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Tag Archives: condo market

In Toronto, “Low Rise” Vs. “High Rise” Living? About $194,000

David George-Cosh – Wall Street Journal

The dream of owning a new home with a yard and white picket fence is fading for many in Toronto, thanks to a widening price gap between houses and condos.

The price gap between buying a new “low-rise” home versus a new “high-rise” home has widened to about $194,000, from about $75,000 back in 2011, according to George Carras, president of Realnet Canada Inc., a Canadian real estate research firm.

Comment: And people wonder why condos are so popular… not always because people prefer them, but they are the only home they can afford.

A low-rise home is defined by Realnet as a newly built detached, semi-detached home or town house. A high-rise home is an apartment condominium, loft or stacked townhouse.

In April, the cost to buy a new low-rise home in Canada’s biggest city was $627,933, up 6% from the same month last year, while the price of a new high-rise home was relatively unchanged at $433,132, according to a report by Realnet.

There are also less low-rise homes being built, as Toronto policymakers have decided that the best way to handle an expanding population in North America’s fourth-largest city is from the condo market rather than new houses, Mr. Carras said.

“Toronto’s housing market is getting taller, smaller and more expensive,” he says.

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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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  • Toronto condo rents rise 10% in 2 years as rental demand outpaces sales

    31% more units leased in 1st quar­ter of 2013 than last year

    CBC News

    The rental mar­ket in Toronto con­do­mini­ums is heat­ing up, with increas­ing num­bers of units being leased rather than sold and rents con­tin­u­ing to rise in the first quar­ter of 2013, an analy­sis by the mar­ket research com­pany Urba­na­tion suggests.

    Com­ment: And it is this demand for rental units that keeps investors buy­ing them. And that is what keeps the Toronto condo mar­ket strong.

    There were 31% more condo units leased in the first quar­ter than a year ago, Urba­na­tion found, and rents were up 4.4%, a gen­tler jump from the 5.9% increase that occurred between the first quar­ters of 2011 and 2012 but still a sig­nif­i­cant rise, said Pauline Lier­man, Urbanation’s direc­tor of mar­ket research.

    The aver­age rent was $1,856, or $2.33 per square foot, in the first quar­ter com­pared to $2.11 in Q1 2011.

    That jump in rent of more than 10% in two years is mainly a prod­uct of demand, with the most desir­able units in down­town loca­tions close to tran­sit lines and ameni­ties, Lier­man said.

    The vacancy rate is barely over 1% for rental con­do­mini­ums,” Lier­man said. “The mar­ket has remained tight.”

    Investors who have bought con­dos are choos­ing to rent them out instead of sell­ing them, Urbanation’s senior vice-president, Shaun Hilde­brand, said in a news release.

    For the first time in a while, rents are ris­ing faster than prices,” he said.

    New units going straight to rental market

    Of the 773 new con­do­minium units listed in Q1 2013, 13% were rented out, ver­sus 4% of listed units in Q1 2012. Only 2% of the new listed units were resold, down from 2.8% last year.

    You’re see­ing a higher trad­ing fac­tor rather than a resale fac­tor,” Lier­man said. “What you’re see­ing is more [units] are going into the rental mar­ket. These peo­ple may be investors or peo­ple who bought and aren’t going to use their units and are not putting their units into the market.”

    Much of the increase in rentals in Q1 2013 is owing to the fact that more than twice as many con­do­minium projects were com­pleted that quar­ter than in 2012: 4,859 new units were reg­is­tered in Q1 2013 ver­sus 2,127 in Q1 2012.

    Many condo projects were started in the volatile period of 2008–2009 and expe­ri­enced con­struc­tion delays because of the reces­sion and are only now mak­ing up the deficit, which is in part why the num­ber of avail­able new condo units was so much lower last year, Lier­man said.

    Tighter mort­gage rules putting off buyers

    Lier­man says that another fac­tor dri­ving more peo­ple to rent condo units instead of buy­ing them is the fur­ther tight­en­ing of mort­gage rules last year, which short­ened the max­i­mum amor­ti­za­tion period for government-backed insured mort­gages and reduced the max­i­mum size of home equity loans.

    The changes have def­i­nitely seen first-time buy­ers put off; they’re rent­ing,” she said. “It’s hard to quan­tify, but you can def­i­nitely see the resale mar­ket has slowed down through­out the lat­ter half of the year. Even the new sale mar­ket slowed down. We were ahead of the year before dur­ing the first half of 2012 and then every­thing eased off. Prices have flat­tened out.”

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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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  • Toronto condo con­ver­sions increase rent
  • Should I buy that condo now, or wait for prices to fall?

    Ricky Chadha – Globe and Mail

    Ques­tion: I heard one of the bank econ­o­mists online say­ing that there was only a four or five-month sup­ply of new con­dos on the mar­ket in Toronto, but that buy­ers should wait a lit­tle longer to see if prices come down any fur­ther. It seems to me that prices are bound to bot­tom out soon. Do you think I should wait?

    Answer: There has been on and off spec­u­la­tion for some time that the hot Toronto condo mar­ket is bound for a slow­down. But reports on the future of the real estate mar­ket always dif­fer. On one hand, you have some media report­ing doom-and-gloom sce­nar­ios while oth­ers remain opti­mistic about future growth in the condo sector.

    Com­ment: Media write doom-and-gloom, cit­ing econ­o­mists from other coun­tries and pun­dits with 10 years worth of wrong answers. Or, real­tors and indus­try groups – who know bet­ter – with oppos­ing opin­ions. Who has been right year after year? Oh yeah, us, the realtors.

    Mar­kets do fluc­tu­ate and nobody knows when peaks or val­leys will begin or end. The one thing that’s cer­tain is that the Toronto mar­ket has con­tin­u­ously taken hits and bounced back over time.

    Com­ment: What hits? The burst­ing bub­ble of the 1990s, but that is it. Out­side of that one event, there has never been a year where prices dropped.

    But if you are in the mar­ket for a new condo, you have to ask your­self a sim­ple ques­tion: “Why exactly am I buying?”

    Whether you’re look­ing to buy a place you plan on liv­ing in for a num­ber of years, or to rent out as an invest­ment prop­erty, the mar­ket will likely fluc­tu­ate up and down through­out the time you own it. You can’t con­trol that, and there are no guar­an­tees, but over time you should real­ize value.

    Com­ment: Exactly. Year to year is moot, but I can guar­an­tee you that your condo will be worth more in 5 or 10 years than it is worth today. Cars will also cost more, as well as milk.

    Sure, the mar­ket may bot­tom out in a month or six. You will still have likely gained some equity, and you can expect to see sig­nif­i­cant growth in the long term based on past trends.

    Com­ment: Bot­tom out? It has not even peaked and has not begun to go down? How the hell can it bot­tom out?

    Look at all the major finan­cial mar­ket indices. The Dow Jones and S&P 500 have taken major hits in bad mar­kets, yet peo­ple who held their posi­tions are bet­ter off than they were before mar­kets crashed, cor­rected, declined or what­ever you want to call it. But that under­lines there are many options for where you put your money – real estate, the mar­kets, pre­cious met­als, under your bed…

    It all boils down to oppor­tu­nity cost – the cost of NOT mak­ing the invest­ment in real estate or another asset. That is some­thing I can­not answer for you; your choice as to the best place to put your money for growth requires some soul-searching on your part. It’s not sur­pris­ing that I would encour­age invest­ment in real estate, but I find an asset you or a ten­ant can live in beats one that’s on paper. Every­one needs a roof!

    Let’s get down to brass tacks and look at some num­bers relat­ing to the Toronto market.

    In Toronto, resale condo units were down 16.9% in the first quar­ter of 2013 ver­sus the same period last year. Prices were rel­a­tively flat year-over-year (0.5% decrease), with the aver­age condo price hov­er­ing around the $333,000 mark in Q1 2013 (Source: TREB Condo Mar­ket Report Q1 2013).

    New con­do­minium com­ple­tions were in a steady decline for the major­ity of 2012. How­ever, in 2013 they’ve resumed an upward tra­jec­tory. Cana­dian Hous­ing and Mort­gage Cor­po­ra­tion (CMHC) is esti­mat­ing approx­i­mately 17,000 new condo units in 2013, com­pared with 11,000 last year. That’s a lot of con­dos com­ing on stream, but many are des­tined to be bought by investors and enter the rental mar­ket where, accord­ing to a report this week by Toronto-based condo research firm Urba­na­tion, aver­age rents have hit a record $1,856 a month.

    Com­ment: The new con­dos com­ing onstream are already bought. Con­dos only get built once they have been paid for. A typ­i­cal build­ing is 90% sold but the time it is com­pleted. So no, those con­dos will not be bought by investors, they have already been bought.

    So, active list­ings will likely remain high com­pared to pre­vi­ous years. No one can pre­dict what that will mean for prices, but you will have a broad choice and can expect some com­pe­ti­tion in cost and the abil­ity to negotiate.

    Com­ment: Resale condo list­ings have increased a bit, but new con­dos have slowed to near zero. Thus the sup­ply is only on the resale side, thus we are see­ing more sales and higher prices in that seg­ment. No sur­prise there.

    Every­thing still boils down to that basic ques­tion: “Why am I buying?”

    If you are mov­ing for per­sonal rea­sons such as qual­ity of life improve­ment, you may not want to wait. If you are an investor look­ing to acquire a rental prop­erty, then urgency may not be a fac­tor – there is clearly choice and oppor­tu­nity. That said, wait­ing would also be a delay in your oppor­tu­nity for monthly rental cash flow and a start to build­ing equity with your newly acquired asset.

    As always, the mar­ket­place is never the over-riding fac­tor – your choice must be based on what works for your own hous­ing and finan­cial needs.

    Com­ment: Wow… so many words that did noth­ing to answer the actual ques­tion. In the future, prices are only likely to rise, as are inter­est rates. It may sound pat, but my answer to the ques­tion of when to buy is always “yes­ter­day”. Prices and rates were either the same or lower in the past, so the longer you wait, the more it will cost you. No mat­ter why you are buy­ing, wait­ing will never save you money. Never. If you are an investor, buy a resale condo that you can rent out imme­di­ately. New con­dos just take your 25% down and you make noth­ing on it for years as you wait for it to be built. Time is always of the essence.

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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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