Tag Archives: forbes
House prices going through the roof
Even The Donald has been trumped by a real estate record
By Jessica Gresko – Associated Press
PALM BEACH, Florida — Donald Trump’s property for sale has all the big-time extras one might expect. Pricey marble and 24-karat gold fixtures in its bathrooms, a gargantuan fountain by the driveway and 145 metres of oceanfront out back.
Perhaps the biggest thing about the home, however, is its price: $125 million (U.S.). And (sorry, Donald) that price has already been trumped. A home in Aspen, Colo., is now listed at $135 million. Another in Lake Tahoe, Nev., was recently listed at a flat $100 million.
The listings represent a monetary milestone in American real estate: The first time U.S. homes have broken into a whopping nine figures, according to real estate experts, and they’ve done so in quick succession. A May survey of the nation’s most expensive homes by Forbes.com put Trump’s home at the most expensive and the first to break the $100 million mark.
Now, the trio has market followers wondering: Will they sell? And what do you really get for $100 million?
“I’m surprised it took so long for people to realize value,” Trump said of the listings.
Usually the top 10 per cent of any marketplace is considered the luxury market, but these properties are a tier above.
“They’re super-luxury properties,” said Trump, the real estate mogul and reality TV star.
Shari Chase, of Chase International, which has the Lake Tahoe listing, said: “This is stratospheric for offering prices but I think we’re going in that direction….These three properties, they are really the Super Bowl of real estate.”
The listings are extreme. At these prices, bedrooms, bathrooms and square-footage are almost irrelevant. Like their price tags, all three are gigantic.
At the Aspen property, owned by Saudi Prince Bandar, the main residence, finished in 1990, has more than 56,000 square feet (about 1,000 square feet bigger than the White House) on a nearly 40-hectare site. It even has its own car wash and gas pumps.
Need more outdoors? The Lake Tahoe home, owned by Tommy Hilfiger Corp. co-founder Joel Horowitz, comes with 38,000 square feet of livable space on 85 hectares. Included are a private trout-stocked lake and two par-3 golf courses. Among indoor features is a grand staircase that replicates one built on the Titanic.
Smaller on acreage but bigger in square footage is Trump’s property, called Maison de L’Amitié (House of Friendship), which he bought for about $41 million in 2004.
He assigned renovations to Apprentice winner Kendra Todd. Its approximately 80,000 square feet encompass several buildings.
Sara Clemence, an editor for Forbes.com who wrote its listing report, says the recent 100-million-plus-dollar listings are significant.
“That said, just because you ask for it doesn’t mean you’re going to get it,” she said.
Taxes alone on the Trump property, if sold at its current asking price, would be more than $2 million a year, according to the Palm Beach County property appraiser website.
The Donald, surprised to hear his property had U.S. competition, asked, “Who’s at 135? My property is worth more than $125 million. It’s a bargain.”
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New rules won’t put lid on prices
The real problem in the GTA is not enough new houses
Terrence Belford – Globe and Mail
There may be a perfect price storm brewing in the Toronto real estate market. Especially affected will be both new and resale homes – all those detached and semi-detached houses and townhouses families look for. Federal Finance Minister Jim Flaherty suggested the possibility when he announced changes to residential mortgages in mid-February. But he took only small steps toward reducing demand.
Mr. Flaherty’s most significant move was to say that from mid-April on anyone seeking a mortgage at a rock-bottom variable rate had to prove they could afford payments on a five-year fixed-rate mortgage. Truth be told, for the past three or four months many lenders had already demanded that people looking for variable-rate mortgages qualify for the higher three-year fixed-rate ones, mortgage brokers say.
Brokers have also been advising clients that even if they get a variable-rate mortgage, they should make payments at the three-year fixed-rate level. That advice serves two goals: It pays down the mortgage faster and cushions borrowers against anticipated increases in interest rates.
Mr. Flaherty ignored the real problem, which in the GTA is the supply of houses.
There’s no point in marginally reducing demand if the supply is not there. Continued high demand coupled with extraordinarily low supply mean prices will shoot up faster than dandelions after a spring rain.
Let me explain. Normally we would go into a new year with anywhere between 20,000 and 22,000 new homes in the GTA waiting for buyers. This year, there are just 7,400, according to RealNet Canada Inc., which tracks the market. This means anyone looking for a new family home has an extraordinarily small supply to choose from. But if you need a home, with mortgage rates still at historic lows, it continues to seem a great time to buy.
So, you look at resales, which is exactly what a record number of buyers did in the first six weeks of this year. Jason Mercer, the Toronto Real Estate Board’s senior manager of market analysis, says the period between Jan. 1 and Feb. 15 set a new record – 8,464 resale home change hand, up a whopping 81 per cent from last year.
Listings were up 15 per cent as well; that number was 6,212. As people saw the prices their neighbours were getting, they decided to join the rush, sell and move up, down or sideways.
The result? Resale house prices in the GTA rose 18 per cent from the same period last year. The average resale price is now $417,915, which incidentally puts them solidly above the $400,000 ceiling for exemption from the Harmonized Sales Tax (HST), due to come into effect July 1.
So the result of the small supply of new houses is huge pressure on resales and therefore a likely continuation of big price jumps.
“I think for the next six months at least the resale market will be the strongest game in town,” says Cam Forbes, director of operations and a broker at Royal LePage Real Estate Services Inc. “Mid-year will be the telling point; I don’t know if demand will continue at this level. “But if it does then the situation will indeed be worrisome.”
Mr. Forbes and Mr. Mercer suggest that if interest rates rise as predicted – perhaps to the 5 per cent level – that will take some people out of the market, and yet the ones most affected are likely to be the young just starting careers whose chief interest is small, affordable downtown condos, not houses anyway.
The HST may also have an effect since, it will effectively drive up the price of all housing over that $400,000 mark.
But what the GTA really needs is a healthy supply of new low-rise homes and that rests largely in the hands of municipal politicians not builders.
The whole lengthy process of getting approval for new developments came almost full stop last spring in the wake of the global recession. Builders shelved plans for new developments until they could see signs that the GTA was starting to recover. By summer when demand came back strong they had lost half a year.
At the same time, local municipalities had started rethinking whether they indeed wanted new subdivisions, and for those already in the works, they boosted development charges, which have become a handy back-door way of raising municipal revenues without much public outcry.
As Stephen Dupuis, president of BILD, the home builders’ association, points out, between 2001 and 2009, municipal charges on new development rose by 134 per cent, which is about four times greater than house prices rose during the same period.
It is indeed a gloomy picture. But unless we start focusing on the issues of supply and affordability, the GTA could be headed for trouble.
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Feather Factory Lofts — 2154 Dundas Street West
Carved from the early 20th century Toronto Feather and Down Company factory on Dundas Steet West, the Feather Factory Lofts is one of the newest additions to the Toronto loft conversion scene. Rising only 5 storeys above the intersection of Dundas and Ritchie, this boutique loft houses only 44 hard lofts.
These lofts retain the original charm and workmanship of the wooden posts and beams. Large expanses of mullioned windows highlight the industrial nature of the lofts. Exposed brick seals the hard loft appeal. Ceilings range up to 14 1/2 feet in this converted factory. Topping it all off, stainless steel counter tops in the kitchen highlight the factory feel of the Feather Factory Lofts.
There have been a few starts and stops with the Feather Factory Lofts. I am not too sure, but I think the current “Grand Opening” is the second or third. Not sure what happened before, as they were not cooperating with outside agents, and thus would not allow me to help clients at the sales centre. But Plazacorp is behind it now – and they know lofts (Bloorline Lofts and the Chocolate Company Lofts). With the lofts now on MLS, I can now help anyone interested in the Feather Factory Lofts!
They say every loft is complete and you can move in right away. Let’s hope this time everything works out. Oh yes, they are also including bicycle storage and a Zipcar membership with each loft.
The building originally housed the B. F. Harvey Company Factory is a great example of a medium-scaled industrial warehouse, typical of the type built in the early 20th century in Toronto’s industrial neighbourhoods. It features the solid timber frame construction, robust brick cladding, and symmetrical placement of industrial-scale window openings associated with industrial design.
With the addition of two floors to the original three-storey structure, the building was highlighted with elements of the popular Edwardian Classical style, particularly the modest parapet and stone detailing at the division between the new and old sections, as well as a substantial cornice along the roofline. The added height and subtle Classical detailing gives the B. F. Harvey Company Factory a distinction and visibility on Dundas Street West where it stands out from the surrounding commercial and residential building stock.
The design of the B. F. Harvey Factory involved the work of two Toronto architects. When the original three-storey factory was commissioned in 1910 and built in 1911, manufacturer Benjamin Harvey engaged James Walker, who had received awards for interior and graphic designs. After the Toronto Feather and Down Factory began a long-term occupancy of the site, two floors and a cornice were added according to the plans (1922) of William F. Sparling.
In practice since 1905, Sparling was associated with Samuel Curry during his early career, and gained expertise in designing Classically inspired buildings, including the Toronto Trust and Guarantee Building in the Financial District. Beginning in the late 1920s, he was a partner in the firm of Sparling Martin and Forbes. However, it was during his solo career between 1917 and 1928 that Sparling received his best-known commission for the Masonic Temple (1918) at Yonge Street and Davenport Road. The varied projects that followed included the unexecuted plans for the conversion of Casa Loma into residential apartments.
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