Tag Archives: estate experts
Toronto’s Wealthy Buyers Dragging Up Home Prices For Everyone
Rachel Mendleson – Huffington Post
High-income buyers are a driving force behind Toronto’s booming housing market, fueling demand for an extremely limited supply of properties in desirable areas, says one real estate broker.
According to Paul Maranger, a senior vice-president at Sotheby’s International Realty, this year has seen a surge in activity in the luxury real estate market in Toronto, as buyers increasingly chase a “Manhattan type of lifestyle.”
“Toronto at the luxury level is not looking for value. They’re looking for convenience,” he said on Thursday. “Many of our clients who work in the financial district, they’re working incredible hours at the office, and they are willing to pay a substantial premium to not have to do any extra work.”
Maranger was one of several real-estate experts made available to reporters on a conference call to discuss the BMO Spring Housing Report.
When it comes to the changing tastes of the wealthy, Maranger says the desire to walk to restaurants and the theatre is putting added pressure on properties in the city centre, and particularly single-family homes, which have become increasingly rare in Toronto due to a lack of available space.
Compared to the same period last year, Maranger says sales of “luxury” single-family homes ($2 million or more) in Toronto have so far increased by more than one-third, from 95 to 128.
Demand has been particularly strong along the subway lines, says Maranger, who cited the recent sale of a home in the Summerhill neighbourhood for more than $300,000 over the asking price as evidence of this trend.
“For a city the size of Toronto, we are grossly under-serviced from a subway perspective,” he said. “What we’ll see as a result of that, and what we’re seeing now, is a disproportionate demand, particularly along the Yonge subway corridor. Buyers are willing to pay a substantial premium to be on that line, and certainly on the [Bloor-Danforth] line.”
This increase in activity at the upper-end is rippling through the real-estate market, he says, pushing up prices of single-family dwellings across the city.
“There certainly is a Domino effect in the marketplace,” he said, noting that demand for detached homes just under the luxury level has grown feverish, with bidding wars and multiple offers becoming increasingly common.
“To get into the marketplace now […] the entry level price point is about half a million dollars, which is a substantial amount of money,” he added.
This observation adds weight to warnings of some observers, who have argued that growing income inequality may be ratcheting up house prices on the whole, and pricing low and middle-income earners out of the city centre.
Demand for single-family homes at the high-end combined with what Maranger describes as the tightest market he has seen in 15 years, has contributed to a boom in condo developments.
The recent increase in condo construction — and dampening demand in the formerly white hot Vancouver market — have prompted some to question the fundamentals of the Toronto market. But Maranger predicts activity at the high end of the market will remain strong.
“We have an incredibly strong base of high-income households who work predominantly in the financial district, and in financial law, education and health care,” he said. “From a mid-to long-term perspective, Toronto is going to hold itself in very good stead in the luxury 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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Offshore bids price Canadians out of housing market
Toronto bungalow sells for $421,800 over asking price in market’s ‘new reality’
Prithi Yelaja, CBC News
Overseas investors are snapping up properties in Canada’s largest cities, driving up prices and pushing ordinary Canadians out of the housing market, observers say.
Real estate experts call it the “new reality,” and the high price paid for a north Toronto bungalow is the latest evidence.
This month, the three-bedroom bungalow, circa the 1960s and without much updating, sold for $421,800 over the asking price, creating a buzz among agents and other buyers.
Located in Willowdale, where similar detached houses typically sell for just short of $900,000, the bungalow at 300 Dudley Ave. was listed at $759,000.
Comment: Exactly. The house was priced $200,000 below market value. Not only did that spur the bidding war, but it made the winning bid look much crazier than it was. If the house was worth $1 million, then the winning bid was only $180k over. Keep things in perspective.
The winning bid of $1,180,800 came from a university student whose parents live in China and own a business in San Francisco. There were four other bids of more than $1 million.
“The initial response was quite vociferous,” said Michael Adelson, a Re/Max agent who represented the seller and received several phone calls about the deal after it was done.
“There’s a lot of anger among Canadians who earn money here that they’ve been priced out of the market. There is some degree of anxiety about how people are going to compete with these hyper-inflated prices.”
‘Outrageous and borderline bizarre’
Adelson declined to discuss the specifics of the Willowdale deal, citing client confidentiality.
But CBC business commentator Michael Hlinka called the deal “outrageous and borderline bizarre.”
The strong reaction to the price likely stems from how it changes the vision of affordability for average Canadians, he said.
Comment: But this is a large lot in a pricey neighbourhood. I can show you nice semis in Leslieville for $500k or less, or fixer-uppers near The Junction for less than $300k. Again, keep things in perspective.
Property markets in other large cities, such as Vancouver and Calgary, are undergoing similar pricing shocks, he said.
“We’re looking at this through a prism of our expectations growing up in Canada in the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s, when part of the Canadian dream was that you would own your own single-family home,” Hlinka said. “But as Canada matures, we’re going to be looking at a new reality, where that may be out of reach. And I don’t think you can turn back the clock.”
Toronto real estate mogul Brad Lamb said Canadians’ home-buying expectations have to change, but he doesn’t believe that overseas investors are to blame.
The scarcity of the product — in this case, single detached homes — is key, he said. And as the Toronto population grows and land available for new houses becomes scarce, the competition for these homes will become even more intense.
Comment: And he is right. When there are 20-30,000 new condos built every year and only 100-200 houses, you can see why they are getting pricier. Add to that a house on a 60-foot lot, more than double the usual size, and you can see where the price comes from.
Condos are the alternative. Already, they’re the norm for families wanting to live in the central cores of cities such as New York and Chicago, said Lamb, who is a condo developer.
“It’s an illusion for people to think they can live in downtown Toronto in a detached home and not be wealthy,” Lamb said. “Ordinary people can’t live in central London or central Paris or central New York.
“If you want to live in central Toronto, you’re going to have to live in a condo or be a millionaire. That’s the reality… It’s not a bad thing. It’s the way cities evolve.”
Inflated prices, such as the price fetched by the Willowdale bungalow, do make it difficult for ordinary Canadians to get into the market, no matter who buys the house, said Steve Matthews, a Re/Max agent in north Toronto.
“It skews the market. How does Joe Normal compete with that” [price], said Matthews.
Comment: Joe buys in Leslieville, or Etobicoke, or Pickering. Or he buys a condo. That is what Joe does. It’s as bad as hearing that woman whine about not being able to afford a house like this, the one who runs that horrible blog. She owns a gorgeous house in Richmond Hill, but that is not good enough. We certainly are a spoiled bunch, aren’t we?
“Now, the person who lives next door and the person who lives down the street think they should get that price, too. It also generates resentment because it makes it tougher for everyone — buyers, agents, banks — so there is a ripple effect that goes beyond the immediate sale.”
Comment: That is called market value. And if you can’t afford that area, buy somewhere else. I would love to live in Forest Hill, but I can’t afford it, so I live somewhere else. And I don’t complain about it!
Foreign students drive market
As more people get exposure to Canada as an offshoot of globalization, the overseas investor market will rise, Hlinka said. As an instructor at George Brown College in Toronto, he has seen an explosion in the number of foreign students.
“When their parents come to visit, they get an idea of what real estate costs here, and they can’t believe how cheap it is. They want to buy because they think it’s a bargain.”
In addition to China, investors pouring money into real estate are flocking to Canada from the Middle East, Korea, Russia, India and the Philippines as well, said Tony Ma, who owns HomeLife Landmark Realty in Markham.
About 65% of Ma’s agents are Chinese and the bulk of his business comes from Chinese clients. Most are new immigrants to Canada, but about 20% are foreign investors, including parents overseas who buy on behalf of their children studying in this country.
Fewer than 5% are pure investors with no ties to Canada, said Ma, a former neurosurgeon who moved to Toronto from Zhengzhou, China, in 1998.
“Most of our buyers are part of Canadian culture. I don’t think they are going to push local Canadian people out of the market. When immigrants come to Canada today, they have money, not like when I came to Canada 20 years ago. I didn’t have money.”
Last year, buoyed by his strong ties to the mainland China market, Ma’s agency sold 263 homes priced at more than $1 million, with about 40% of those being all-cash deals with no conditions attached.
Chinese drawn to Canada
Canada’s stable government and banking system and the relatively low prices draw investors, he said, pointing out that while condos in downtown Toronto can sell for $800 per square foot, in Beijing, the price is $2,000 per square foot and in Hong Kong it’s double that.
Moreover, to control prices, the Chinese government allows each family there to bank finance only two properties — one to live in and one to invest in — and buyers must pay 100% cash for anything above the two-property limit, Ma said.
Not only are prices in Canada more affordable, homes and condos are a better value proposition, since they come ready to move into, unlike in China, where buyers get a concrete shell they have to pay to finish, he said.
“So they see an $8 million house here, they see the quality, they see the finishes and they think it’s cheap,” Ma said. “They can move in today.”
Vancouver tops the list with Chinese investors because of the city’s temperate climate and proximity to their homeland, he added.
Janet Sinclair of Re/Max Hallmark Realty Ltd. in the Beaches neighbourhood of Toronto, routinely deals with foreign investors.
“They have driven prices up,” she said. “Whenever we launch a new condo downtown we get a number of Hong Kong investors and a lot of people coming over from England. People want to put their money in Canadian real estate because they think it’s safe.”
Comment: They buy condos, they do not push prices up. Self-entitled Torontonians with $1,000 strollers who have to get little Kaydon into the best school – they are the ones behind most bidding wars and they are responsible for driving prices up.
Sinclair recently dealt with a Hong Kong investor representing a dozen buyers, who happened to be family members from back home. They snapped up units in a new waterfront condo building and are now interested in another project in the Beaches.
She also recently sold a penthouse condo in downtown Toronto to Swiss investors for $1.25 million.
“They didn’t bat an eye at the price. They said in comparison to what they pay in Switzerland, these prices are nothing. Our prices are not scaring them at all.”
Builders tearing down old houses
The Willowdale buyer who paid the premium price is stinging from the negative reaction to the sale and declined to be interviewed.
Adelson said the Yonge Street corridor between Highway 401 and Finch Avenue is in demand because of the subway and its proximity to York University and Seneca College. Along with a thriving retail strip and a planned new Whole Foods, 10 new condominium projects are in the works.
The area is a magnet for certain ethnic groups, including people from the Middle East and China, Adelson said.
“It’s a cultural thing. Their communities are already there. If you go down to the Danforth, their stores are not there, so that’s not as attractive a location for them.”
The area is also rife with redevelopment as builders tear down older homes and replace them with monster houses or two smaller units.
That’s just what a buyer from China, who recently bought a tear-down bungalow in the area for $720,000, plans to do, said the sales representative who sold him the property.
The buyer became familiar with the area through visiting his daughter, a doctor who lives there. He plans to rent out the house for two years until his building plans are approved, then tear it down and build several townhouse units.
“He thinks the Toronto real estate market has a long way to go,” he said. “He’s right.”
Only pockets of Toronto are of interest to overseas investors, including North York and the downtown core and not areas like Leslieville in the east end, Adelson said. Although that neighbourhood is considered hot and the property values are rising, it has not experienced the overheated bidding wars seen farther north.
—————————————————————————————————–
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.
—————————————————————————————————–
Incoming search terms

















