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Tag Archives: consequence

If You Are Buying Real Estate You May Come Across The Bully Offer

Chan­dler Man – Fav​s​tocks​.com

The nor­mal real estate sys­tem is fac­ing some new issues since the Toronto hous­ing sec­tor has inten­si­fied. Many home shop­pers are being caught off guard by a maneu­ver known as a bully offer, that has become a preva­lent way to seize prop­er­ties off the mar­ket in advance of a bid date. This sit­u­a­tion has placed Real­tors in a dilemma of how to effec­tively serve their clients while retain­ing con­sumer faith in the bid­ding process undamaged.

The bully offer tac­tic is a con­se­quence of the bid­ding sys­tem presently favored to bring atten­tion to a prop­erty by pub­lish­ing a low price and open­ing the home for show­ings, how­ever not enter­tain­ing offers until a spec­i­fied date. If one of the inter­ested buy­ers puts in a bully offer – which is usu­ally higher than the mod­er­ate list price – the stip­u­la­tion is that the offer be agreed to before the bid date spec­i­fied on the listing.

The home owner rec­og­nizes their oppor­tu­nity to move their prop­erty fast and often accepts the bully offer to cut steps out of the cur­rent sales plan. For buy­ers in Toronto who have spent count­less hours hunt­ing for houses and Toronto con­do­minium list­ings com­ing across a bully offer can upset your plans.

The pur­chasers that respected the offer date have not been pleased when they learn that a bully offer has been signed on a home that they had been wait­ing to bid on. Objec­tions have been raised, and as a con­se­quence new poli­cies are cur­rently in effect for home own­ers con­tem­plat­ing bully offers.

This kind of scheme is used mostly in Toronto but pur­chasers of homes in other nearby regions are also see­ing it. If a bully offer is made and the ven­dor wants to accept it, the Real­tor has to call all the bid can­di­dates and let them know a bully offer has been made so they can have the chance to make a counter bid. Despite the fact the con­cept is good, the real­ity is that most poten­tial buy­ers are not able to drop what they are doing to rush to the agent’s office with all forms filled-out for a bid with such short warn­ing. As a result, the com­plete mul­ti­ple offer process is voided if the bully offer goes undis­puted and is accepted by the home owner.

Some real estate pro­fes­sion­als do urge their clients not to accept a bully offer, how­ever to wait until the sched­uled offer pre­sen­ta­tion because there could be a higher offer tabled by other pur­chasers. This method has been advan­ta­geous in a lot of trans­ac­tions, how­ever the allure of tak­ing the bully offer and fast track­ing the sale is often too tempt­ing to turn down. The would-be buy­ers who are left out in the cold in spite of fol­low­ing the rules spelled out by the seller are begin­ning to be irri­tated by the rise in bully offers.

The bot­tom line is that bully offers are cre­at­ing dam­age to the entire hous­ing mar­ket by under­min­ing con­sumer con­fi­dence in the offer pro­ce­dure. Real­tors are hav­ing to put intense con­sid­er­a­tion into how they can revamp the poli­cies to keep it fair while rep­re­sent­ing their clients’ best interest.

A solu­tion for poten­tial pur­chasers might be to turn to the Wasaga Beach real estate mar­ket and steer clear of the Toronto region how­ever that is clearly not work­able. As long as the real estate glut in Toronto is affect­ing the bid process, pur­chasers are going to have to stay on their toes to coun­ter­act any bully offers that impede their oppor­tu­nity to bid.

Any rep­utable Real­tor should advise their pur­chasers not to be bul­lied into mak­ing an offer that is higher than the present mar­ket value for any property.

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Con­tact the Jef­frey Team for more infor­ma­tion  -  416−388−1960

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Have you started your kids’ condo fund?

The housing market is red hot and new condos are constantly changing Toronto’s skyline. New research shows parents are helping finance purchases for kids, partly as an investment

Garry Marr, Financial Post

Here’s one way to tackle the red-hot Canadian housing market: Get someone to buy you a home.

That someone would be your parents. According to a new survey from TD Canada Trust, 10% of Canadians are considering buying a condominium for their adult children. A year ago, only 5% of parents thought about buying the kids a condo.

“It could be something that the parents are looking at as a long-term source of income, letting their children live it in for now,” says Chris Wisniewski, associate vice-president of real estate and secured lending with TD.

It could also be that parents know condominium prices, like detached homes, have climbed to unprecedented levels, making it difficult for adult children to come up with a minimum 5% down payment, let alone the 20% needed to avoid costly mortgage default insurance.

Toronto condo research firm Urbanation Inc. says the average existing condominium in the city sold for $331,000 in the first quarter of 2010. Based on an average $369-per-square-foot price, that’s a 900-square-foot unit. For a new one, prices averaged $443 per square foot in the first quarter, so about $400,000 for that same-sized condo.

Ms. Wisniewski says low interest rates are convincing parents to step up and buy their children homes. The condominium represents an attractive alternative to those parents because the costs are stable.

“They know what the maintenance costs will be,” she says. “[Parents] are thinking, ‘I’m not worried my children are too young to accept the responsibilities of home ownership if I set them up in an apartment. They don’t have to recognize the responsibilities of maintenance in an apartment.’ “

Parents might also see a condominium as a way to get their kids to start a family. The survey found 36% of Canadians are willing to raise families in a condo.

“One of the reasons for that is affordability,” says Ms. Wisniewski. “Where are the new condominiums being built? They are being integrated in really nice existing neighbourhoods with all the infrastructure and all the schools and amenities.”

Brian Johnston, president of developer Monarch Corp.’s Canadian division, says he doubts families will ever be integrated into the condominium stock, but does agrees with the premise that parents are helping to buy housing for their children. He says parents often want to keep children close to them so they’ll chip in for a condominium in a nearby neighbourhood.

“How do we know they’re helping out? They tell us when they are writing the cheques for the deposit,” Mr. Johnston says.

Mr. Johnston said when it comes to recent immigrants to Canada, there is “lots of help” from family members to get that first home. “Condominiums are not inexpensive and they’re going to need that help, particularly if the younger ones have not had time to build up their finances.”

The builder has his own children and, based on today’s prices, he figures he’s going to have to lend a helping hand. “I don’t expect them to be able to buy a condo…before they are 30. That is just part of the deal [for parents],” says Mr. Johnston.

It’s not like Baby Boomers don’t have the cash. There have been endless studies that suggest the Boomers are set to inherit billions of dollars in the coming years from their parents.

Craig Alexander, deputy chief economist with TD Bank Financial Group, says there is no hard data to suggest how much parents are helping children, but they certainly have the financial capacity to lend a hand.

Canadians have $1.5-trillion invested in stocks and mutual funds with $500-billion of that figure in capital gains.

“The generation before the Baby Boomers were big savers and, as a consequence, there is a very large income transfer going to take place over time,” says Mr. Alexander, adding it makes sense that some of that money is going to end up in housing and real estate.

For first-time buyers facing rising rates and increasing prices, the helping hand couldn’t come at a better time – just ahead of tighter mortgage financing rules. Most of them probably hope their folks go from “considering” buying a condo to actually doing it.

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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information  -  416-388-1960

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  • Canadian hoteliers see gap in luxury market

    More than 1,000 such hotel rooms are slated to open in Toronto and Vancouver over the next 12 months. But hoteliers aren’t worried about oversupply: They insist the five-star market is underserved

    Steve Ladurantaye – Globe and Mail

    During the darkest days of the recession, one thought kept going through Tony Cohen’s mind: Better to be building a luxury hotel through the downturn than to be opening one.

    Mr. Cohen, who with partner Peter Freed is putting the finishing touches on the 102-room Thompson hotel in the western part of downtown Toronto, isn’t worried any more about filling rooms when the doors open in May. The economy is recovering, business travellers are slowing returning, and the market is far from saturated. Toronto and Vancouver, Mr. Cohen believes, have long suffered from a lack of luxury in the hotel sector.

    That’s about to change. Within the next 12 months, more than 1,000 luxury hotel rooms are slated to open in each of those cities – a huge expansion that was planned before the recession hit, and one with uncertain consequences for an industry that was hammered during the downturn.

    “This all may be happening at a crazy time, given what’s been happening in the economy over the last couple of years, but I maintain this market has been underserved,” said Mr. Cohen, who also operates a small luxury boutique hotel in Toronto called Le Germain. “This is a long time coming, and we really feel it’s all coming together at the right time.”

    The past couple of years have been anything but the right time for Canada’s hotel industry. Revenue per available room, a key measure of the sector’s financial health, plunged 12%, according to data from Colliers International.

    Insiders suggest that even that number flatters the truth, because many chains have kept room rates stable but offered free nights and other upgrades to attract guests. PKF Canada, a market research firm, estimated in its annual review that profitability at the nation’s hotels declined by 33% in 2009.

    But there are hopeful signs emerging. Figures from STR Global, which tracks occupancy and rates week-by-week, show that life is slowly returning to the market. The average daily rate was up 0.3% at the end of March, to $118.77. Occupancy rates climbed 1.7% to 58.2%.

    Hotels such as the Thompson, Trump, Four Seasons and Ritz-Carlton in Toronto and the Shangri-La, Fairmont Pacific Rim and Hotel Rosewood Georgia in Vancouver could help drive a renaissance for the embattled industry, said analyst Lyle Hall, managing director of HLT Advisory Inc. in Toronto.

    “There is still some ugliness out there as the convention and meetings markets see softness,” Mr. Hall said. “But these brands have certain standards and price thresholds. Having them come in and push rates up should help. It’s the thing about rising tides lifting all boats.”

    There are 12,000 hotel rooms within walking distance of Toronto’s Union Station, while the Olympic-fuelled boom in Vancouver has pushed the number of rooms in its downtown to 13,000. But both markets have been short on truly high-end offerings, industry analysts say.

    There is no formal definition of what constitutes a five-star hotel. It generally refers to properties with a high staff-to-patron ratio and luxury restaurants and amenities. Colliers International executive managing director Bill Stone said the lack of such inventory has cost the cities financially, as large trade shows and upscale events opt for markets with higher-end facilities.

    “You are going to see new business coming to these cities because they haven’t had this calibre of offerings before,” Mr. Stone said. “This is going to be better than people anticipate – people like to be at these places in a way that is different than more traditional hotels, and that attracts the corporate clientele.”

    For the Ritz, the results are already evident. Though it won’t open until midsummer, advance bookings are already in place for weddings and bar mitzvahs. Site tours have been available for a year, and most of its 400 employees have been hired.

    “Having these hotels will attract groups that would otherwise go to Chicago or San Francisco that already have them in the market. That is a certainty,” general manager Tim Terceira said.

    While paying guests are the cornerstone of survival for any hotel, several of the developments have another advantage built into their business plans – they aren’t only hotels, they are also condominiums. With hundreds of property owners sharing the same space as vacationers, amenities such as restaurants and cleaning services have a built-in source of alternative revenue.

    At the Ritz, for example, 135 condos will share the downtown Toronto location with 267 hotel rooms. The suites range from $700,000 for a standard condo up to an estimated $11-million for the penthouse.

    “They’ve offered condo buyers a high level of services that don’t normally come with an independent building,” Mr. Stone said. “This helps with financing out of the gate, and the hotels also like it because it creates a feel that goes beyond the scope of a traditional offering.”

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    Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information  -  416-388-1960

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