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Tag Archives: real estate association

Jim Flaherty on home sales dive

‘I don’t mind prices com­ing down a bit, too’

Tara Perkins and Sean Sil­coff – The Globe and Mail

The way Jim Fla­herty sees it, his July changes to Canada’s mort­gage rules are hav­ing the desired effect on the hous­ing market.

Well, yeah,” the finance min­is­ter told The Globe and Mail. “I don’t mind prices com­ing down a bit, too.”

Mr. Flaherty’s com­ments Tues­day fol­lowed new num­bers show­ing Cana­dian home sales posted their fastest year-over-year decline in Decem­ber since he tight­ened mort­gage rules in July.

Sales of exist­ing homes over the Mul­ti­ple List­ing Ser­vice fell 17.4% in Decem­ber from a year ear­lier, and were down 0.5% from Novem­ber, accord­ing to the Cana­dian Real Estate Association.

The MLS Home Price Index, which seeks to fac­tor out changes in the types of homes being sold to get an indi­ca­tion of under­ly­ing prices, rose 3.3% from a year ear­lier. That’s the slow­est growth since April of last year.

Suc­ces­sive rounds of tight­en­ing mort­gage reg­u­la­tions have kept the hous­ing mar­ket in check dur­ing what has become an extended low inter­est rate envi­ron­ment,” said CREA chief econ­o­mist Gre­gory Klump.

Hav­ing said that, the impact of the new rules are prob­a­bly fully priced into the mar­ket now, said Toronto-Dominion Bank senior econ­o­mist Sonya Gulati.

Com­ment: And now that we see sales and prices ris­ing in Jan­u­ary, can we all just admit how strong the real estate mar­ket is? Every rule change has tight­ened things and made it harder for the mar­ginal peo­ple to get in. Yet it keeps going. We keep trim­ming the fat, and it keeps going. And as we weed out the longer amor­ti­za­tions, the higher re-finances, the hard-to-qualify – this means that those who do buy are more and more able to do so.

Econ­o­mists at TD went through the data last year in an attempt to quan­tify just how much of an impact Mr. Flaherty’s four rounds of rule tight­en­ing were having.

Com­ment: Easy, in Toronto it cut the bot­tom 10–20% out of the market.

In a report in Sep­tem­ber, they con­cluded that the changes had a sig­nif­i­cant per­ma­nent drop in hous­ing demand, but “while home prices took an imme­di­ate hit fol­low­ing the rule changes, they bounced back within two or three quar­ters and con­tin­ued to grow faster than under­ly­ing eco­nomic fundamentals.”

Com­ment: But it is a per­ma­nent drop from the record highs of 2011. Fig­ures will still be on the high side, in line the the 5-year trend before 2011. And those fig­ures are quite high from a his­tor­i­cal perspective.

Blame inter­est rates.

Now, “with the whop­ping 17.4% year-over-year change in sales seen in Decem­ber, we sus­pect that the impacts from the mort­gage rule tight­en­ing in July are now fully priced in,” Ms. Gulati said Tues­day. “We expect the Cana­dian hous­ing mar­ket to sta­bi­lize at cur­rent lev­els over the next few months.”

Com­ment: More likely is that they will rebound slightly to a level some­where between the highs and lows. Expect to see sales lev­els in the range they were in 2010 or so.

Indeed, Royal Bank of Canada econ­o­mist Robert Hogue pointed out that list­ings declined by more than sales in Decem­ber, and that should lend some sup­port to prices now. The num­ber of newly listed homes fell 1.3% from November.

Com­ment: Of course, sell­ers see action slip­ping, so they pull out to wait and see where the mar­ket heads. Now that it is head­ing back up, there will be more list­ings – lead­ing to more sales and thus higher prices.

The MLS Home Price Index has been declin­ing for six months on a month-over-month basis, and there have been fears that those declines will accelerate.

Com­ment: But they never did. They stayed roughly the same month over month.

But now if sup­ply is adjust­ing to the lower demand, this may guard against this accel­er­a­tion of the decline,” Mr. Hogue said in an interview.

He has been of the opin­ion that the impact of Mr. Flaherty’s lat­est round of rule changes, which included cut­ting the max­i­mum length of insured mort­gages to 25 years from 30, would only be temporary.

We’ll get the answer in the com­ing months,” he said.

And if the sharp declines in year-over-year sales end, and sales flat­ten out or even pick up a bit, the mea­sures will have run their course, he said.

Ms. Gulati said the sales-to-listings ratio and the num­ber of months of unsold inven­tory are well within the nor­mal range.

How­ever, when we com­pare prices to other stan­dard met­rics like price-to-income, we still believe that prices have devi­ated from under­ly­ing eco­nomic fun­da­men­tals,” she said. “With this in mind, house prices will likely resume their trek down­wards once higher inter­est rates come into effect in the fourth quar­ter of 2013.”

Com­ment: Yet now the BoC is say­ing rates will not rise, due to a slower than pre­dicted economy.

—————————————————————————————————–
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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  • The Toronto housing market now

    Calmer, but no fire sales

    Carolyn Ireland – The Globe and Mail

    The recent action on Fuller Avenue in Parkdale provides a good snapshot of Toronto’s real estate market at the moment. Three houses sold within about a week of each other.

    Real estate agent Chander Chaddah was representing the sellers of a red-brick Victorian renovated with panache. It’s the kind of property that might have attracted 16 or 17 bids and at least one bully offer back in the spring.

    “I thought for sure it would go in multiples,” says Mr. Chaddah, who set a time to review the bids. “We got one offer.”

    The house sold not far off the asking price for less than $900,000. It was a nice, sedate transaction instead of an all-out brawl.

    The night before, another house on the same street with an asking price of $940,000 sold for $1.060-million. And a smallish semi recently sold well above the asking price as well.

    So houses are still selling but not with the hysteria of the recent past, says Mr. Chaddah.

    Comment: Huh? Two of three sell over asking… one for 13% over and the other for “well above” asking. In one week. On one street. And we are saying that THAT is calm and sedate?

    In some cases, houses are not selling on the offer date at all. On Geoffrey Street in the High Park area, one large Edwardian recently sat for a week or two and then was relisted with a higher asking price.

    Comment: Because it always makes sense if a house does not sell, to re-list it at a higher price. And that house is still for sale… There is no cure for listing too high. Except to lower the price.

    Canadian Real Estate Association numbers show that sales in Toronto dropped about 21% in September compared with the same month in 2011.

    The latest numbers from the Toronto Real Estate Board show that sales dropped 10.5% in the first half of October compared with the same period last year. New listings rose 5.5%.

    Comment: Reaction to new mortgage rules, backlash against high prices, result of high sales early in the year pulling some forward… Hard to say now what is going on. Though it is something that the drop is already cut in half this month.

    Meanwhile, the prospective buyers for entry-level properties are still finding the competition fairly tense. Mr. Chaddah is working with a couple of sets of first-time buyers who are looking to spend less than $500,000.

    Comment: Yeah, me too. Good luck with that!

    “A couple of them got beat up in the past couple of weeks so being able to buy without going into multiples hasn’t been something we’ve experienced.”

    By “beaten up” of course he means they were the dejected losers in the contests for two houses. In one case they walked away from a small house in Mimico because too many offers were already listed.

    “I told them it’s going to get nutty and we didn’t even throw our hat in the ring.”

    Comment: Heck, I got into a nice little sedate 4-way bidding war last week. Nice house, not that exciting, priced around market value and not that low. It went almost $44,000 over asking! Looking for those same people yesterday, the first 10 listings that met their needs were all set for bids.

    But Mr. Chaddah’s prediction is that the market will slow even more before the end of the year – partly because it always does in November and December but also because buyers don’t seem to be feeling the same sense of urgency.

    Comment: Condos are slow, but not so much houses. And it depends on the segment of the market.

    But if things slow down much more, the market could draw back some potential buyers who were so put off by the zaniness earlier this year that they stepped out of the house hunting fray.

    Mr. Chaddah had a couple of potential buyers like that last spring.

    “The trick is to have the confidence to jump back in and be a contrarian,” says Mr. Chaddah. With his clients, so far that hasn’t happened.

    “They’re still on hiatus.”

    —————————————————————————————————–
    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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  • Average house prices don’t tell the whole story

    There are better indicators to glean market trends

    Tom McFeat – CBC News

    When someone asks how house prices are doing in a particular neighbourhood, the question seems easily answered.

    The big real estate boards all issue monthly price reports that spell out what the average selling price was in the previous month and how that compares to the month, and the year, before.

    But there’s a problem with trying to divine market direction from average price data. It’s just too blunt a tool.

    If real estate — as the saying goes — is really about “location, location, location,” then average prices frequently don’t capture the reality of what’s going on in a particular city or neighbourhood.

    Calculating the average house price is as simple as adding up the prices realized for all home sales in a particular month and dividing by the number of sales. The problem with that metric begins to emerge, however, when one or more parts of the housing market don’t act in tandem with all the other segments, as they seldom do.

    For instance, what happens if the percentage of really expensive homes sold drops more than it does for other types of homes? That could lead to a big drop in the average selling price, even though the price of more moderate homes may be little changed.

    That exact scenario played out with the release of the June sales figures from the Canadian Real Estate Association. Among the ocean of figures CREA released was the fact that the average resale price across the country that month was down 0.8% from the same month a year earlier.

    It left the impression that prices in the Canadian housing market had dropped compared to the previous year.

    It turns out that the national average price dropped only because Vancouver’s pricey real estate market had 28% fewer sales this June than it did in June 2011.

    Exclude Vancouver from the national figures and CREA says the average national selling price last month actually rose 3.2%. In fact, CREA reports the average home price in June was higher year-over-year in 70% of the local markets it looked at.

    Average price data within cities are also vulnerable to a shift in the sales mix.

    What if a huge batch of low-priced condos are snapped up one month? That would send the average price lower, even though the resale market for other types of housing may not have budged at all.

    So it comes as no surprise that economists who analyze the real estate market hate averages.

    “Averages are a horrible place to go,” says Tsur Somerville, who heads up the Centre for Urban Economics and Real Estate at the University of British Columbia.

    Gregory Klump, the chief economist at CREA, agrees. Using average prices is “like looking in a funhouse mirror,” he warns.

    Finding the median price, which involves ranking all sales from top to bottom and finding the sale price that’s in the middle, is a bit better, Somerville says, but it’s still flawed methodology. Like average prices, the median fails to take into account changes in buying patterns.

    Economists say there are more sophisticated methods that give a better sense of market trends than either averages or medians.

    1. The hedonic approach

    More than 15 years ago, the MLS developed its own home price index to get a clearer picture of price trends. It uses a complex statistical model to measure the rate at which housing prices change over time by tracking price changes in “typical” homes in each market. Each neighbourhood has a typical benchmark home.

    CREA, in addition to providing average home price data, also releases MLS home price index data for five major markets: Greater Vancouver, the Fraser Valley, Calgary, the Greater Toronto Area and Montreal. Sixteen additional markets are slated to be added in the future.

    “If you really want an accurate measure of what’s going on with home prices, you’ve got to keep the quality of the homes constant,” says CREA’s Klump. “That’s what the [MLS home price index] does. It compares apples with apples over time. It’s not subject to a change in the sales mix the way average and median prices are.”

    What difference do the different approaches make? In Vancouver, for instance, the average selling price in June was $701,141, down 13.3% from last year. But using the MLS home price index methodology, Greater Vancouver prices actually rose year-over-year by 1.7%.

    2. The repeat sales method

    This method of tracking home prices looks at how the price of the same house 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.

    Given the high rate of renovations, that can be problematic, but the statistical models attempt to account for that.

    The Teranet-National Bank home price index is the best-known example of the repeat sales method in Canada.

    “The statistics work out the problem that not every house sells every year,” says Somerville, who uses data from both the MLS and the Teranet-National Bank home price indices to track market trends.

    In the U.S., the widely tracked Case-Shiller home price index uses the repeat sales method, too.

    3. Other methods

    Somerville cites a couple of other indicators to track housing price trends.

    The Royal Lepage house price survey is a quarterly look at seven types of housing in dozens of neighbourhoods across Canada. The values are estimates of fair market value in each of the surveyed locations, based on local home price data and knowledge of local housing market conditions provided by Royal Lepage real estate agents and brokers.

    “In theory, it should be problematic, because it’s a survey,” says Somerville. “It’s not based on actual data. But it moves very well with the higher quality statistical data.”

    Some market watchers also look at the sales-to-new-listings ratio. Currently, it’s at 51.7% nationally and has been trending down. Anything over 60% is considered a sellers’ market, with anything below 40% being a buyers’ market.

    Somerville also looks at sales activity. “Changes in sales tend to lead market conditions,” he says. “So when sales are declining, that’s the best sign of a weakening market, although price declines don’t have to follow. You can get prices flat-lining; they don’t have to decline.” Cooling market

    Currently, the number of sales in most markets in Canada is slowing. Overall, CREA reports 4.4% fewer sales in June than a year earlier.

    At the same time, year-over-year prices aren’t retreating in most markets, at least yet. But the recent tightening in mortgage regulations could change that and it could show up as early as August, when sales and price figures for July are released.

    “We do anticipate that some first-time buyers will be priced out of the market,” Klump says.

    These days, the operative words among Canadian housing market watchers seem to be “slowing” and “cooling.”

    “The cycle of eroding affordability followed by softening home prices has begun in some regions and will be felt in many parts of the country by year-end,” Royal Lepage CEO Phil Soper forecasts. “Home prices cannot grow faster than salaries and the underlying economy indefinitely.”

    Somerville says that of all the housing markets in Canada, Toronto is the one that bears watching. “If I was concerned about a market, I’d be more concerned about Toronto, because the level of building activity has been very, very high there,” he says, referring to the the boom in condo-building.

    “You see supply levels being very high by historic standards in terms of construction,” he says. “I’m not saying things have to go sour; I’d just be more concerned [about Toronto] than elsewhere.”

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