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Category Archives: Other Real Estate Markets

Quebec realtors dispute figures showing more condos on sale in Montreal than Toronto

Alli­son Lam­pert – The Gazette

When­ever there’s a big national story on the spec­tre of a tidal wave of plung­ing resale prices, empty con­dos and fore­clo­sures turn­ing major Cana­dian hous­ing mar­kets into ghost towns, the epi­cen­tre of the impend­ing col­lapse always seems to be in either Toronto or Vancouver.

Com­ment: Which is funny, since Toronto is not col­laps­ing and Van­cou­ver has been for years.

So when recent opin­ion pieces warned of “signs of another bust in the mak­ing” – that the num­ber of homes for sale in Greater Mon­treal on the Mul­ti­ple List­ing Ser­vice now sur­passed active list­ings in Van­cou­ver and Toronto com­bined, the fig­ures were startling.

Equally sur­pris­ing were fig­ures show­ing dou­ble the num­ber of con­dos for sale on the MLS (or on the Cen­tris list­ing sys­tem in Que­bec) in Greater Mon­treal as in Greater Toronto — the largest real estate mar­ket in the coun­try, which has more con­dos under con­struc­tion than any­where else in North America.

Mon­treal is actu­ally where the great­est supply-demand imbal­ance cur­rently exists,” ana­lyst Ben Rabidoux wrote Wednes­day in The Globe and Mail.

Com­ment: Which is com­ing from some­one almost as neg­a­tive as Garth Turner!

While active list­ings in the Mon­treal condo mar­ket, direct com­par­isons between the num­ber of homes for sale in the two cities have come under fire.

Com­ment: You can­not com­pare them, two dif­fer­ent cities. And you can­not com­pare either to Vancouver.

In a response Wednes­day, the Que­bec Fed­er­a­tion of Real Estate Boards chal­lenged the argu­ment that there were more con­dos for sale in Mon­treal than in Toronto, cit­ing the dis­par­ity in hous­ing starts between the two cities.

There are now 51,000 con­dos under con­struc­tion in Greater Toronto, com­pared to 12,600 in Greater Mon­treal, the fed­er­a­tion said, cit­ing Canada Mort­gage and Hous­ing Corp. data. As of Jan­u­ary, 20,800 of those con­dos in Toronto have yet to be sold, com­pared to 5,800 units in Mon­treal, wrote Paul Car­di­nal, the federation’s direc­tor for mar­ket analy­sis cit­ing data from research firms in both cities.

Com­ment: There are actu­ally 61,000 con­dos under con­struc­tion in Toronto right now.

Right there, that’s about four times less than in Toronto,” Car­di­nal wrote.

Com­ment: And with about 3.3x as many peo­ple in Toronto, for Mon­treal to have 1/4 the con­dos makes a lot of sense. The scale is right.

It’s clear that there are far more con­dos for sale in Greater Toronto than in Greater Mon­treal. So we can­not con­firm that sup­ply is more prob­lem­atic in (Mon­treal) than in Toronto.”

What’s more, the Toronto Real Estate Board tracts data sep­a­rately for condo apart­ments and condo town­houses, while in Mon­treal, those num­bers are com­piled in one cat­e­gory for all types of con­dos. Yet most of the com­par­isons between the cities include all 12,623 con­dos for sale in Mon­treal last month, but only cite the 6,123 condo apart­ments in Toronto, which make up the major­ity of the active list­ings in that category.

In March, there were about 1,000 condo town­houses for sale in Toronto, data from TREB show.

But while the com­par­i­son may not be two to one, there is still a gap in the active list­ings between the two cities.

Either way, it’s clear that sup­ply is ris­ing in Greater Mon­treal, where the condo mar­ket now favours buy­ers for the first time in 15 years with March inven­tory up 25% to 12,623 units, com­pared to the same month in 2012.

Com­ment: Same as Toronto, sell­ers have ruled the roost for a long time.

While cer­tain Mon­treal condo projects have already sold out, some devel­op­ers are now giv­ing away cars, rais­ing bro­kers’ com­mis­sions and run­ning spe­cial pro­mo­tions to sell units. And on Sat­ur­day, the down­town Mon­treal condo tower Avenue is hold­ing a sale where buy­ers can get higher-floor apart­ments for the same price as units on lower levels.

For Mon­treal buy­ers, it doesn’t take a com­par­i­son with Toronto to know that choices abound these days in the city’s condo market.

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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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  • Long-Term Outlook For Real Estate Remains Positive

    Ann Han­nah, Pres­i­dent of the Toronto Real Estate Board – Toronto Sun

    Sales through the Toronto MLS sys­tem cov­er­ing the Greater Toronto Area were down 17% year-over-year in March with 7,765 trans­ac­tions com­pared to 9,385 in March 2012. It is impor­tant to note, how­ever, that unlike last year, this March included a statu­tory holiday.

    Com­ment: And it is impor­tant to note that the mort­gage rules this March were dif­fer­ent than last year. That is a LOT more impor­tant than a stat holiday.

    March also marked the end of the first quar­ter.  There were 17,678 sales reported dur­ing the first three months of the year – down 14% com­pared to last year.

    Com­ment: Again, a quar­ter with dif­fer­ent mort­gage rules.

    Sales activ­ity was mar­gin­ally stronger in the areas sur­round­ing the City of Toronto, with 4,874 trans­ac­tions reported in the 905/705 regions within the TREB mar­ket area, rep­re­sent­ing a year-over-year decrease of nearly 16%. The City of Toronto’s 2,891 sales rep­re­sented a decline of 19% com­pared to a year ago.

    As has been the case over the bet­ter part of the last year, the num­ber of active list­ings at the end of the month have been up com­pared to the pre­vi­ous year. Buy­ers have ben­e­fited from more choice, which helps explain why the aver­age num­ber of days a home remained on the mar­ket before sell­ing has edged up. In March, the aver­age days on mar­ket was 24 days ver­sus 21 days a year ago.  With this said, active list­ings con­tinue to trend below lev­els expe­ri­enced in the pre-recession period.

    On a year-over-year basis, the aver­age price of a GTA home sold through Toronto MLS increased by nearly 4% in March to $519,879. Gains were slightly bet­ter in the City’s sur­round­ing area with aver­age price climb­ing by more than 4% to $493,238. The City of Toronto’s aver­age price of $564,793 rep­re­sented an increase of nearly 3% com­pared to March 2012.

    The aver­age Toronto MLS home price was up 3% annu­ally com­pared to the first quar­ter of 2012.

    Town­house prices in the City of Toronto saw the most sig­nif­i­cant year-over-year price gains in March, climb­ing by nearly 8%. Semi-detached homes in the City of Toronto fol­lowed, grow­ing by nearly 7%. Detached homes in the City’s sur­round­ing area also showed healthy price gains, increas­ing by 5% com­pared to a year ago.

    One key fac­tor that may prompt buy­ers to enter the mar­ket as we move fur­ther into spring is the afford­abil­ity that five-year fixed rate mort­gages offer, at approx­i­mately 3%. Less promis­ing though, was the March unem­ploy­ment rate in Toronto, which remained stalled last month at 8.4%, iden­ti­cal to that of the pre­vi­ous month.

    The long-term pic­ture for our City’s real estate mar­ket, how­ever, remains pos­i­tive, sup­ported by the Greater Toronto Area’s favourable rep­u­ta­tion. Recently, three GTA munic­i­pal­i­ties – New­mar­ket, Oakville and Burling­ton – ranked within the top ten of Mon­ey­Sense magazine’s annual “Best Places to Live in Canada” report, which exam­ines fac­tors that con­tribute to qual­ity of life includ­ing employ­ment, incomes, hous­ing afford­abil­ity, weather, crime rates and access to med­ical treat­ment. In fact, eight GTA munic­i­pal­i­ties, includ­ing the City of Toronto, ranked within the top 30 on the report’s list of 200 cities.

    Com­ment: Toronto also made the short list of the world’s most intel­li­gent com­mu­ni­ties – www​.intel​li​gent​com​mu​nity​.org

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    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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  • Canadian housing market will have a soft landing

    The Canadian Press

    Scotiabank chief executive officer Rick Waugh says he expects the Canadian housing market will have a “soft landing” rather than face a major downturn this year.

    The head of Canada’s most international bank told the bank’s annual meeting that delinquency rates with its clients are “slightly elevated,” but appear to be under control.

    Waugh says he doesn’t anticipate the bank will endure any significant losses from unpaid mortgages.

    Comment: With default rates at or less than 1/3rd of 1%, I would expect so. Canadian mortgages default at a rate around 1/1,000th as they do in the US.

    Canada’s housing market is expected to soften this year as fewer people buy homes and construction of new homes starts to slow.

    A report from Scotiabank last month said that the slowdown was part of the market getting back into balance.

    Comment: A slow down meaning less sales. We are already seeing that in Toronto, with annual sales down from highs in the mid-90,000 range to a more manageable 80-85,000. It does not mean prices are going to fall or that the markets will crash.

    Lower housing prices tend to cause a larger correction in home prices in certain sectors like condominiums in major cities.

    Comment: Except most major Canadian cities have seen prices rise in Q1 2013. Only Vancouver, Victoria and Saint John, N.B. had prices decline this quarter. Canada as a whole, negative cities included, saw house prices rise 2.2% and condos rise 1.2%. That is for the 1st 3 months of the year, a full quarter. So where are these lower house prices coming from? Toronto prices rose almost 4% in March alone.

    Separately, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. said Tuesday the pace of housing starts crept up slightly in March, despite a drop in the number of single dwellings begun in some urban markets.

    The agency estimates there were 12,273 actual starts in March, which extrapolated out over 12 months gives a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 184,028, just over the 183,207 February figure.

    It says the annual rate of starts in urban markets slipped 2.7% in March to 157,217 units, as the level of activity in multiple-unit dwellings such as condos and apartments remained steady but starts of single urban dwellings fell.

    Comment: Well, duh… who is building houses in cities anymore? It is all condo construction now.

    There was a 6.6% decline in single urban starts to 60,558 units while multiple urban starts remained relatively unchanged at 96,659 units in March.

    Urban starts decreased 15.7% in Ontario on a seasonally adjusted annual rate and were down 13.5% in Quebec.

    However, urban starts increased in 27.1% Atlantic Canada, were 13.8% higher on the Prairies and 13.1% higher in British Columbia.

    In another report, Statistics Canada said municipalities issued building permits worth $6– billion in February, up 1.7% from January. The agency says higher construction intentions in the non-residential sector in eight provinces more than offset a decline in the residential sector.

    Despite the February advance, the total value of building permits has been trending downwards since late 2012.

    Permits for residential construction fell 7.2% to $3.6-billion.

    The value of permits in the non-residential sector increased 18.9% to $2.4-billion, with increases in every province except New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.

    All three segments of the non-industrial sector – commercial, institutional and industrial – recorded increases.

    Comment: Still not sure I understand what the soft landing here is. Sales volume drops a bit, from record highs down to the 5-10 year average. Prices keep rising. Building permit are up one month, down another, basically evening out. How is that even a landing? Sounds to me like things are rising or staying fairly level. Where is the drop? Where is the landing?

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    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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