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Tag Archives: international attention

Real estate in Toronto is the real deal

Stephen Dupuis – Toronto Sun

When the world’s most influ­en­tial lead­ers gath­ered in Toronto for last weekend’s G20 sum­mit, I couldn’t help but won­der how they view our city’s eco­nomic struc­ture, par­tic­u­larly the hous­ing market’s impact on the national econ­omy, assum­ing of course that they can see any­thing over the fences and barricades.

While I’m not an expert on the real estate indus­try in China or Saudi Ara­bia, I can bet that their hous­ing mar­kets dif­fer con­sid­er­ably from that of Toronto.

Solid invest­ment

So much, in fact, that it’s no won­der that a lot of the new devel­op­ments in our city are viewed as solid invest­ments in coun­tries in Europe, Asia and the Mid­dle East.

While some inter­na­tional buy­ers can invest in mul­ti­ple prop­er­ties in their home coun­tries, many opt for the much more afford­able option of invest­ing in new homes in Toronto.

For­eign investors see the value of hav­ing a healthy, sta­ble Cana­dian hous­ing market.

In fact, I wouldn’t be the least bit sur­prised if some of the attend­ing finance min­is­ters might be tempted to snap up a pent­house or suite in the down­town core.

Pric­ing is afford­able, while construction-related job cre­ation is aver­ag­ing around 170,000 per year over the last five years in the GTA alone.

Tax bonanza

In fact, by the end of this year, the fed­eral and provin­cial gov­ern­ments will col­lect $4.5 bil­lion in tax rev­enue thanks to the hous­ing indus­try, which is no small pota­toes no mat­ter what coun­try you’re from.

I expect that num­ber to grow with the newly imple­mented Har­mo­nized Sales Tax (best known as the HST) tak­ing effect next Thursday.

Despite the finan­cial impact this tax will have on new home buy­ers, the demand was still strong as buy­ers snapped-up 3,004 new homes and con­do­mini­ums in the GTA in May.

While I don’t know how many of these pur­chases were made by for­eign investors, I can tell you that some of the newly launched high-rise devel­op­ments in the city have surely gar­nered some inter­na­tional atten­tion.

Among world’s best

This is evi­dent by the tremen­dous out­come of this year’s National Sales and Mar­ket­ing Awards in Las Vegas, where Toronto home builders picked up 25% of the awards, over­tak­ing a pre­dom­i­nantly Amer­i­can ros­ter among other inter­na­tional nom­i­nees. This just goes to show you that our indus­try can take on the best in the world and still come out on top.

Where other coun­tries have strug­gled, Cana­di­ans have flour­ished and despite what some sources will tell you, expert analy­sis has shown that there is no bub­ble on the horizon.

A strong recov­ery from the global finan­cial cri­sis a few years ago was a sturdy indi­ca­tor that our hous­ing indus­try is well reg­u­lated to a point that it can sur­vive an eco­nomic decline and bounce back rel­a­tively quickly, lead­ing the way to a sta­ble econ­omy.

Healthy relationships

Orga­ni­za­tions such as the Canada Mort­gage and Hous­ing Cor­po­ra­tion, Tar­ion War­ranty Cor­po­ra­tion and BILD have a healthy rela­tion­ship with indus­try lead­ers and var­i­ous lev­els of gov­ern­ment to ensure a good work ethic. The end result is a hous­ing mar­ket that pro­vides a pos­i­tive impact to not only the econ­omy as a whole, but to all par­ties involved. This weekend’s guests bet­ter take note!

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Luxury homes sales through the roof as buyers seek stable investment

Country’s richest residents – as well as millionaires from China and United Kingdom – turning to property to provide safe haven for their money

Steve Ladurantaye – Globe and Mail

As the real-estate market in Canada continues its record-setting recovery, the market for high-end homes is surging.

The country’s richest residents – as well as millionaires from countries such as China and the United Kingdom – are turning to property to provide a safe haven for their money because the market is seen as a stable place to park cash as the global economy recovers from a deep recession.

Attributing the upswing in sales to “improved economic performance, increased personal wealth, immigration and foreign investment,” ReMax Canada said in a report Monday that sales for so-called luxury homes broke records in nine of the 13 regions examined in the first quarter of the year.

“It’s an astounding recovery compared to last year when people just slammed on the brakes,” said Michael Polzler, executive vice-president and regional director of ReMax for Ontario and Atlantic Canada.

The brokerage’s definition of a luxury home varies by market, from $400,000 in St. John’s to $2-million in Greater Vancouver. The amount is usually determined by looking at the top 1-to-5 per cent of sales in any given market.

While there are no statistics available to confirm the presence of high-end buyers from out of the country, anecdotal evidence from real estate brokerages across the country is abundant. Century 21 recently launched a Chinese version of its website to help Asian buyers find Canadian residential properties and Realtor.ca – the hub for listings on the Canadian Real Estate Association’s Multiple Listing Service – now gets almost 1 per cent of its traffic from China.

“There is no doubt a great deal of the demand is coming from mainland China,” said Ross McCredie, president of Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, who has also been fielding calls from prospective buyers in the European Union and Mexico. “The Chinese are the people shopping at above $5-million.”

Canada’s market has rebounded strongly from the recession, with average sale prices up almost 20 per cent. But on a global scale, prices here are still relatively low – especially for high-end properties, which realtors said are selling for about the same price as they were in 2007.

And while Canada’s rapid recovery – it posted a 5.2 per cent year-over-year gain in 2009 – stoked fears of a housing bubble even as unemployment climbed higher, other markets have been far frothier.

Over the same time period, a survey by Knight Frank LLP found prices in Hong Kong gained 27.6 per cent, followed by China at 25.1 per cent, Israel at 21.3 per cent, and Australia at 13.6 per cent.

Canada was 12th on the list, just behind South Africa and a smidge ahead of Austria.

That has drawn international attention to homes such as the Montreal mansion being sold by real estate agent Cyrille Girard. The house has seven bedrooms, five bathrooms and a heated indoor pool. It also features something its owner didn’t have last year – interest from buyers willing to pay the $27-million asking price.

Mr. Girard – an agent with Sotheby’s International Realty Quebec – only listed the 41,000-square-foot house Monday. Two interested buyers have already booked appointments to tour the lakefront property, and he considers them real leads to buy what is currently Canada’s priciest listing.

“One is flying in from out of the country, though I don’t want to say where because these things can be delicate,” he said. “There is a great deal of interest because prices in Canada are seen as reasonable compared to other places in the world.”

But while buyers have returned from their self-imposed exile, the boom in luxury housing has taken on a different tone than the broader market because buyers are willing to take time to explore their options, since there are plenty of listings and relatively few would-be owners.

Phil Soper, chief executive officer of Brookfield Real Estate Services, said there’s also no rush to buy because the homes are no longer looked at for their investment value.

“Those buying these homes are typically financially sophisticated and there aren’t too many who will believe we’re in for several years of highly appreciating values,” he said. “They see today’s prices as reasonable, and don’t really think prices will fall very much.”

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  • Toronto’s real estate talents hot global commodities

    Ryan Starr – Toronto Star

    Dur­ing a recent round table dis­cus­sion among Toronto’s top real estate mar­ket­ing exec­u­tives, Joe Latobesi of  Mon­tana Steele Adver­tis­ing offered up his view on this city’s cre­ative talent.

    There’s nobody bet­ter,” he declared. “I’ve gone on hous­ing tours in other places, only to come back and see that we do things bet­ter here than any­where I’ve been.”

    Sure, Latobesi was pat­ting him­self on the back.

    But his assess­ment was borne out weeks later in Las Vegas when Mon­tana Steele won a whop­ping nine gold sales and mar­ket­ing awards from the National Asso­ci­a­tion of Home Builders, the most ever by a sin­gle agency.

    This record tro­phy haul included the NAHB’s top hon­our, Com­mu­nity of the Year, which Latobesi’s firm gar­nered for its work on Bazis International’s ill-fated 1 Bloor condo project.

    The agency’s suc­cess did not go unno­ticed by Amer­i­can devel­op­ers in atten­dance at the Jan. 20 event, sev­eral of whom approached Latobesi to talk about enlist­ing his team’s ser­vices. (Great Gulf homes picked up the project, renam­ing it Num­ber One Bloor.)

    We’ve had three or four inquiries,” he says. “They said, ‘we saw your work, took notice of your awards and we’d like you to look at this project.’ They think we could bring a dif­fer­ent point of views.”

    Mon­tana Steele isn’t the only local firm attract­ing inter­na­tional atten­tion these days.

    Toronto’s real estate tal­ents — whether they work in archi­tec­ture and design or adver­tis­ing and mar­ket­ing — have become hot global com­modi­ties, lend­ing exper­tise to projects around the world, from the U.S. to the Mid­dle East, and from Cen­tral Amer­ica to South Asia.

    Mean­while, Toronto’s bro­kers and devel­op­ers are also fan­ning out across the globe, sell­ing projects to for­eign investors who are attracted to a real estate mar­ket that has come to be seen as one of the world’s safest in the wake of the eco­nomic meltdown.

    I used to say Toronto was the best-kept secret in the world,” says Dan Flomen, a bro­ker with TFN Realty Inc., who helps local builders set up sales offices abroad. “The secret’s now out.”

    MAJOR MARKETERS

    Deb­bie Cosic’s knack for sell­ing and mar­ket­ing con­dos has resulted in a fair bit of inter­na­tional work for her Mississauga-based bro­ker­age, In2ition Realty with her part­ner Mira Tmljenovic.

    In2ition is cur­rently man­ag­ing sales for projects in Florida and Hon­duras. The com­pany has also set up satel­lite offices in Pak­istan to mar­ket Hol­i­day Tow­ers, a four-storey devel­op­ment in Etobicoke.

    The world is watch­ing Toronto,” Cosic says. “We’re the No. 1 condo mar­keters. (Our team has) been to Europe, the U.S., Dubai and India — and Toronto is light years ahead in real estate sales and marketing.”

    Flomen agrees. “Toronto is forward-looking,” he says. “There’s the expres­sion, If it isn’t bro­ken, don’t fix it. But I’ve found our top design and mar­ket­ing peo­ple say, ‘Okay, that worked, now how can we improve on it?’ “

    Toronto has had an amaz­ing real estate run over the past 15 years, and with that activ­ity come evo­lu­tion and sophis­ti­ca­tion,” says Elaine Cec­coni, co-owner of inte­rior design firm Cec­coni Simone, which has worked on projects in Dubai, Qatar, Abu Dhabi, China, Anguilla and Cuba.

    There’s a high degree of good design and good projects here, and the way Toronto mar­kets those projects is unique. The rest of the world has come here, seen how it’s done and fig­ure they can cir­cum­vent the learn­ing curve by engag­ing our local peo­ple to do it for them.”

    Gerry Ryan is a case in point. His mar­ket­ing acu­men has caught the eye of many an inter­na­tional client. In recent years his firm, Ryan Design, has had projects in Dubai, Kaza­khstan, Turks & Caicos, Rus­sia, Ukraine and Costa Rica.

    These inter­na­tional con­nec­tions came largely as a result of Toronto-based builders, archi­tects or bro­kers who rec­om­mended him, Ryan says.

    Nobody from Kaza­khstan or Dubai is going to just call us up and give us a job. There’s always a local connection.”

    Toronto archi­tects are also becom­ing well-known global quantities.

    Core Archi­tects, for exam­ple, has worked in the U.S., Caribbean, Turks & Caicos and St. Kitts. In the Mid­dle East, the firm was con­tracted by Emaar Prop­er­ties to do mas­ter plan­ning and design for Dubai Marina, lead­ing to other projects in Abu Dhabi, Oman and India.

    The nature of archi­tec­ture is such that it’s a lot more global than other prac­tices,” says Babak Eslahjou, one of the firm’s prin­ci­pals. “And the Inter­net has enabled us to work in dif­fer­ent parts of the world and com­mu­ni­cate far eas­ier than before.”

    INTERNATIONAL FOCUS

    Toronto’s bro­kers and devel­op­ers are also deploy­ing on global mis­sions in an effort to attract inter­na­tional buy­ers for local projects.

    Can­derel Stoner­idge, the devel­oper of Aura at Col­lege Park — a 75-storey condo that’s being billed as the tallest in Canada — has mar­keted the tower in Pak­istan, Dubai, Bahrain, India, Sin­ga­pore, and China.

    Either we’ve been an exhibitor at real estate exhi­bi­tions, or we’ve teamed up with local bro­ker­ages and basi­cally done a road show for their clien­tele,” says Riz Dhanji, Canderel’s vice-president of sales and marketing.

    The firm decided to go global in order to tar­get mar­kets that had pre­vi­ously shown inter­est in Aura, he says.

    A num­ber of sales for Aura were made to inter­na­tional buy­ers from Dubai, Pak­istan, India and China. So we fig­ured, why not go directly to these mar­kets to talk about the project.

    Going abroad and phys­i­cally meet­ing with peo­ple has worked pretty suc­cess­fully for us.”

    What’s Toronto’s appeal to inter­na­tional investors?

    They like that it’s a safe place to put their money,” Dhanji says, not­ing that lux­ury prop­er­ties here are con­sid­er­ably cheaper than in other major centres.

    What’s more, an iconic devel­op­ment like Aura has a par­tic­u­lar cachet for for­eign buyers.

    Because of its loca­tion, stature and height, Aura gets a lot of atten­tion from the inter­na­tional com­mu­nity,” he says. “If I had a 10-storey build­ing on the east side of Toronto and took that over to Dubai, it wouldn’t get the same interest.”

    Work­ing world­wide can bring cer­tain advan­tages for Toronto firms.

    As an archi­tect, it’s always good to travel and see dif­fer­ent ways of doing things,” says Eslahjou. “It opens up your per­spec­tive and that feeds your work back in Toronto.”

    And in a city that fan­cies itself world class, inter­na­tional work cre­den­tials can help set a local com­pany apart.

    It’s a good sell­ing point,” Cic­cone says, “espe­cially with new clients who haven’t worked with us before. It gives us an edge; there’s a cred­i­bil­ity fac­tor with work­ing internationally.”

    That said, it can present chal­lenges — dis­tance, for example.

    Not being on the ground every day means you have to rely on your (inter­na­tional) sales team to be your eyes and ears,” says Cosic. “Plus, every coun­try has its own way of doing busi­ness. So we have to quickly adapt and that can be tough.”

    Ulti­mately, though, such local insight is essen­tial to inter­na­tional success.

    You have to under­stand where you’re mar­ket­ing,” Ryan says. “The biggest mis­take we can make as adver­tis­ers is to think we just did some­thing in Toronto and now we can do it exactly the same in a place like Costa Rica.

    Well, each place is dif­fer­ent, and you can’t mar­ket inter­na­tion­ally unless you under­stand that market.”

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