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Tag Archives: mortgage rate

Toronto real estate to flatline in 2013

Susan Pigg – Toronto Star

Toronto house prices are expected to flat­line rather than fall in 2013 — gains should aver­age just 1% — with the “cycli­cal cor­rec­tion” that has taken hold since spring likely to be more short-lived than severe, accord­ing to a new report from Royal LePage.

Com­ment: Actu­ally they pre­dict a 1% price increase NATIONALLY, not in Toronto. Same as Remax, 1% aver­age NATIONAL price gains. I think Toronto might see some­thing that low, but more likely in the 3–5% range. Depends what hap­pens with con­dos and what the mar­ket as a whole does in the spring.

Very mod­est home price appre­ci­a­tion will be the norm for the next two years,” the realty com­pany says in a national hous­ing mar­ket sur­vey released Tues­day, not­ing that fur­ther declines in Van­cou­ver house prices, and the soft­en­ing in Toronto’s condo mar­ket in par­tic­u­lar, will have a “sig­nif­i­cant damp­en­ing effect” on Cana­dian aver­age house prices in 2013.

Com­ment: Mod­est appre­ci­a­tion, but appre­ci­a­tion to be sure. Cer­tainly not the stu­pid 25% drop that some have pre­dicted. The same drop that has yet to materialize…

How­ever, fears of a “sharp or drawn out col­lapse are unwar­ranted,” it notes, adding that prices have sim­ply out­paced wages for the last three years “and the mar­ket requires time to adjust.”

Com­ment: But prices and wages do not cor­re­late, they never have. Wages and monthly costs are what mat­ter. In 2010 the aver­age price was $431,276 with mort­gage rates around 4% – for a monthly cost of $1,833. In 2012 the aver­age price was $497,298 with a mort­gage rate of around 3% for a pay­ment of $1,901 – $68 more per month, about 1.2% per year. Wages increased around 2% annu­ally dur­ing the same time. So no, there is no real dis­par­ity between wages and monthly car­ry­ing costs.

The sil­ver lin­ing in every real estate mar­ket cor­rec­tion is that there is a bal­ance shift,” says Royal LeP­age pres­i­dent Phil Soper in a state­ment. ” … Cana­dian home buy­ers will see momen­tum shift in their favour this spring.

They should be met with more choice — and sta­ble prices.”

Com­ment: But once buy­ers sense it is their mar­ket, they will come out droves – which will cre­ate com­pe­ti­tion and will likely push prices back up again.

First-time home­buy­ers, who real­tors and hous­ing experts feared have been vir­tu­ally locked out of the mar­ket by tighter mort­gage lend­ing rules imposed by Ottawa, “are adjust­ing to the new require­ments by opt­ing for cheaper homes or sav­ing longer,” says the survey.

Com­ment: And it is the sav­ing longer that is going to be telling. Do they come back in the spring and sum­mer, after 9 months or a year of extra sav­ing? That is what will truly tell us the state of the Toronto real estate mar­ket – and the national hous­ing mar­ket as well.

While bid­ding wars and bully bids dom­i­nated the busy spring mar­ket in 2012, come sum­mer real­tors began to see “a dis­con­nect” between buy­ers and sell­ers: Buy­ers have been hold­ing off, antic­i­pat­ing a slump in prices, while sell­ers have dug in their heels, deter­mined to wait and see if spring 2013 brings some heat back to the cool­ing market.

Com­ment: And as long as the sell­ers hold out, the buy­ers have noth­ing, no bar­gain­ing position.

The lack of enough houses for sale in Toronto last year to meet demand helped boost the price of a two-storey home by 6.2%, to an aver­age of $668,133 year-over-year by the fourth quar­ter of 2012. A detached bun­ga­low climbed 4.9%, to $558,345, dur­ing the same one-year period.

Com­ment: And the gold stan­dard 2-storey detached is flirt­ing with $900,000!

Toronto con­dos aver­aged year-over-year gains of 2.6%, end­ing 2012 at an aver­age $356,865.

The pipeline of buy­ers in Toronto seek­ing single-family homes will remain strong through­out 2013,” accord­ing to Gino Romanese, a senior vice pres­i­dent with Royal LePage.

The condo sec­tor is likely to soften fur­ther, with the excep­tion of older, big­ger con­dos in desir­able Toronto neigh­bour­hoods that, says Romanese, “will likely out­per­form newer units that tar­get investors and young professionals.”

Royal Bank CEO Gord Nixon told a bank­ing con­fer­ence Tues­day that the real estate slow­down is hav­ing an impact on mort­gage lend­ing but that the mar­ket is likely to remain solid, accord­ing to Cana­dian Press.

Nixon said RBC has lit­tle expo­sure to the con­do­minium mar­ket, while Bank of Mon­treal CEO Bill Downe told the con­fer­ence the bank pulled back on condo con­struc­tion fund­ing in the wake of the U.S. hous­ing melt­down in 2007 and 2008.

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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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  • Banks cut mortgage rates

    Two big Canadian banks — the Royal and Bank of Montreal — cut long-term mortgage rates slightly Thursday as borrowing costs fell in the bond market.

    The two banks said their rates for a four-year loan will drop by one twentieth of a percentage point to 6.6%, effective Friday. A five year rate drops by the same amount to 6.7%.

    All other rates remained unchanged.

    The changes reflect a drop in the cost of borrowing on the bond market, where banks finance their mortgage lending.

    Investors expect inflationary pressures to cool and interest rates to drop as the North American economy slows down.

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    Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information

    Toronto and Canada Housing Forecasts Getting Rosier

    Each month, our local home builders’ association receives several market intelligence reports from the Canadian Home Builders’ Association. This month’s newsletter contained a number of items that I thought would be of interest to new-home buyers in the GTA.

    Economic Update

    Dr. Peter Andersen, CHBA’s consulting economist, notes that this year will be much busier than expected for construction activity of all types. Housing starts have surged and residential construction has picked-up again. Non-residential construction, always a second-half cyclical performer, is in a solid expansion. A strong office leasing market and a declining office vacancy rate are signaling the onset of an office tower construction cycle.

    Housing starts averaged 248,000 at annual rates in the first quarter – an increase of 17% from the same period a year earlier. This is far above the 2005 housing starts total of 225,481 units and also the annual cyclical peak of 233,431 units set in 2004.

    The March starts figures were striking – 252,300 at seasonally adjusted annual rates. The first-quarter surge reflected both single-detached and multiple-unit starts. Housing start forecasts for 2006 are being revised upwards as a result of the monthly performance through the first three months of the year.

    The resale market is always a good indicator for new-home demand. It is still hot and shows no sign yet of affordability stress. First-quarter sales were at an all-time record high, after adjusting for seasonality. Sales of existing homes and condos in March continued at close to record levels. This is also good news for renovation demand as the stimulus to renovation from resale housing activity, which works with a lag, shows no sign of slowing down. The national average resale price in March in major markets was up by 11.5% year over year.

    RBC affordability index

    High home prices and utility costs in the last three months of 2005 pushed home affordability to its highest level in 10 years, according to the Royal Bank of Canada.

    RBC’s affordability index measures the proportion of pre-tax household income it takes to service the costs of owning a home. Despite the fact that incomes continue to rise, this increase does not match the hikes in mortgage rates, house prices and utility costs.

    Income growth in Canada is starting to accelerate, wages are rising, but the increase in house prices has been faster. Add to it higher interest rates and overall size of rising mortgages, so affordability is going down.

    Vancouver and Calgary were hit the hardest as housing prices soared in the last quarter of 2005. Affordability is expected to get worse in the first half of this year, but should level off by year’s end.

    Labour shortage

    The construction industry is concerned after hundreds of construction workers from Portugal and other countries have been deported as the new Conservative government moved away from Liberal government promises of an amnesty plan.

    Promises of an amnesty gave hope to underground workers who came forward to file refugee claims as a result. Their attempts to stay in the country legally ended up getting many of them deported. Canada’s current immigration system is tailored to educated immigrants, and blue-collar workers often do not qualify.

    “This is insanity,” says immigration lawyer Lorne Waldman. “We have an immigration system that is supposed to supply workers for jobs, but these blue-collar workers who are needed cannot qualify to get in.”

    There is a major labour shortage in the construction industry – an industry that accounts for 9.5% of Canada’s total gross domestic product and 7.5% of Ontario’s alone. It is estimated that there are between 10,000 and 15,000 illegal immigrants working in southern Ontario’s construction and hospitality industries, and 200,000 undocumented workers across the country. Deportations are therefore a major threat to the construction industry.

    The Canadian Home Builders’ Association wrote a letter to Immigration Minister Monte Solberg, supporting the work foreign workers do in the homebuilding industry and urging him to resolve the labour shortage.

    Solberg says the government is working with the provinces to ensure labour needs are met. “We understand the process doesn’t work well for a lot of people. We’re trying to fix that. The ideal situation is for people to go through the process.” He ruled out an amnesty, he said, because he doesn’t want to encourage people to come to Canada illegally.

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


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