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Tag Archives: real estate board

Toronto home sales slip

The Cana­dian Press

Toronto home sales in July slipped 1.5% com­pared with a year ago as sales of con­do­minium apart­ments fell 10%, the city’s real estate board said.

Com­ment: And yet again, some­one needs to explain that sales always dip in the sum­mer. The past few years have been crazy, so we have all for­got­ten what nor­mal is. But fewer sales through the sum­mer months, when peo­ple are away, is totally nor­mal. Let’s see what hap­pens in the fall – in things do not take off as usual, then we have a problem.

Over­all, the board reported Fri­day 7,570 homes sold last month com­pared with 7,683 a year ago.

Com­ment: And things do need to be put in per­spec­tive – peo­ple are call­ing for the col­lapse of the Toronto real estate mar­ket over 113 sales. Take a moment and think about, 113 fewer sales does not sig­nify an entirely new hous­ing mar­ket trend.

Sales of con­dos slipped to 1,753 for the month, as detached and semi-detached home sales dropped 2% and 4%, respec­tively. Town­house sales jumped 15%.

Board pres­i­dent Ann Han­nah said new mort­gage lend­ing guide­lines and the addi­tional cost of the Toronto land trans­fer tax prompted some to put their buy­ing deci­sion on hold.

Com­ment: Could be the new mort­gage rules, though they truly affect maybe 5% of buy­ers. More likely is the sum­mer weather. or both.

Very strong annual sales growth in the first half of 2012 and an ear­lier peak in sales this spring com­pared to 2011 help explain more mod­er­ate sales this sum­mer,” Han­nah said in a statement.

Com­ment: True enough, there were a LOT of sales in the first part of the year.

In Toronto, the aver­age sell­ing price in July was $476,947, up 4% from a year ago, while the MLS home price com­pos­ite index was up 7.1% year-over-year.

Com­ment: As long as prices keep ris­ing, we are not turn­ing to a buy­ers’ mar­ket. But if sales con­tinue to slide as list­ings rise, we may actu­ally see some­thing chance. But for all of you wait­ing for prices to fall, since 1966 there have only ever been 4 years where prices fell – all related to the bub­ble of the late 1980s and reces­sion of the early 1990s.

New list­ings totalled 13,888 for the month, up from 12,407 a year ago.

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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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Vancouver real estate cools — could Toronto be next?

CBC News

Prices continue to rise in Canada’s two largest real estate markets, but a closer look at the numbers shows two housing markets headed in different directions.

Both cities have been singled out by the Canadian Real Estate Association for either skewing the national numbers higher and lower in recent months. And both cities remain among the hottest real estate markets in the country.

And the similarities don’t end there.

Resale prices move higher

On the surface, new data from real estate boards in the two markets shows prices for resale homes are indeed still rising. In Toronto, the average price of a resale home was $517,556 in April — an 8.5% increase from the same month a year earlier.

The average price in Vancouver, meanwhile, was $683,800 in April, up 3.7% compared to a year ago.

Rising prices are broadly perceived to be the surest sign of a buoyant housing market, but the number of homes sold — and the number of homes listed for sale — tell a different story.

In Vancouver, there were 2,799 sales on the Multiple Listings Service last month. That’s a 13.2% decline from the 3,225 homes sold the same month a year earlier. Indeed, the number of homes sold in April in Vancouver is the lowest total for that month since 2001, the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV) noted in a release this week.

“Although April sales were below what’s typical for the month, we continue to see… a balanced relationship between buyer demand and seller supply in our marketplace,” REBGV president Eugen Klein said.

Others are not so sure. Real estate analyst Ben Rabidoux with M Partners says the drop-off in sales even as more homes come on the market is a trend worth noting. New Vancouver listings totaled 6,056 in April, more than double the number of homes sold and a 3.6% increase on the level a year earlier.

The new listings figure is 6.7% above the 10-year average for the month.

Comment: So Vancouver has the opposite problem as Toronto. Listings are up – increasing supply – while sales and prices slow down. In Toronto, we have low levels of listings, pushing sales and prices up.

“This is something I’ve been watching for a while,” Rabidoux said. “Inventory is ratcheting up even as sales are falling.”

An increase in listings can sometimes be a sign of a market top, as people are eager to sell to lock in gains they’ve earned in a widely acknowledged strong housing market.

If the level of willing buyers for all those new listings can’t keep up, it can create a buyer’s market with more sellers than buyers. Prices are still in positive territory but that’s unlikely to continue if such a large gap between buyers and sellers persists.

Contrast that with Toronto, where the number of sales continues to increase at a rapid pace — up 18% to 10,350 in April. Yet the number of listings was up by almost as much, nearly 15% to 16,436.

Comment: But that is only one month, taken out of context. Month after month, year after year, listings have lagged behind sales. That is why there are 10 buyers for every listing. If sales were up 5%, listings were up 4% – or even down. That gap has been growing for a LONG time.

An increase in listings is a relatively new trend in Toronto, and it mirrors what happened in Vancouver about a year ago, Rabidoux notes. “It hasn’t been substantial enough to make a dent yet, but it’s noteworthy because that’s what happened in Vancouver,” he said. “Listings took off before sales died.”

Comment: One month, people, one month.

To be sure, a change in the market’s overall direction isn’t showing up yet in prices. The numbers suggest there’s still ample demand for housing in Canada’s largest city.

“Interest in single-detached homes has been very high, both in the City of Toronto and surrounding regions,” Toronto Real Estate Board president Richard Silver said. Prices for detached homes in the GTA were up 9% in the month, TREB noted in a release this week.

If there’s any weakness in the Toronto market, it’s likely in the condo sector, Rabidoux said. The average price of a condo across the 416 and 905 area codes was $339,978 in April, up 4%.

Comment: Yes, because supply is not limited in condos. There are more for sale, so less pressure on prices. Never mind all of the new developments.

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty noted the city’s condo market was one of the government’s primary concerns in wanting to rein in control of Canada’s national housing agency last week.

Comment: And yet it is slowing down, of its own volition. He needs to be worried about the houses in trendy areas!

On a square-foot basis, new condo prices actually declined in Toronto in the first quarter of 2012. That’s the first time that’s happened since 2009, Rabidoux said.

“Condos are usually the canary in the coal mine,” he said. “The whole Toronto story feels like it’s been recycled from Vancouver 18 months ago.”

Comment: Except for the prices – which are more than 32% lower in Toronto than Vancouver. We have a LONG way to go to get to their lofty levels.

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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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Real estate boards ignoring month-to-month losses to promote year-over-year gains

Writ­ten by  Kit Kadlec – Cana­dian Real Estate

Home prices and sales across the coun­try dropped in most major mar­kets in July com­pared to a month ear­lier, but that’s not what local real estate boards are report­ing in their press releases.

Com­ment: Except every­one who knows any­thing about real estate knows that prices peak in the late spring, usu­ally around May, and then go down a touch in the fol­low­ing months. Hap­pened last year. Hap­pened the year before. Hap­pened in 2002. It is not news, we all know it hap­pens. If you fol­low the stats as closely as I do, you would already know this.

Rather than com­pare July fig­ures to the pre­vi­ous month, real estate boards are instead tout­ing the gains in sales and prices com­pared to 12 months ago. But this time last year, the mar­ket expe­ri­enced a sig­nif­i­cant downturn.

Com­ment: And the mar­ket expe­ri­ence a down­turn in 2008. And in 1990. So what? The mar­ket goes up and down all the time. July is the month that real estate agents used to take off – before things got way out of hand and the mar­ket was crazy every month – because it was so slow. Now peo­ple are jump­ing on the fact that the sum­mer is qui­eter than the spring as a sign of impend­ing real estate doom. The rea­son things peak around May is that peo­ple want to close on their new house before the new school year. This cre­ates extra pres­sure around that time. Then things set­tle down through the sum­mer as peo­ple go on vaca­tion or just hang out in the back­yard. In the fall, things will start to ramp up again. This is pretty much the same pat­tern as every year…

The Ottawa Real Estate Board ran this head­line on its lat­est press release, for exam­ple: “Ottawa hous­ing mar­ket warms up in July.” In fact, sales were down 22.5% in July com­pared to June, and aver­age prices were down 3.6%.

The board instead pro­moted the fact sales were up 18.8% com­pared to a year ear­lier, and prices were up 6.2% over that period. Sim­i­lar trends were also found in Van­cou­ver, Cal­gary and Toronto, as local boards there also pro­moted the yearly gains rather than monthly drops.

One rea­son is that yearly trends are con­sid­ered more accu­rate by some, as sales can largely be influ­enced by the weather and time of year, for exam­ple. Thus, com­par­ing July with a pre­vi­ous July can be more use­ful than com­par­ing it with June.

Com­ment: Exactly. Things change month to month, dif­fer­ent sea­sons, dif­fer­ent world events. You can­not com­pare on such small time frames and get mean­ing­ful data. Com­pare the same month, year over year over year and you get a pat­tern of what is hap­pen­ing on a macro scale. And these are all aver­age num­bers. One big sale on the Bri­dle Path and the num­bers get skewed.

Oth­ers see it as spin by the boards to pro­mote a con­stant pos­i­tive pic­ture in each of the press releases, which often get repeated in news media with the same angle that’s fed to them.

Com­ment: Only the tin­foil hat crowd and the media. And the man quoted below.

In his blog, Garth Turner labeled the prac­tice of using yearly stats by the Toronto Real Estate Board as “decep­tion” and “illusion.”

Big drop in sales and prices from last month. Val­u­a­tions trend­ing lower since the spring. Total 2011 sales lower than those recorded last year. So are words like ‘strong home sales,’ ‘sec­ond best on record’ and sub­stan­tial rebound’ respon­si­ble? Of course not,” noted Turner on Toronto’s mar­ket. “These are realtor-salesguys.”

Com­ment: Wow… stat­ing the sim­ple fact that last month was the 2nd best July ever is spin? It is a fact! Almost-record months do indi­cate strong sales, do they not? As noted above, last year saw a down­turn, so num­bers being up this year is not a sub­stan­tial rebound? Come on… let’s talk spin. How about the uber-negative guy who tries to make every­thing point to the real estate world implod­ing and destroy­ing all asso­ci­ated wealth and peo­ple within. Sorry, try­ing to make every­thing suit a pre-conceived neg­a­tive view­point is spin. Or decep­tion. Or just sim­ple delusion.

Turner was refer­ring to the August press release, which quoted Toronto Real Estate Board Pres­i­dent Richard Sil­ver. “If the cur­rent pace of sales hold up, we could see the sec­ond best year on record under the cur­rent TREB mar­ket area,” Sil­ver said in the release (read it for your­self here – http://​www​.toron​to​re​alestate​board​.com/​c​o​n​s​u​m​e​r​_​i​n​f​o​/​m​a​r​k​e​t​_​n​e​w​s​/​n​e​w​s​2​0​1​1​/​p​d​f​/​n​r​_​m​a​r​k​e​t​_​w​a​t​c​h​_​0​7​1​1​.​pdf).

Com­ment: So if 2011 is a lit­tle less than the pre­vi­ous best year, that is a FACT. The truth. Actual evi­dence. There is no spin, no doc­tor­ing, no decep­tion. You can­not argue with the num­bers and TREB sim­ply reports them. Read all of the press releases for your­selves, dear read­ers. They are bor­ing and dry, sim­ple recita­tions of the facts. It is the fear mon­gers and opin­ion­a­tors who put their spin on the num­bers, ususally try­ing to make them seem worse than they truly are.

Sales in Toronto were up 23% in July 2011 com­pared to July 2010, but were down 22% from June 2011.

Com­ment: Sales are down because list­ings are down. Duh. And it must be noted that the 22% fewer sales num­ber was CONTAINED IN THE TREB PRESS RELEASE! So who is try­ing to deceive who? Some peo­ple in the media could turn a cat being res­cued from a tree into a tale of woe and destruction.

Some boards, such as the Edmon­ton Real Estate Board, just left the bad news out of the release. While pro­mot­ing that sales were up 3.6% in July com­pared to 12 months ear­lier, there was no men­tion by the board that sales were also down 9.3% com­pared to the pre­vi­ous month.

Take a look below at how the pic­ture of these mar­kets greatly changes depend­ing if you’re com­par­ing monthly or yearly stats.

July 2011 sales com­pared to June 2011: –22%
July 2011 sales com­pared to July 2010: +23%
July 2011 aver­age prices com­pared to June 2011: –3.2%
July 2011 aver­age prices com­pared to July 2010: +9.7%

Com­ment: But, stats can always be manip­u­lated. For fun, lets com­pare May 2011 to May 2010 and April 2011.

May 2011 sales com­pared to April 2011: +11%
May 2011 sales com­pared to May 2010: +6%
May 2011 aver­age prices com­pared to April 2011: +2%
May 2011 aver­age prices com­pared to May 2010: +9%

In this instance we see that both monthly and yearly com­par­isons show increases. We could do this for every month of the year and we would see month-to-month com­par­isons increase and some decrease. But I bet most or all of the yearly com­par­i­ons show an increase. The point is to show long term trends, not the lit­tle blips that occur because of weather and vaca­tion time.

Spin is truly the art of choos­ing stats to sup­port a pre­con­ceived notion. Sim­ple report­ing of facts is just that. I will trust that my read­ers are smart enough to spot the difference.

———————————————————————————————————————
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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