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Tag Archives: real estate commissions

Condos offer a lucrative return over time

Making property work for you; Many new condos are bought by investors – maybe it’s time to follow their lead?

By Suzanne Wintrob, Postmedia News

In 1982, Brad Lamb was studying engineering at Queen’s University in Kingston and sharing a seven-bedroom house with nine others. With monthly rent set at $100 per person, it was a great deal for cash-strapped students. But when the owners put the property up for sale at $50,000 one spring day, young Brad was stunned.

“I pulled out my calculator and figured out how much a mortgage would cost,” recalls Lamb. “The taxes were on the flyer and I figured these guys were making crazy money. The net cash flow after all costs, with a 25% down payment, was something to the tune of $6,000 a year, and that was just free cash flow.”

Armed with his engineering degree, Lamb promptly set out to become a landlord. He worked for four years as an engineer while buying and selling property “with other people’s money,” he says. By 1988, he was earning $50,000 a year as an engineer yet “my real estate agent made $70,000 from me alone that year in real estate commissions.” It was enough to hang up his pinky ring, earn a real estate licence and get into the game full-time.

Since then, Lamb has bought, sold and managed several hundred properties, mainly in condominium towers in Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal. The profit earned him the seed capital to launch Lamb Development Corp. in 2001 for $3 million, and it solidified his opinion that buying condos as investments is a wise move.

“An individual can easily manage four or five condominium rental suites and have a full-time job,” Lamb says. “Four or five, after 25 years, will make you enough money to live like a king. You’ll pay off your mortgage, you’ll have $2 million or $3 million of net equity. And anyone can retire on that.”

With cranes continuing to dot the city, there’s no shortage of condominium units. Urbanation reports 50% of new condos sold in the Toronto Census Metropolitan Area are purchased by investors, with the number skyrocketing to 90% in parts of downtown where price per square foot averages $550.

Gone is the bad rap of the 1990s when investors were considered speculators, unable to come up with enough funds to close the deal. Today’s investors are classy businesspeople, and they are generally renting to responsible tenants who simply can’t yet afford to buy.

Urbanation places the average rental price at $2.11 per square foot, up 2.2% from last year.

With nearly 18,000 new condominium suites selling annually over the past five years, it’s predicted an additional 7,000 suites will be added to the condominium rental pool annually over the next few years.

By far, buyers originally from Pakistan, India, Iran, China, Korea and Russia are the biggest investors in Toronto’s condo market. According to Simon Mass, senior vice-president at The Condo Store, most have lived in Canada for years and were raised in cultures where owning property pays off.

“You typically don’t get any WASP buyers in preconstruction condos,” says Mass, whose company matches affluent clients with about 1,200 pre-construction units every year. “Go to an opening and you’ll see everybody who’s buying is of a certain ethnic group because they believe in the market. In their own countries they became very wealthy on real estate.

“They understand preconstruction and they like to play that way. They don’t believe in the stock market. They don’t believe in life insurance. Real estate for them is the No. 1 investment source.”

They also work with brokers who have an in with reputable developers so they can jump queues and get better deals.

For example, when Lamb readies to launch a project, he first gives a shout-out to fast-moving friends, family and “anybody who has bought from us before and isn’t a pain in the ass” and offers suites for sale at a 10% discount. That will sell 25% of the building, he says.

Next up, fast-acting brokers he has worked with before get dibs at a 5% discount and another 35% of the building sells. Then it’s on to lesser-known brokers, where prices are a tad higher and another 10% sells.

By the time he gets to the general public, the project is at 70% sold, “so you’re not nervous, you’ve got enough sales to build it.”

CONDO HOW-TO

Looking to invest in real estate? To make money at it, here’s some advice from those in the condo game:

CHOOSE A POPULAR LOCATION

Consider downtown, says Mark Bristoll of Edenshaw Homes: “If you’re close to subway lines, major amenities and good shopping districts, all those things make for a good urban experience so there’s a greater chance of being able to attract more interest in the building.

Hence, as an investor you have a better chance of selling it or renting it out.”

FIND A REPUTABLE REAL ESTATE AGENT

Get good advice, says Simon Mass of The Condo Store, and speak to people who have been doing this for a long time: “You don’t necessarily deal with the guy whose picture is on a bus shelter or has a two-page spread in the newspaper saying he’s No 1.”

DO YOUR HOMEWORK

Just like stocks and bonds, understand what you’re investing in and why. Tools like RealNet’s realcondoinvestor. ca can help purchasers, and those thinking about it, to evaluate the condo market and even compare it to other asset classes like the TSE or gold.

———————————————————————————————————————
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.

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

High buys in the sky

By Suzanne Wintrob – National Post

In 1982, Brad Lamb was studying engineering at Queen’s University in Kingston and sharing a seven-bedroom house with nine others. With monthly rent set at $100 per person, it was a great deal for cash-strapped students. But when the owners put the property up for sale at $50,000 one spring day, young Brad was stunned.

“I pulled out my calculator and figured out how much a mortgage would cost,” recalls Mr. Lamb. “The taxes were on the flyer and I figured these guys were making crazy money. The net cash flow after all costs, with a 25% downpayment, was something to the tune of $6,000 a year, and that was just free cash flow.”

Armed with his engineering degree, Mr. Lamb promptly set out to become a landlord. He worked for four years as an engineer while buying and selling property “with other people’s money,” he says. By 1988, he was earning $50,000 a year as an engineer yet “my real estate agent made $70,000 from me alone that year in real estate commissions.” It was enough to hang up his pinky ring, earn a real estate licence and get into the game full-time.

Since then, Mr. Lamb has bought, sold and managed several hundred properties, mainly in condominium towers in Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal. The profit earned him the seed capital to launch Lamb Development Corp. in 2001 for $3-million, and it solidified his opinion that buying condos as investments is a wise move.

“An individual can easily manage four or five condominium rental suites and have a full-time job,” Mr. Lamb says. “Four or five, after 25 years, will make you enough money to live like a king. You’ll pay off your mortgage, you’ll have $2-million or $3-million of net equity. And anyone can retire on that.”

With cranes continuing to dot the city, there’s no shortage of condominium units. Urbanation reports 50% of new condos sold in the Toronto Census Metropolitan Area are purchased by investors, with the number skyrocketing to 90% in parts of downtown where price per square foot averages $550. Gone is the bad rap of the 1990s when investors were considered speculators, unable to come up with enough funds to close the deal. Today’s investors are classy businesspeople, and they are generally renting to responsible tenants who simply can’t yet afford to buy. Urbanation places the average rental price at $2.11 per square foot, up 2.2% from last year.

With nearly 18,000 new condominium suites selling annually over the past five years, it’s predicted an additional 7,000 suites will be added to the condominium rental pool annually over the next few years.

Judging by the activity, those numbers won’t be hard to achieve. Just this month, for instance, Plaza Corp.’s newly launched York Harbour Club on Old Fort York Blvd. sold 441 of 502 condos, live/work suites and townhomes in just three weekends. Scott McLellan, Plaza Corp.’s senior vice-president, says it’s impossible to say how many purchasers bought units as investments since tenants won’t move in for at least a year. But he admits the flurry of sales was likely due to strong relationships the firm has built with select real estate brokers. Since builders need to sell 65% to 70% of units pre-construction to secure bank financing, York Harbour Club appears in great shape, with groundbreaking just weeks away.

By far, buyers originally from Pakistan, India, Iran, China, Korea and Russia are the biggest investors in Toronto’s condo market. According to Simon Mass, senior vice-president at The Condo Store, most have lived in Canada for years and were raised in cultures where owning property pays off.

“You typically don’t get any WASP buyers in pre-construction condos,” says Mr. Mass, whose company matches affluent clients with about 1,200 pre-construction units every year. “Go to an opening and you’ll see everybody who’s buying is of a certain ethnic group because they believe in the market. In their own countries they became very wealthy on real estate. They understand pre-construction and they like to play that way.  They don’t believe in the stock market. They don’t believe in life insurance. Real estate for them is the No. 1 investment source.”

They also work with brokers who have an in with reputable developers so they can jump queues and get better deals. For example, when Mr. Lamb readies to launch a project, he first gives a shout-out to fast-moving friends, family and “anybody who has bought from us before and isn’t a pain in the ass” and offer suites for sale at a 10% discount. That will sell 25% of the building, he says. Next up, fast-acting brokers he has worked with before get dibs at a 5% discount and another 35% of the building sells. Then it’s on to lesser-known brokers, where prices are a tad higher and another 10% sells. By the time he gets to the general public, the project is at 70% sold “so you’re not nervous, you’ve got enough sales to build it.”

Mark Bristoll, chief financial officer of Edenshaw Homes, says it’s the “cheap and cheerful” suites that usually sell out first. Penthouses often go last because purchasers want to touch and feel the prestigious space. Mr. Lamb says the final 10% is usually sold when the building is complete, but at the highest price per square foot. Most who buy early end up renting their unit to family members or strangers, with only 5% flipping it, he says.

By the time the building closes a few years later, the unit is usually worth at least $50,000 more than its original price, Mr. Bristoll adds. Though many builders don’t allow resales until the building closes, some provide what’s called “assignment rights” if the building is virtually sold.

Yet making money isn’t the only upside to Toronto’s investment frenzy. It’s also a boon for those needing a roof over their head. With few rental buildings going up and 100,000 new immigrants arriving in the Greater Toronto Area annually, investors have become the city’s biggest source of accommodation.

“No one has built any serious level of apartments in this city — except low-income housing — in 30 or 40 years,” Mr. Lamb says. “If that’s the case, where are people renting? They’re renting in condos. All these buildings downtown are at least 50% occupied by tenants. They pay the rent every month, they take good care of the building, they respect their neighbours — the same kind of thing that you’d see from an owner. It’s absolutely great for the city having high-end rental stock, which for most of the ’70s and ’80s, we didn’t have.”

———————————————————————————————————————
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.

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

Ontario energy minister promises action to lower cost of hydro

By Lee Green­berg, The Ottawa Citizen

Ontario’s Lib­eral gov­ern­ment will move Thurs­day to lower home hydro bills in an appar­ent bid to neu­tral­ize attacks over increas­ing liv­ing costs.

Finance Min­is­ter Dwight Dun­can acknowl­edged the plan in a scrum with reporters out­side the leg­is­la­ture in Toronto Tuesday.

We will be talk­ing about things like hydro rates on Thurs­day, yes,” he said.

Both oppo­si­tion par­ties have focused their attacks on pock­et­book issues in recent months, fol­low­ing the July 1 intro­duc­tion of a 13% har­mo­nized sales tax (HST). That tax added 8% to a range of pre­vi­ously exempted items, includ­ing gaso­line, new homes over $400,000 and many ser­vices such as hair­cuts, gym mem­ber­ships, real estate com­mis­sions and home renovations.

The most notice­able impact appears to be on already ris­ing home hydro bills, which, accord­ing to one ana­lyst, have nearly dou­bled since the McGuinty Lib­er­als took office in 2003.

Dun­can did not say how the gov­ern­ment would pro­vide relief for hydro rates, although spec­u­la­tion cen­tres on three options. The gov­ern­ment could lower or freeze hydro rates, elim­i­nate debt ser­vic­ing charges which amount to roughly $65 per year, or elim­i­nate the HST ($156.48 annu­ally for the aver­age Hydro Ottawa con­sumer using 800 kWh per month).

We’re hop­ing they sim­ply take the HST off hydro bills. We think that’s a good first step,” said NDP leader Andrea Hor­wath. “It’s very clear that peo­ple can’t make ends meet. A big part of that is their soar­ing hydro bills.”

Dun­can also announced Tues­day that the province’s books are in con­sid­er­ably bet­ter shape than pro­jected eight months ago.

The Windsor-area MPP said Ontario’s 2010-11 deficit is now fore­cast at $18.7 bil­lion, a full $1 bil­lion lower than esti­mated in the March budget.

We are see­ing rea­son­ably solid growth in a range of rev­enues, includ­ing cor­po­rate taxes,” he said when asked what was behind the good news numbers.

It is unclear whether higher-than-expected HST rev­enues played in the updated deficit projection.

Dun­can did not answer when asked that ques­tion directly Tuesday.

We’ll take you through the num­bers (Thurs­day),” he said.

Con­ser­v­a­tive leader Tim Hudak said the pub­lic doesn’t need to wait for the fall eco­nomic statement.

They’ve taken a lot of money in through the HST,” he said. “That’s a mas­sive tax grab on fam­i­lies. And now with gas up at 1.08 — 1.09 a litre, they’re rak­ing in a lot of money on the backs of families.”

Thursday’s fall eco­nomic state­ment will also intro­duce fre­quent spend­ing reports as another attempt to dif­fuse tax­payer anger over ris­ing costs and decreas­ing afford­abil­ity in the province.

Pre­mier Dal­ton McGuinty, whose pop­u­lar­ity has slipped con­sid­er­ably in the polls over the past six months, acknowl­edged his chal­lenges in a recent inter­view with the Citizen.

What we have to do is con­tinue to work with Ontar­i­ans and make sure we are very sen­si­tive to addi­tional cost pres­sures,” he said. “Real fam­ily incomes have just not grown sig­nif­i­cantly in a long time.”

———————————————————————————————————————
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 repro­duce them here for peo­ple who
are inter­ested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.

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

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