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Home sales to be flat in 2013, prices to rise marginally: forecast

Tara Perkins – The Globe and Mail

Despite the large drop in home sales that much of Canada experienced in recent months, 454,000 homes will change hands this year, just 1% less than in 2011, real estate agency Re/Max forecasts.

Comment: Wow, must have been a HUGE drop… In fact sales only dropped 0.1% from September to October. Why must things be SO badly skewed? It gives people the wrong idea about what is actually going on.

It expects the value of houses nationally this year to be flat compared to last year.

For 2013 it is also forecasting that 454,000 homes will be sold, and that prices will rise 1%.

Comment: Amazing, the people who deal with real estate every single day think that prices will rise next year. But some right wing economic outfit that no one has ever heard of says prices will fall 25%. Which one do you think is right? Which one has the experience and knowledge to make a correct prediction? Do you hire an accountant to fix your car?

The real estate agency expects that this year’s home sales will be at least as high as last year’s in 65% of the Canadian markets it examined, led by Western cities such as Calgary and Regina.

In contrast, Vancouver will show an annual pullback in sales. And “moderation was more widespread in the east, with half of Ontario and Atlantic Canada markets reporting 2012 sales off the 2011 pace,” Re/Max said.

In terms of prices, it said that 81% of markets will see average price increases this year, with Regina posting the strongest growth at 8%. Hamilton and Burlington, Ont., Greater Toronto, Fredericton and Saskatoon will follow closely behind.

Vancouver is forecast to see house prices fall 6% this year. While Vancouver is currently experiencing a significant pullback in sales, Re/Max forecasts that the city will rebound to show the strongest sales gain in 2013, while markets in Quebec will show the largest decrease.

The strongest price gains in 2013 are forecast for St. John’s, Regina, Kingston and Halifax.

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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’s overheated housing market unsustainable

    Jay Bryan, Post­media News

    While Canada’s high-flying hous­ing mar­ket con­tin­ues to sta­bi­lize, it’s increas­ingly evi­dent that one city – Toronto – is a glar­ing exception.

    Com­ment: What about Cal­gary? Or Mon­treal? Or the bid­ding wars in Hal­i­fax and Winnipeg?

    In sharp con­trast to price mod­er­a­tion in most cities and a sig­nif­i­cant drop in Van­cou­ver, where buy­ers are being priced out of the country’s costli­est mar­ket, Toronto buy­ers are on a spend­ing spree – one that looks as if it won’t end well.

    New fig­ures from the Cana­dian Real Estate Asso­ci­a­tion show prices up by 10.5% in Toronto over the past 12 months, the only major city with a double-digit gain. In con­trast, Mon­treal gained a mod­est 3.7% and Van­cou­ver is down by 3.1%.

    Com­ment: That was in March, but April is shap­ing up to be more of a 7% increase. Which means the price increase is slow­ing, which is good news. I think we can safely assume that March was an abber­a­tion. With Feb­ru­ary in the 8% range and now April around 7%, one month was just stronger than oth­ers… a sta­tis­ti­cal anomaly.

    On aver­age, national home prices in March – influ­enced by the big Van­cou­ver mar­ket – edged down half a per­cent­age point from an excep­tion­ally high level this time last year.

    This is in line with the expected trend for a rel­a­tively flat mar­ket this year, said Sonya Gulati at the TD Bank. TD pre­dicts that national prices will increase 2.1% for all of 2011 as sales flatten.

    Com­ment: Right, sales are soft­en­ing, slow­ing down. That is to be expected, not some bizarre col­lapse of the market.

    The bank cal­cu­lates the aver­age national price is prob­a­bly 10 to 15% above a sus­tain­able level, but doesn’t fore­see any big drop, Gulati said.

    Com­ment: What is the “sus­tain­able level”? Why is that level sus­tain­able? If prices remain flat for 5 years, does that level then become more sus­tain­able? I love terms like that, they mean absolutely nothing!

    Instead, it expects prices to drift down grad­u­ally once inter­est rates begin ris­ing, prob­a­bly in mid-2013. Its fore­cast is for a decline of 3.6% in 2013 and 4.3% in 2014.

    Com­ment: I am not sure we will see a decline, that means we need to turn around 6.4% in the next 24 months… I think that is unlikely. Unless Van­cou­ver totally craters. I think we will see some­thing more in the 0–1% range, almost flat. But remem­ber, that is a national aver­age and has lit­tle bear­ing on any one par­tic­u­lar local mar­ket. Toronto will con­tinue to rise, though we will likely slow, through 8% or so this year, 6–7% next year and set­tle in the 5–6% range we have seen long-term over the past 15+ years.

    But this benign national pic­ture con­ceals grow­ing stresses in the country’s biggest city.

    Toronto, which accounts for about one-fifth of the whole hous­ing mar­ket in Canada, has defied pre­dic­tions, with sales remain­ing strong in spite of surg­ing prices.

    Com­ment: Defied pre­dic­tions of the “experts” who do not work in the actual real estate indus­try. Most of us who do this for liv­ing were not all that sur­prised. I did not think March would hit 10.5% over last year, but 8% would not have sur­prised me in the least.

    It’s not clear exactly why hous­ing is “so out of con­trol” in Toronto, says John Andrew, a real estate pro­fes­sor at Queen’s University.

    Com­ment: Yes it is. Sup­ply and demand. There are 10 buy­ers for ever seller, espe­cially in houses. And with low low low inter­est rates, peo­ple can afford to pay more. Cheap money and low sup­ply, basic economics.

    But one fac­tor, he notes, is the severe squeeze on the sup­ply of single-family homes within easy com­mut­ing dis­tance of down­town, which is help­ing to super­charge their prices. And those who can’t pay up have flooded into the less-costly con­do­minium mar­ket, caus­ing a boom that Andrew and other ana­lysts now find worrisome.

    Com­ment: Could not have said it bet­ter myself. Except that I am not worried.

    Craig Alexan­der, chief econ­o­mist at the TD Bank, is so fas­ci­nated by the frenzy of con­do­minium con­struc­tion that he counts the num­ber of projects as he dri­ves through Toronto.

    I would feel a lot bet­ter if I were count­ing half as many cranes,” he says.

    Com­ment: But they are being bought by first time buy­ers and investors plan­ning to rent them out. Never mind the empty nesters. There are 100–110,000 peo­ple mov­ing to Toronto every year, who need some­where to live. We have no rental mar­ket any more, no one is build­ing apart­ment build­ings. It is all con­dos. If it was not sus­tain­able, it would not be hap­pen­ing. And one day it will slow down. But right now, a crane does not go up until 70–80% of units are sold, with 20–25% down. That is a big invest­ment from a lot of peo­ple, a big vote of con­fi­dence in the project. And each one of those buy­ers has to show a mort­gage approval to make their pur­chase firm.

    That’s under­stand­able. Andrew cal­cu­lates that Toronto now has 143 high­rise condo projects under con­struc­tion, more than in any other North Amer­i­can city, with more on the draw­ing boards.

    Is there enough demand for all those con­dos? It’s hard to imag­ine,” he says.

    Com­ment: But there is, the proof is in the cranes. If there are an aver­age of 300 units per build­ing and 70% need to sell to get fund­ing and thus start con­struc­tion, that means over 30,000 con­dos have been bought. With 20–25% down on the aver­age sale price of $360,000, that is an invest­ment of around $2.4–2.5 bil­lion from the buy­ers alone. Never mind the very stingy banks that fund the rest of the con­struc­tion costs. That is a huge foun­da­tion sup­port­ing the entire Toronto condo indus­try. And that is why it is solid and safe mov­ing forward.

    Worse, many pur­chasers appear to be for­eign investors look­ing for rental prop­er­ties as a haven from uncer­tainty in finan­cial markets.

    Com­ment: Why is that worse?

    When it’s an invest­ment prop­erty, peo­ple are pretty quick to dump it when things get ugly,” Andrew points out.

    Com­ment: But they have been buy­ing and rent­ing units for 10 years now – when is it going to get ugly? I have done the math in enough posts, I am not doing it again. But a $300,000 condo with 35% (required for non-citizen new condo buy­ers) down means costs that can be cov­ered by $1,600 in rent, the going rate. So they put down $100,000 and 10 years later that same unit is worth $400,000 and ten­ants have paid down the mort­gage to $200,000. So they made $200,000 in 10 years… not bad at all. And if they have 5 of them, they just made $1 mil­lion. They have no rea­son to dump them, they want to hold them and have the ten­ants pay them off. When the mort­gage is 0 in 15–20 years, their $100,000 invest­ment is now a $500,000 condo. Now it is just pos­i­tive cash flow every month. Again, if they have 5 of them, they are pulling in $8–10,000 a month. The investor is mak­ing $100,000 a year – and assets worth $2–2.5 mil­lion. Why would they sell?

    That could presage a hard land­ing once the pool of ten­ants thins out and ris­ing mort­gage inter­est rates squeeze invest­ment returns.

    Com­ment: With 100–110,000 peo­ple mov­ing to Toronto every year, never mind those mov­ing out of the fam­ily home, there is no short­age of renters – or first time buyers.

    Dou­glas Porter, deputy chief econ­o­mist at BMO Cap­i­tal Mar­kets, is sim­i­larly wor­ried. While the national hous­ing mar­ket looks increas­ingly sta­ble, “I do think Toronto could have a fairly seri­ous cor­rec­tion in the next cou­ple of years,” he says.

    Com­ment: Could. Or could not.

    In the rest of Canada, how­ever, con­di­tions look far health­ier. With sales and price gains flat­ten­ing out, it’s likely that the growth rate of Cana­dian mort­gage debt will soon dip sig­nif­i­cantly, Porter believes.

    Com­ment: Except that higher mort­gage rates will neu­tral­ize any price drops.

    Since mort­gages make up the biggest chunk of the wor­ri­somely heavy debt load car­ried by Cana­di­ans, this could ease the pres­sure for fed­eral offi­cials to hike inter­est rates early or squeeze the hous­ing mar­kets with tougher bor­row­ing rules.

    Com­ment: But hik­ing the prime rate will not affect the fixed rates.

    And behind the scenes, there’s an encour­ag­ing demo­graphic trend that’s likely to keep hous­ing demand from falling off a cliff, believes Ste­fane Mar­ion, chief econ­o­mist at the National Bank. He points out that the group aged 20 to 44, the prime source of new hous­ing demand, is grow­ing faster in Canada than any other large indus­tri­al­ized nation.

    Com­ment: Which might have some­thing to do with all the con­dos being built… they do tend to be pop­u­lar with the younger folks and first time buyers.

    Over the next five years, this cohort will grow by 3.7% in Canada, 42% faster than in the U.S., with immi­gra­tion and the matur­ing of baby boomers’ chil­dren pro­vid­ing a new bump in hous­ing demand. Even Que­bec, the slowest-growing of Canada’s big provinces, will show a gain of 2.3%.

    By con­trast, most other big indus­tri­al­ized nations are suf­fer­ing losses in this age cohort as their pop­u­la­tions stag­nate. The hardest-hit, Italy, Japan, Ger­many and Spain, will see this group shrink by seven% or more.

    Canada’s demo­graphic boost won’t immu­nize us against a severe shock, such as a new reces­sion, but short of that, it could keep the hous­ing mar­ket health­ier than some expect.

    Com­ment: Come on, we never even had a reces­sion. We did not have 2 con­sec­u­tive quar­ters with neg­a­tive growth. We had one. And our econ­omy is boom­ing, quite the oppo­site of reces­sion. Even the US, which has sucked for years, is grow­ing. There is no reces­sion com­ing – and it is wrong and mis­lead­ing to sug­gest the possibility.

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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 Real Estate Forecast 2010

    Toronto Real Estate Market at a Glance

    * MLS® sales in the GTA will hit a record high 101,000 this year. Average prices for 2010 will increase to $444,000. Both sales and price growth will begin to show significant moderation in the second half of this year and early next year.

    * New home sales will jump to 42,000 in 2010 thanks to a 50% increase in high rise sales. Housing starts will rise by 34% this year to reach 36,400 units on strong single-detached construction.

    * The unemployment rate in Toronto will fall slightly to an average of 9% this year. Employment gains will push the unemployment rate down further next year, providing support for homeownership demand.

    Toronto Resale Market – Nearing a Turning Point

    The resale market in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) will put an exclamation point on 2010 with a record level of activity this year. Sales will reach six digits for the first time and price growth will be well above the historical average. This momentum, however, is expected to wane in the second half of the year. In fact, the market will look quite different by 2011 as sales levels converge back to their longer-term average and prices show little movement. The era of rockbottom mortgage rates is coming to an end and the red hot GTA housing market will begin to lose its steam.

    A full year of record-low borrowing costs has made first-time buyers out of tens of thousands of renters and parents’ basement dwellers in the GTA. However, the primary source of stimulus fuelling this increase in homeownership is already beginning to fade. Five-year mortgage rates are on the move and will be a full percentage point higher by the end of the year. Combining higher rates with the new reality of average prices well above $400,000 will make the transition to homeownership more expensive. The erosion of affordability will cause delay for many first time buyers, who have proactively accelerated their purchasing decisions and propped up sales temporarily.

    Home sales in the GTA, however, are not expected to decline dramatically and will converge to the 10-year average in 2011. More jobs, stronger income growth and higher net migration will provide support for the market. Furthermore, demand from current homeowners is expected to pick up some of the slack left by fi rst-time buyers. Owners feel the timing is right to make a move as prices for their current home climb to new highs and fi nancing costs for their next purchase still remain low. Also, price appreciation for detached homes in some desirable areas in the GTA hasn’t been as strong as the rest of the market. A higher presence of move-up buyers will further increase the appeal of established neighbourhoods, which should see above-average price growth in the coming years due to their fixed level of supply and relatively low level of turnover. With move-up buyers looking to enter the high end and down-sizing baby boomers looking for less maintenance and to liquidate assets for retirement, a high level of new listings will be a theme over the next couple years.

    Investors are also expected to be active in listings their condominiums — approximately 17,000 high rise units will be completed this year with an additional 16,000 coming on stream in 2011. Those who purchased at pre-construction sales centres a couple years back will realize their completed units have gone up in value by about 20 percent. Research undertaken by CMHC reveals that approximately 20% of the condominium units registered in 2009 were listed for sale. It is likely that this share will grow as investors look to capitalize on the recent run-up in prices. Expect up to 10,000 newly completed condominiums to be put on the market over the next couple years. The added supply will lead to softer price growth for high rise units relative to low rise homes.

    Existing owners on the move and listings from some condo investors will provide buyers with more selection at a time when overall demand is moderating. With fewer buyers competing for more homes, bidding wars will become less common and prices will face little upward pressure. There is a risk that prices could come down some in late 2010/early 2011. However, any declines would be minimal and short-lived. In fact it is quite difficult to call a decline in house prices that lasts longer than six months in Toronto as prices have recorded annual increases in each of the past 14 years. That streak is expected to increase to 16 years in 2011 with a balanced market producing price growth of less than two percent. Prices can be expected to remain fairly fl at over the next few years to allow income levels to catch up.

    Toronto New Home Market – The Future is ‘Up’

    A calmer buying environment in the resale market will lead fewer purchasers into new home sales centres. Total new home sales will trend lower in the second half of the year, particularly for singles as the HST sets in, but will nonetheless register a banner year for 2010. High rise units will take back the majority share of new home purchases this year with a record-breaking 23,500 sales. The 18,500 low rise sales will provide a boost for housing starts in 2010, but single-detached homes will soon become a drag for overall housing starts in the GTA. The construction industry will rely more on high rise development next year thanks to recent condo sales centre activity.

    Although sales have heated up, high rise starts have yet to materialize. The diffi cult sales and construction financing environment lasting through most of last year will weigh on the number of projects started this year — total high rise starts will remain at the decade average of 14,000 units. All signs point to a pick up in starts in the second half of 2010 and into 2011. Lenders are making credit more available and projects that opened sales offi ces back in late 2007 and early 2008 have hit their preconstruction sales targets. Groundbreaking ceremonies are beginning at sites across the city and a ready-for-construction backlog of at least 10,000 units should be cleared by year end. The upward trend will continue in 2011 thanks to sales levels hitting new highs in late 2009 and the fi rst half of 2010 (typical sale-to-start time lag for high rise projects is approximately 18 months). Also, as the large volume of units currently under construction finish up over the next couple years, more labour, fi nancing and construction cranes will be available to start new projects. High rise starts will rise by close to 30% next year with the potential for further gains in the years ahead. Healthy unsold inventory levels will support more project launches and demand will remain stable as affordability in the GTA declines and land constraints continue to favour high density development. Expect high rise cranes to appear in 905 areas such as North Oakville, downtown Mississauga, Vaughan Metropolitan Centre and Markham Centre.

    Unlike the high rise market, better times for low rise construction appear to be in the past. The upward trend for singles beginning in the second half of 2009 will be shortlived and the longer-term decline that started back in 2003 will resume. A 60% increase in detached starts in 2010 will be matched by an equivalent reduction in 2011. The “pull-forward” effect from buyers and builders looking to close on homes before the HST is introduced will result in some let down in the latter part of the year. Furthermore, interest rate increases will no doubt impact affordability and demand for the most expensive houses, and new singles in the GTA defi nitely fit the bill — prices will average $600,000 this year. But perhaps the bigger story weighing on the outlook for single detached construction relates to the scarcity of available land. Over the past seven years the number of available units at construction sites has been cut in half, resulting in the same trend for sales and starts.

    Greenbelt boundaries and Provincial housing density targets are making low rise development less feasible in the GTA. As well, single detached sites are typically located outside of the built-up boundary, which can require extensive infrastructure development. Single detached project sites will continue to come online, however at this time, less than 5,000 units are ready to build according to RealNet Canada Inc. Since a developer cannot sell what they do not have, single detached starts will remain limited and the supply squeeze will continue to push prices up. Row homes, which are conducive to infill development and more affordable than singles, will take on their greatest share of low rise housing starts next year with 30%.

    Mortgage Rate Outlook

    The Bank of Canada cut the Target for the Overnight Rate in the earl months of 2009. The rate was 1.50% at the start of 2009 and has since fallen to 0.25%. Looking ahead, we expect that short-term interest rates will begin to rise in the second half of 2010.

    With the overnight rate expected to increase in the coming months, mortgage rates have begun to rise. According to CMHC’s base case scenario, posted mortgage rates will gradually increase throughout the course of 2010, but will do so at a slow pace. For 2010, the one-year posted mortgage rate is assumed to be in the 3.6-4.8% range, while three and five-year posted mortgage rates are forecast to be in the 4.2-6.7% range. For 2011, the one year posted mortgage rate is assumed be in the 5.0-6.0% range, while three and fi ve-year posted mortgage rates are forecast to be in the 5.6-7.2% range.

    Rates could, however, increase at a faster pace if the economy recovers more quickly than presently anticipated. Conversely, rate increases could be more muted if the economic recovery is more modest in nature.

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

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