel­a­tively afford­able older semis and new town­house projects draw more first-time buy­ers and young urban­ites to the area.

    Now new projects are re-branding the area with such ban­ners as East Vil­lage Leslieville and Leslieville Loft­houses. The City of Toronto is refur­bish­ing Green­wood Park.

    As the area is increas­ingly revi­tal­ized, prop­erty val­ues are on the rise.

    —————————————————————————————————–
    Con­tact the Jef­frey Team for more infor­ma­tion – 416−388−1960

    Lau­rin & Natalie Jef­frey are Toronto Real­tors with Cen­tury 21 Regal Realty.
    They did not write these arti­cles, they just repro­duce them here for peo­ple
    who are inter­ested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.

    —————————————————————————————————–


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