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Tag Archives: chief economist

Canada Housing Slump

Flaherty’s New Mort­gage Rules A Scape­goat For A Much Big­ger Problem

Daniel Tencer – Huff­in­g­ton Post

This sum­mer, Prime Min­is­ter Stephen Harper and Finance Min­is­ter Jim Fla­herty took a reg­u­la­tory ham­mer to Canada’s hous­ing mar­kets, caus­ing condo sales to plum­met in Toronto, and sink­ing Van­cou­ver house prices by jaw-dropping margins.

Com­ment: No, Van­cou­ver only dropped 0.8% accord­ing to Ter­anet. And that had noth­ing to do with mort­gage rules, they have been drop­ping by almost a third over the past cou­ple of years. And all Toronto real estate sales have slowed, by an aver­age of 14% lower in each of the 4 months fol­low­ing the new mort­gage rules. Exactly in the mid­dle of the 11% to 17% of buy­ers who would not qual­ify under the new rules, accord­ing to CAAMP. Amaz­ing how much those num­bers mesh and how exact the tim­ing of the sales drop was.

Or so the finance and real estate indus­tries would have you believe.

Com­ment: Or the actual data, the facts. They get in the way of so many great argu­ments, I know…

To hear Canada’s banks, indus­try groups and even the Con­fer­ence Board tell it, the slow­down that descended on many Cana­dian hous­ing mar­kets over the sum­mer is the fault of the strict new mort­gage rules Fla­herty put into place this past June.

Com­ment: Actu­ally the new rules came into effect in July… you didn’t even get the tim­ing right. And yet we went from 1.5% fewer sales in July to 12.5% fewer in August to 21% fewer in Sep­tem­ber. May had 11% more sales than in 2011. What changed from May to Sep­tem­ber – oh right, new mort­gage rules that dis­qual­ify up to 17% of home buy­ers. All num­bers for Toronto, I am not com­ment­ing on national figures.

To the sur­prise of no one, fol­low­ing the intro­duc­tion of the most recent rule changes, sales activ­ity ratch­eted down,” said Gre­gory Klump, chief econ­o­mist at the Cana­dian Real Estate Asso­ci­a­tion, in announc­ing a 15.1% year-on-year decline in home sales for September.

Com­ment: And they were down 8.9% in August, after being up up 3.3% in July. So changed almost 20% and went from ris­ing sales vol­ume to neg­a­tive sales vol­ume with new mort­gage changes right in the mid­dle. Vol­ume up 3.3% in the month of changes, down 8.9% in the month fol­low­ing. And we want to say that the new mort­gage rules were not the cause?

The Toronto Real Estate Board chimed in: “Some house­holds have put their home pur­chase plans on hold in response to the higher cost of home own­er­ship brought about by the recent changes to mort­gage lend­ing guidelines.”

Com­ment: Of course they did. If they can’t buy now, most peo­ple wait and save up a larger down pay­ment. Watch, spring is going to be crazy as all those who put their plans on hold come out and start buy­ing again.

The indus­try has good rea­son to main­tain this nar­ra­tive. For one, it makes it seem like falling sales vol­umes and prices are all “part of the plan,” noth­ing to worry about. (Not true.) And it also deflects uncom­fort­able ques­tions about the role of real estate devel­op­ers, agents, banks and indus­try groups in cre­at­ing the inflated house prices Canada has seen in recent years.

Com­ment: No one ever said it was part of any plan, only that the new mort­gage rules had an effect on sales vol­ume. And the only peo­ple who cre­ate prices are the 200,000 buy­ers and sell­ers involved in the 100,000 Toronto trans­ac­tions in 2011. Buy­ers are the ones will­ing to pay the prices, sell­ers are the ones demand­ing them. Devel­op­ers are respon­si­ble for maybe 15% of the mar­ket, so they cer­tainly can­not push prices too high. And when they sell 90% of a project, obvi­ously the 100s of buy­ers do not think the prices are inflated. They are buy­ing the units, they are pay­ing the prices. So who is to blame there? Who is to blame when 14 trendy fam­i­lies get in an all out bid­ding fist fight for a house near the lat­est Toronto Life “hot neigh­bour­hood” and bid it from $599,000 to $843,000? Is it my fault, as a real estate agent, or the fault of the buy­ers who HAD TO HAVE that house? Do you blame the seller, know­ing they have a valu­able prop­erty, squeez­ing every last penny out of it? You would too, you all know you would.

The media are happy to go along with it, because it offers a neat and sim­ple expla­na­tion for why Canada’s decade-long hous­ing boom is com­ing to a halt. The only prob­lem is, this isn’t what’s happening.

Com­ment: What? The media paints real estate agents as the devil, slightly below lawyers and used car sales­men. We are all in in for the money (isn’t that why we all go to work?), we are push­ing prices up, etc. How about the banks and their low rates? Oh wait, that comes indi­rectly from the Bank of Canada – do we blame them? Oh wait, low rates mean slow econ­omy, a result of the Euro woes – do we blame Greece or Spain? Wait, how about bash­ing all those ter­ri­ble immi­grants, all those hor­ri­ble peo­ple who want to escape their home coun­tries to come to Canada – they all need a place to live. Shall we blame them for want­ing to live in our won­der­ful coun­try? Let’s put the blame where it is due!

First the back­ground: Fla­herty tight­ened the rules for mort­gages for the fourth time in as many years this past June, reduc­ing the max­i­mum length of a mort­gage insured by the CMHC to 25 years from 30, effec­tively mak­ing that the max­i­mum amor­ti­za­tion period for most Cana­di­ans who take out mort­gages. He also reduced the max­i­mum amount you can bor­row against the value of your house to 80% from 85%. These changes, like the pre­vi­ous ones, were aimed at ensur­ing that Canada’s ris­ing home prices weren’t due to irre­spon­si­ble lend­ing and borrowing.

The be sure, this will have a cool­ing effect on the hous­ing mar­ket. There are prospec­tive home buy­ers who just can’t afford the extra $140 per month, on aver­age, that the shorter mort­gage peri­ods rep­re­sent. Some home­buy­ers have just been priced out of the mar­ket. But can that alone explain the 70-per-cent drop in condo sales in Toronto, or the nine-per-cent drop in house prices in Vancouver?

Com­ment: Actu­ally, if we take the aver­age semi-detached in Toronto priced at $583,117 the change with 5% down on a 3.09% mort­gage is about $294, $374 on the aver­age detached house. It is cer­tainly not $140. And for those stretched to buy, an extra $100 a week is not chump change. Not if you have kids and could be spend­ing $1,500/month on day­care. And that mort­gage on the detached house is $3,817. Add in util­i­ties, prop­erty tax, car pay­ments and oh… food… and it is a lot of money per month. That extra can mean a lot. And it obvi­ously did mean a lot, as sales vol­ume fell as soon as the new rules came into effect.

Highly unlikely. TD Bank fore­cast the impact of the mort­gage rule changes on the hous­ing mar­ket and found it would amount to a three% decrease in house prices — far less than what Van­cou­ver, for one, has already seen. Not to men­tion, we’ve had three pre­vi­ous rounds of mort­gage rule tight­en­ing since 2008, and none of them tipped the mar­ket down­ward. Clearly, some­thing else is hap­pen­ing here.

Com­ment: No, the three pre­vi­ous rule changes did not really affect peo­ple. This one did. Pre­vi­ous changes affect for­eign investors and re-financers mainly. The amor­ti­za­tion changes from 40 years to 35 to 30 did not do too much.

The hous­ing market’s fun­da­men­tals aren’t look­ing good. Stand­ing in the way is that pesky basic law of eco­nom­ics — sup­ply and demand. In some Cana­dian mar­kets, those two things have become entirely detached from one another.

Com­ment: Except Toronto where we have 100,000 peo­ple mov­ing here every year with only 25,000 new hous­ing units being cre­ated. Even con­ser­v­a­tive esti­mates of 30,000 new house­holds being cre­ated (I think it is closer to 50,000) still have us shy by at 5,000 hous­ing units. Add to that divorcees need­ing two homes now, chil­dren mov­ing out of the parental home, uni­ver­sity grads, etc. and there is a steady and press­ing demand here in Toronto. That is why 170+ condo devel­op­ments can sell 80–90% so easily.

As the CEOs of both BMO and RBC have attested, Canada’s real estate mar­ket is sim­ply over­built — par­tic­u­larly in Toronto, where condo con­struc­tion has grown so thor­oughly out of hand that there are now twice as many high-rises going up there as there are in New York City.

Com­ment: And yet they are all being bought, with 20–25% cash down. The demand is there, that is why there is the sup­ply. There are no new rental build­ings being built, con­dos are the new rental mar­ket. And our vacancy rate is 1.4% which is incred­i­bly low – which means bid­ding wars on rentals now. I have heard of 45 peo­ple show­ing up for a mass show­ing of a sim­ple one-bedroom loft. That, my friend, is what we call demand.

And more, much more, con­struc­tion is being planned.

In Van­cou­ver, where res­i­den­tial con­struc­tion has been some­what more restrained than in Toronto in recent years, the supply-demand dis­con­nect is reflected in prices, which have flown so high that Van­cou­ver has nearly as many houses listed for sale over $1 mil­lion as sell in the entire United States in a month. The city’s hous­ing costs ranked as the sec­ond least afford­able in the world, after Hong Kong, in a recent survey.

Com­ment: In the US I can buy some entire towns for less than $1 mil­lion. Have you been there recently? The land is worth­less… Check out Buf­falo or Detroit or Rochester or Gary, Indi­ana. Whole swaths of the coun­try are aban­doned and derelict because it is not even worth tear­ing the build­ings down.

Across the coun­try, house prices are now 35% higher rel­a­tive to income than has been the long-term trend through his­tory, Bank of Canada Gov­er­nor Mark Car­ney noted ear­lier this year.

Com­ment: But the car­ry­ing costs are way lower. The aver­age price in Toronto last month was $485,000. At today’s best rate of 2.89% with 20% down the mort­gage is $2,191. Back in Novem­ber 1981 when mort­gage rates were 18.8% and house prices were only $90,203 the mort­gage pay­ment with 20% down would have been $1,470 – in 1981 dol­lars. Adjust for infla­tion (using the Bank of Canada infla­tion cal­cu­la­tor) and that mort­gage pay­ment is actu­ally be $3,508 in 2012 dol­lars. So your price-to-income ratio is moot. It is the actual monthly cost that mat­ters and monthly mort­gage costs are at a his­tor­i­cal low. Just look at the recent RBC report.

Sim­ply put, prices are too high. Cana­di­ans aren’t earn­ing enough to jus­tify these price lev­els. And closely linked to this is the ele­phant in the room: debt.

Com­ment: But that fact alone does not mean any­thing. Prices are high for a lot of things: houses, dia­monds and Porsches. It does not mean they have to come down. Real estate prices are higher in New York, even higher in Lon­don and even higher in Tokyo. So what?

It has never been cheaper to take on debt in Canada. With a global finan­cial cri­sis bust­ing out all around, the Bank of Canada dropped its base inter­est rate to one% in Jan­u­ary, 2009, and it has stayed at or below that level for nearly four years now.

Com­ment: Debt is a whole other issue, I give you that. It is the debt used to finance vaca­tions and TVs, the kind of debt with noth­ing to show for it, that is dan­ger­ous. Hous­ing debt is good debt, you have a large and tan­gi­ble and valu­able asset. A TV is worth­less the day after you buy it and a vaca­tion is just burn­ing money. And that kind of reck­less spend­ing could cer­tainly get us all in a lot of trouble.

Some econ­o­mists argue this is an exces­sively expan­sion­ary pol­icy that has over­heated Canada’s hous­ing mar­ket. (Plenty of oth­ers would say that, given the dam­age tak­ing place in other parts of the econ­omy, those low rates were necessary.)

All this has had an alarm­ing effect on house­hold bal­ance sheets. StatsCan recently revised its mea­sure­ment of house­hold debt to make it more in line with inter­na­tional norms, and found the debt-to-income ratio hov­er­ing at a record 163.4%, higher than the level the U.S. had when its hous­ing mar­ket began a years-long decline half a decade ago.

Com­ment: But we can­not com­pare the new num­bers with the old num­bers since we are using dif­fer­ent meth­ods of mea­sure­ment. When we used the same mea­sur­ing stick, our cur­rent debt was around the same level as the US. Not that it mat­ters, their sit­u­a­tion was so far dif­fer­ent from ours that we might as well be com­par­ing real estate on Mars.

That offers more of a clue to why Canada’s hous­ing mar­ket has peaked and appears to be on a down­ward tra­jec­tory. It’s basic math­e­mat­ics writ small in the finances of house­holds across the coun­try — there’s just no more breath­ing room to bor­row more money.

Com­ment: Huh? Your made-up down­ward trend is because we have too much debt and can’t bor­row more, even though you argue that money is too easy to bor­row? What?

Add to that the phe­nom­e­non of for­eign investors bail­ing on con­dos, at least in Toronto, and you have a pretty per­fect storm for a hous­ing slowdown.

Com­ment: WHAT? For­eign investors are not bail­ing on Toronto con­dos, there is NO evi­dence for that at all! That is pure spec­u­la­tion, I could call it a fab­ri­ca­tion or worse. There is no data on for­eign investors, none. About all we have is Tridel say­ing 5% of their buy­ers are not Cana­dian cit­i­zens and a mort­gage group say­ing they have 4% for­eign buy­ers on their books. Even if they all stop buy­ing tomor­row, which they won’t, it does not impact 95% of the condo mar­ket. So take your fake stats and… never mind, bet­ter to be polite.

And, if any­thing, the adjust­ments to the mort­gage rules were too lit­tle, too late.

What should hap­pen in a mar­ket like this is a re-balancing — or a cor­rec­tion, if you pre­fer. What­ever the ter­mi­nol­ogy, house prices have to come down rel­a­tive to incomes. Then and only then can they return to healthy, sta­ble lev­els of growth.

Com­ment: No, they don’t. What about NYC where rents aver­age $3,400 a month? And real estate approaches $1,000/sf to start. Do New York­ers make twice as much as Toron­to­ni­ans? Nope… If inter­est rates rise, then we might see prices flat­ten­ing or drop­ping. A jump from 3% to 5% would push monthly costs up around $510 on the Toronto aver­age $485,000 prop­erty. That would cer­tainly hurt. Espe­cially when added to the $300 extra the amor­ti­za­tion drop caused. Add $800/month to the aver­age prop­erty over the course of a few years and you can cer­tainly see where some down­ward pres­sure would come from. Or, prices would sim­ply sta­bi­lize while vol­ume fell to more his­toric val­ues in the 50–70,000 annual trans­ac­tions range. Heck, for most of the  20 years before the 2000s we had around 30–60,000 trans­ac­tions a year. And prices rose in all but 4 of those years, regard­less of whether there were more or less sales than the year before. Prices have risen in 43 of the past 47 years (includ­ing 2012) even with mort­gage rates push­ing 20%, even when rates dou­bled from from 1978 to 1981 (10.67% to 21.46% in 48 months), prices still rose ($67,333 to $90,203). Prices rise, it is called infla­tion. Remem­ber Grampa telling you about movies for a nickel? Try explain­ing that to Cine­plex when they ask $19.95 to see Bat­man – I don’t think that logic will work on them. When I was a kid, choco­late bars were $0.43 with tax – now they are 2 for $2.22 + HST. Lis­ten to old Bill Cosby standup, back when he talks about is $19,000 Rolls Royce – which he bought new. Hous­ing prices may expe­ri­ence some minor ups and downs, but they will always rise over time.

Our finance min­is­ter agrees with this.

It’s bet­ter to have some soft­en­ing in the mar­ket rather than have sud­den move­ment,” Fla­herty said this sum­mer, talk­ing about the new mort­gage rules.

But can “soft­en­ing” be achieved at this point? Or has the hous­ing mar­ket become so out of bal­ance that there’s sim­ply no way to avoid a hard land­ing? That, of course, is the big ques­tion these days.

Com­ment: Only amongst the media, the pun­dits and the wags. Any­one who looks at the avail­able infor­ma­tion knows what is going on. None of us can pre­dict the future, but with enough data we can form an intel­li­gent opin­ion. Or, we can shout bad news from the rooftops, a lot of peo­ple pre­fer that option.

Yet how­ever you slice it, this is one phe­nom­e­non that you can’t pin on last-minute reg­u­la­tory changes. So blame it on exces­sive debt. Blame it on over-enthusiastic real­tors, or home­buy­ers who have finally drawn a line in the sand on house prices.

Com­ment: Yes, you can. I have proven it over and over through­out this piece.

Just don’t blame it on Harper and Fla­herty. All they did was close the barn doors after the horses had fled, and help the chick­ens come home to roost.

Com­ment: It is not a mat­ter of blame, it is a mat­ter of cause and effect. We can all see the effect and the cause is no less obvious.

—————————————————————————————————–
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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  • David Rosenberg’s 5 reasons Canada’s household debt panic is overblown

    Pamela Heaven – Finan­cial Post

    There’s a lot of hor­ror sto­ries cir­cu­lat­ing lately around the lat­est data show­ing that Cana­dian house­hold debt to income ratio has hit 165% – not just a record high, but also beat­ing the bub­ble peaks in the United States.

    Gluskin Sheff chief econ­o­mist David Rosen­berg, how­ever, has taken a closer look at the fig­ures. Here’s his five rea­sons why the panic may be a bit overblown.

    1) Cana­dian debt/income ratio isn’t as bad as it looks. Because Cana­di­ans pay for their health care through their taxes, their dis­pos­able income is dis­torted rel­a­tive to the U.S. In terms of per­sonal income, the ratio is actu­ally closer to 118%, rather the scary 165%.

    2) Cana­dian house­hold debt rel­a­tive to assets (19%) and net worth (24%) is below prior peaks of 20% and 25%, respec­tively. Rosen­berg esti­mates Canada would need to see a 20% drop in the hous­ing mar­ket to get net worth/income ratio down to the U.S. level.

    3) Cana­di­ans have more equity in their homes – 69% of the value com­pared with 43% in the U.S. “This equity gap is a prime rea­son why Cana­dian house­hold net worth/income ratio (at over 500%) is some 35 per­cent­age points above U.S. lev­els,” Rosen­berg writes.

    4) Cana­di­ans are bet­ter able to ser­vice their debts. Cana­dian wage growth at 4% a year is about dou­ble what it is in the U.S. – a rise that pretty much matches the aver­age inter­est rate they are pay­ing. Mean­while, debt growth has slowed to its slow­est in a decade – show­ing that bal­ance sheets are improv­ing “with­out the painful delever­ag­ing that has occurred south of the border.”

    To be sure, if the Bank of Canada feels com­pelled to raise rates that would be a dif­fer­ent mat­ter, but that is a long way off,” he said.

    5) The debt-servicing ratio in Cana­dian house­holds is now just over 7% – a level it has only been below in the past 15% of the time. So even though Cana­dian inter­est rates are 75 basis points higher than in U.S, it is not ham­per­ing our abil­ity to han­dle debt.

    —————————————————————————————————–
    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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  • Real Estate Prices, Sales Tick Up Again in Canada

    Property Wire

    The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) reports that the country’s real estate sales and prices are edging up again, although experts are quick to note that seasonally adjusted rates are more or less flat. The 1% increase in transactions and marginal gain in prices must be viewed with Vancouver’s high-end sales activity in mind.

    This year’s sales in the city’s priciest neighborhoods did not match last year’s numbers and accounts for how the entire country’s numbers are skewed. CREA analysts report that sales in Vancouver and Toronto are so influential that netting them out across national sales can actually determine whether the market is seen as improving or in decline.

    Residential property prices in Canada are continuing to edge upwards and activity is either up or steady in half of local markets, according to the latest data from the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA).

    Nationally transactions were up just under 1% in April compared with the previous month and activity stood 11.5% above levels in April 2011.

    But CREA said that she size of the year on year increase reflects a slowdown in sales last April following changes to mortgage rules which came into effect in March 2011.

    The actual, not seasonally adjusted, national average price for homes sold in April 2012 was $375,810. While more or less flat compared to last spring on a national basis, average sale prices were up on a year on year basis in 80% of all local markets in April.

    “It bears repeating that the national average price was skewed higher last spring by record level high end home sales in Vancouver’s priciest neighbourhoods, and that a replay of this phenomenon was not expected this year,” said Gregory Klump, CREA’s chief economist.

    “Sales data confirm that high-end activity in Vancouver is well off the peak levels reached at this time last year, which is exerting a gravitational pull on the national average price. By contrast, activity in Toronto is stronger this spring than it was last spring. Higher priced sales activity there is on the rise and buoying average prices. As the most active housing market in Canada, Toronto is the biggest factor supporting national average price,” he explained.

    “Netting Vancouver out of the national average price calculation yields a 4.9% year on year gain. Netting Toronto out of the national average price calculation, while leaving Vancouver in, produces a 2.2% year on year decline. Netting out both Vancouver and Toronto results in a 3.1% increase in average price. On balance, this points to modest price growth amid balanced market conditions in much of the rest of Canada,” he added.

    Sales over MLS® Systems of real estate Boards and Associations in Canada edged up 0.8% from March to April 2012, putting them on par with levels reported in the same month two years earlier. The data also shows that the number of newly listed homes edged back 0.2% from March to April.

    Activity was either up or held steady in half of all local markets in April, with Toronto and Calgary posting the biggest monthly increases for the second month in a row.

    Activity gains in Montreal, Winnipeg, Edmonton, as well as London and St. Thomas also made significant contributions to the national sales increase in April. Increased activity in these markets offset monthly declines in Ottawa, Windsor-Essex, Quebec City, the Fraser Valley, and Vancouver.

    “A number of Canadian housing market trends in April remained intact from the previous month. Trends in Vancouver and Toronto continue to diverge. These two housing markets have an obvious influence on national statistics and a high profile, but Canada is a big place. Trends in housing markets differ across Canada,” said Wayne Moen, CREA president.

    A total of 157,804 homes have traded hands so far this year, up 6.4% from levels reported in the first four months of 2011 and about 4% above both the five and 10 year averages for sales during the first quarter of the year.

    The number of newly listed homes was little changed in April compared to March, having edged back 0.2% on a month on month basis.

    The national sales to new listings ratio, a measure of market balance, stood at 55.9% in April, up slightly from its March reading of 55.4%. Based on a sales to new listings ratio of between 40 to 60%, the number of local markets that were in balanced market territory in April at 59 was up slightly from March’s 56.

    Nationally, the number of months of inventory stood at 5.6 months at the end of April, unchanged from levels reported in March. The number of months of inventory represents the number of months it would take to sell current inventories at the current rate of sales activity, and is a further measure of the balance between housing supply and demand.

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