Toronto Loft Conversions

We know classic brick and beam lofts! From warehouses to factories to churches, Laurin and Natalie want to help you find your perfect new loft. More »

Modern Toronto Lofts

Not just converted lofts, we can help you find the latest cool and modern space. There are tons of new urban spaces across the city. More »

Unique Toronto Homes

Not just lofts, we can also help you find that perfect house. From the latest architectural marvel to a piece of Toronto\'s Victorian past, the best and most creative spaces abound. More »

Condos in Toronto

We started off selling mainly condos, helping first time buyers get a foothold in the Toronto real estate market. Now working with investors and helping empty nesters find that perfect luxury suite. More »

Toronto Real Estate

For all of your Toronto real estate needs, contact the Jeffrey Team. Laurin and Natalie are dedicated to helping you find that perfect and unique new home to call your own. More »

 

Tag Archives: price increases

Toronto Condos

The Toronto condo mar­ket is not going to crash. It is hec­tic, crazy, chaotic even – but it is not in any dan­ger. We have seen some seri­ous price increases over the past decade or so, and those rises are going to slow down. They may stop, we may see prices flat­ten out, even fall a touch. But, over the long term, prices will con­tinue to move upwards. We have 16 straight years of real estate price growth in Toronto, and only 6 of the past 47 years have seen prices go down. There is no rea­son this trend is going to reverse.

The new condo mar­ket is boom­ing because of a few fac­tors. Mainly it is fueled by new arrivals to the city (100,000 peo­ple move to the GTA every year – and they all need some­where to live), many from cities where tower liv­ing is the norm. First time buy­ers are priced out of the house mar­ket, so they go to con­dos as the afford­able option. The sub­ur­ban trend is over, peo­ple now want to live down­town, they want to be near work and play. Lastly, there are almost no new rental build­ings being built – the rental mar­ket is now the condo mar­ket. Vacancy rates are down to 1.3% so there is huge demand for rental units.

Every crane you see means 80% of the con­dos have been sold already, with 20–25% paid upfront by the pur­chasers. Sure, there are more con­dos being built here than in New York City, but NYC already has 100s or 1,000s more high rise build­ings than we do. We are way behind and are play­ing catch up.

Liberty Village Condos

New Con­dos Being Built In Lib­erty Village

There are over 2,200 con­dos in Toronto as of 2012. They stretch across the city, from the lake to north of the 401, from Scar­bor­ough to the Hum­ber River. Most are stan­dard condo tow­ers, though oth­ers include condo town­houses and lofts.

Toronto con­dos have been almost mirac­u­lous, seem­ing to be immune from almost any­thing. Pun­dits have called for the col­lapse of the Toronto condo mar­ket since around 2003, yet it sim­ply has not hap­pened. More and more peo­ple want to live down­town and con­dos pro­vide an afford­able option. Many first-time buy­ers enjoy the maintenance-free lifestyle that Toronto con­dos offer. With 100,000 peo­ple mov­ing to Toronto every year, there is no short­age of peo­ple need­ing a home.

We are here to expand your knowl­edge of the Toronto condo mar­ket. So much has been said in the press over the year, much more so these days. We re-print all sorts of per­ti­nent arti­cles here, with our com­ments, to help you steer through the spin and balder­dash. Much has been made of very lit­tle, small data have been blown up into huge issues.

Recently, the aver­age price per square foot for Toronto con­dos has stayed rel­a­tively flat at $475, though some new projects have come closer to $700 at the end of 2012. Lower pric­ing, low inter­est rates and a pent-up demand has resulted in a heated Toronto real estate market.

Some older build­ings have prices as low as $350 per square foot, though you will have to deal with dated units and high condo fees. Prime loca­tions such as Lib­erty Vil­lage are in the $550–650 psf range. Water­view con­dos on high floors can approach $700 psf and lux­ury con­dos such as those in Yorkville are gen­er­ally over $1,000 psf.

Newer con­dos offer bet­ter fea­tures and fin­ishes, with gran­ite and stain­less kitchens, glass show­ers and engi­neered wood floors – but are def­i­nitely smaller. They have state-of-the art gyms, pools and tend to be much more effi­cient. Older con­dos offer larger units, at the expen­sive of dated kitchens, old broad­loom and smaller win­dows. Ameni­ties tend to be less lux­u­ri­ous. Condo fees are usu­ally lower in new build­ings, higher in older ones.

Below are links of some of the most pop­u­lar con­dos in Toronto, in dif­fer­ent neigh­bour­hoods. Obvi­ously there are many many more out there, but these are the ones peo­ple ask about the most.

The Jef­frey Team is your source for Toronto con­do­minium ser­vices. We focus on excep­tional ser­vice, pro­vid­ing you with every­thing you need – from condo MLS list­ings to infor­ma­tion on condo prop­er­ties in Toronto.

Toronto has Lake Shore and Har­bourfront con­dos that offer fan­tas­tic views of Lake Ontario. These new condo build­ings attract buy­ers from all over, who enjoy their invest­ment in a Toronto condo. Let us help you with view­ing condo list­ings, vir­tual condo tours, condo pho­tos and more.

CityPlace Condos

City­Place Is One Of The Largest New Condo Developments

Are you look­ing to buy a down­town Toronto condo? The Jef­frey Team can help you research con­do­mini­ums in Toronto that best suit you and your fam­ily. Check out tips for buy­ers as well as sum­maries of the condo alter­na­tives! We work with con­dos for sale in Toronto every day, we can help you find what you are look­ing for.

Search through our inven­tory of hot Toronto con­dos, read about var­i­ous Toronto com­mu­ni­ties, we have tons of infor­ma­tion about the Toronto condo mar­ket. We are here to help you search MLS in Toronto to find con­dos for sale. If you are think­ing of buy­ing a condo or sell­ing your condo, call Lau­rin today at 416−388−1960 or email laurin@jeffreyteam.com.

Think of this as your online por­tal to Toronto con­do­mini­ums for sale, help­ing you learn more about the avail­able condo options in Toronto. When you find a condo list­ing that you’d like to see in per­son, let us know and we will make all of the arrangements.

Our goal is to be your trusted real estate web site for Toronto con­do­minium infor­ma­tion, offer­ing condo MLS list­ings, as well as mort­gage and com­mu­nity infor­ma­tion. Learn about the joy and excite­ment of down­town Toronto condo liv­ing.

—————————————————————————————————–
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
  • grey­brook realty part­ners inc
  • con­dos for­est hill 250 000–300 000 toronto
  • grey­brook realty
  • price per square foot office rent north york
  • real estate square footage toronto rate residential
  • price per square foot toronto not downtown
  • high rise res­i­den­tial mar­ket aver­age price per square in toronto
  • real estate aver­age per square foot on st clair in toronto
  • how much does a resale house cost in scar­bor­ough vil­lage for the year 2012–2013
  • build­ing cost per square foot 2012 toronto
  • Canada home prices seen falling, but not crashing

    Andrea Hopkins – Reuters

    Canadian housing prices will fall 10% over the next several years and home building will slow sharply in 2013, but the country’s recent property boom is not expected to end in a U.S.-style collapse, according to a Reuters poll.

    Comment: That is a national prediction, not a local one for Toronto. With Vancouver dropping like a stone, it is easy to see how average prices could fall. But when something like 14 of 15 major centres are seeing price increases, I am not so sure where is drop is going to come from.

    The survey of 20 forecasters published on Friday showed the majority believe the Canadian government has done enough to rein in runaway prices, preventing the type of crash that has devastated the U.S. market for years.

    “This isn’t a sharp correction, this isn’t a U.S.-style correction, it’s just simply an unwinding of the excess valuation that was created by artificially low interest rates for a long period of time,” said Craig Alexander, chief economist at Toronto-Dominion Bank.

    “I would emphasize that while a 10 % correction sounds scary, in actual fact, this would be a healthy outcome.”

    U.S. house prices crashed as a mortgage crisis unraveled in 2008, triggering a financial crisis and leaving a trail of foreclosures, negative equity and financial hardship for millions of people. Housing prices in the U.S. have only begun to rise again this year.

    On a national basis, Canadian house prices are expected to drop 10% over the next several years, and housing starts will fall more than 17% to 184,000 units by mid-2013, according to median results of the poll, which was conducted over the last week.

    House prices have already begun to cool in some areas but nationally remain 23% higher than their trough in March 2009, according to a Canadian Real Estate Association index.

    Comment: And this 10% is to happen over a few years. Right now we are up over last year, yet again. So let’s say we start from around 25% up from 2009, then in a few years, say 2016, then we are down 10% but still UP 15% over 2009. Explain to me how this is a bad thing.

    Respondents in the Reuters poll said house prices will rise 2.0% in 2012 and fall 0.1% in 2013, according to the median of 18 forecasts, putting most of the losses at least two years away.

    Comment: How do they predict a price drop while predicting prices are going UP an average of 1.9% in 2012-2013?

    Median forecasts had Toronto prices rising 5.1% in 2012 and falling 1.3% in 2013. But respondents saw an eventual 5% fall from current levels. Vancouver prices were forecast to fall 2.7% in 2012 and 3.8% in 2013, with an eventual decline of 12.5%.

    Comment: If Toronto prices fall at all in 2013 I will eat this blog.

    As sales decline and prices fall, home builders will ratchet back on construction starts, the poll showed.

    Housing starts, which notched a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 222,945 units in the third quarter, will decline to 200,500 in the fourth quarter, 186,900 in the first quarter of 2013, and 184,000 in the second quarter of next year.

    BITE OUT OF GROWTH

    That 17.5% drop in new home building will take a bite out of Canada’s economic growth, fueled by the housing sector, consumer spending and government stimulus since growth slowed in 2009. But a strengthening global economy should help pick up the slack, Alexander said.

    Not everyone is as sanguine. While economists at Canada’s major banks have consistently predicted a softening in prices and a slowing in housing starts, some independent analysts see a very hard landing ahead.

    “The housing market is something to be very worried about,” said David Madani, Canada economist at consultancy Capital Economics in Toronto.

    Madani, whose forecasts are included in the Reuters poll, has consistently predicted a 25% drop in prices and a plunge in housing starts to just 150,000 next year as builders grapple with too many homes and falling demand.

    Comment: He has consistently predicted it and it has consistently NOT happened. I fact, prices rose 5-8% in the face of that “prediction”.

    “The one symptom that housing bubbles always have in common is the over building, and I feel the banks play this down a bit,” said Madani, pointing to recent housing starts well above the 175,000 to 185,000 pace economists say is needed to keep up with population growth.

    Comment: No one has yet been able to explain to me how the 5.5% annual price increase over the past 10-15 years is a bubble. How is that the same as the 127% jump of the late 1980s? Or the 60,000% jump in 6 months during the original bubble, the Dutch Tulip Mania? Prices in Toronto have not risen as much since 1996 as they did from 1987-1990.

    “We’ve been building above 200,0000 for several years. And we know we’ve been building above demographic requirements because the evidence is in the inventory data – it’s high, it’s not low,” said Madani.

    “The excesses are there, it’s plain and clear to see.”

    Comment: What? We have nowhere near enough housing for the demand! That is why 100s of new condo sales centres move 80% or more of their units before shovels hit the dirt. We have bidding wars on rentals! We have investors crying because new condos are down 30% this year. With 100,000 people coming to the GTA every year, they need somewhere to live. Even with 200,000 starts NATIONALLY, we need fully half that in Toronto alone to satisfy demand. These are all real numbers, real data you can check for yourself. What does Capital Economics have but for a desire to get their name in the news?

    Still, all 15 respondents who answered an additional question said they believe the Canadian government has done enough to slow the housing market and prevent a U.S.-style crash, as Finance Minister Jim Flaherty has argued.

    RULE CHANGES HURT

    Mindful of the U.S. boom and bust, the federal government tightened mortgage lending rules four times in the last four years to make it harder for home buyers to take on too much debt in their quest for a home.

    The rule changes gradually shorted the maximum mortgage length from 40 years to 25 and also put limits on how much homeowners could borrow against their house, among other measures.

    While interest rates are not expected to rise until mid-2013, the stiffer lending rules and government warnings about the high debt loads of Canadian households have helped cool the ardor of home buyers, with the hottest markets, including Vancouver and Toronto, already feeling a chill.

    Sales of existing homes were down 15.1% in September from a year earlier, and were 6.5% lower in the third quarter from the previous three months, according to data from the Canadian Real Estate Association.

    Prices, which lag sales, have started to come down as well. Prices for existing homes dipped 0.4% in September from August, according the Teranet-National Bank Composite House Price Index, but remain 3.6% higher than a year earlier.

    Comment: You cannot compare month to month, as there are naturally yearly cycles with some months higher and some months lower. You can only compare the same month in different years.

    Prices of new homes rose 0.2% in the month, the 18th straight monthly gain, and were up 2.4% on the year, according to Statistics Canada.

    —————————————————————————————————–
    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
  • annual increase of house price increase in toronto
  • canadian house sales decline
  • negative equity canada walk away
  • can i get a mortgage with negative equity canada
  • housing price increases toronto renovations
  • alberta walking away from negative equity mortgage
  • toronto yearly price increase
  • Home price gains cooling but still hit record

    CBC News

    Cana­dian home prices rose to another record high in July but mod­er­at­ing gains pro­vided more evi­dence that the real estate mar­ket is cool­ing, accord­ing to a national bench­mark index.

    The Teranet-National Bank home price index showed that over­all prices rose by 0.7% last month – cool­ing from the 1.0% monthly gains seen in each of the pre­vi­ous two months.

    The index hit a new high for the third con­sec­u­tive month.

    But in Van­cou­ver, prices fell 0.5% from June lev­els – the only one of the 11 cities the index tracks that showed a price drop.

    On a year-over-year basis, prices in July were up 4.8% from a year ear­lier. But that was the eighth con­sec­u­tive month that year-over-year gains have decel­er­ated. “Fur­ther decel­er­a­tion is pos­si­ble in August,” National Bank said in a statement.

    Annual price increases in the Toronto mar­ket led the mar­ket, with homes in Canada’s biggest real estate mar­ket ris­ing 9.2% year-over-year – almost dou­ble the national increase.

    Com­ment: And Toronto stays a seller’s mar­ket until that changes. Even with more list­ings and fewer sales, as long as prices keep ris­ing, the buy­ers are held hostage.

    In Vic­to­ria, prices fell 0.4% from the pre­vi­ous July.

    The Teranet-National Bank home price index is the best-known exam­ple in Canada of what is known as the repeat sales method of try­ing to assess home price trends.

    This method of track­ing home prices in 11 major mar­kets looks at how the price of the same home changes over time, so that only prop­er­ties with at least two sales are entered into the mix.

    The assump­tion under­ly­ing this process is that each selected property’s over­all qual­ity remains con­stant. The sta­tis­ti­cal model attempts to account for the high preva­lence of homes that have been renovated.

    But all meth­ods of track­ing home prices have tended to show price increases mod­er­at­ing in the last few months.

    Mar­ket observers have said part of the cool­ing may be due to recent changes to mort­gage insur­ance reg­u­la­tions that have made it more dif­fi­cult for some first-time buy­ers to qual­ify for financ­ing. Record lev­els of house­hold debt may also be a factor.

    —————————————————————————————————–
    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.

    —————————————————————————————————–

    show
     
    close
    You want that dream home? Why you'll have to join the line in this thin housing market http://t.co/IRN3rvwxjE