Tag Archives: resale markets
HST has builders sprinting
Tony Wong – Yourhome.ca
It’s going to be a busy winter for James Bazely.
The developer expects to be building homes and pouring concrete throughout the winter in an effort to beat the new Harmonized Sales Tax, which goes into effect next July.
“We’ve had a lot of customers sitting on the fence, but because of the tax they’re much more willing to seal the deal,” says Bazely, owner of Barrie-based Gregor Homes and president of the Ontario Home Builders’ Association.
“We’ve ramped up production so we can close on our homes before the HST takes effect next year.”
Bazely says he recently talked to his trades and suppliers to ensure they are ready for winter.
“Every week we lose, we get closer to that July deadline.”
The new tax, which combines the PST and the GST, will have an impact on homes worth more than $400,000.
It would add, for example, $6,000 on a $500,000 home – enough money to upgrade to a better kitchen or floors, and a good incentive to close early for many consumers.
A $1 million dollar home gets hit with $36,000 in extra taxes.
Fears of the impact of the HST and continued low interest rates have been enough to jump-start the moribund new homes market.

New Home Builders Try To Beat HST
Ontario housing starts rose to the highest level since March, according to figures released by the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. Monday.
Starts hit a seasonally adjusted and annualized 55,700 in October, up 14.8 per cent from 48,500 units in September.
“Canadian residential construction activity has rebounded smartly from the depths of recession seen earlier this year,” says BMO Capital Markets economist Robert Kavcic.
Housing starts in the Toronto area also did well, up 13 per cent in October and rising for the third consecutive month to 34,200 annualized units.
“I think we’ve overused the term ‘consumer confidence,’ but it really does apply here. Consumers are much more confident,” said Bazely. “But it remains to be seen what will happen next year.”
Builders are worried that the imposition of the HST next year will impact what is seen as a fragile recovery in the market. The renovation side of the industry is seen as being particularly vulnerable.
“There is a worry that the extra 8 per cent tax will force a lot of renovations underground and consumers will simply pay cash, especially when the renovation tax credit expires next year,” says Bazely.
The builders’ association is pushing for a permanent renovation rebate.
The popular renovation tax credit gives back 15 per cent on expenditures between $1,000 and $10,000. It expires next February.
The renovation industry is huge, worth about $39 billion in 2008, or about double that of all the transactions in the resale homes market.
Nationally, housing starts rose by 5.4 per cent to 157,300 annualized units, putting Canadian construction at the best level since the end of last year.
“This report adds to the growing list of indicators pointing to a recovery in the Canadian housing market,” said TD Securities economics strategist Millan Mulraine. “With home purchasing continuing to rise, given the relatively cheap borrowing rate and favourable buying conditions, we expect the recovery in residential construction to remain on track in the coming months.”
The strongest gains were in provinces that were hard-hit by the recession, including Alberta, British Columbia and Ontario. However, despite the improvement, activity is still running below the peak of 2007. But demand is still causing prices to rise.
“The data are now starting to look more like a housing boom rather than merely a rebound,” said Bank of America Merrill Lynch economist Sheryl King. “We expect that prices in both the new and resale markets will continue to press higher.”
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Toronto house prices surge 11% in third quarter
Tony Wong – Toronto Star
When Daniel Austin sold his Markham town home in July, the chartered accountant was happy to get close to list price on the property, which sold in one day. Then, he bought another home in Richmond Hill in September, after a “frustrating search” to avoid bidding wars.
“I think what’s going on is unprecedented and unhealthy and I’m wondering if the chickens will come home to roost,” says Austin. “The market is downright scary.”
Comment: Scary for some, but why? Many people are still buying and selling, in fact records numbers are. Cannot be that frightening if almost 8,200 properties changed hands last month. That is at least 16,400 people who were not afraid (assuming one buyer and one seller per transaction). And they obviously did not think the market is unprecedented or unhealthy.
Tough for buyers, but profitable for realtors, real estate sales climbed to the highest level of any third quarter on record, according to Canadian Real Estate Association data.
After a dismal winter, real estate markets seem to have shaken off all notions that the country is in a recession. According to leading analysts, the market was supposed to be worse this year, not better.
The association reported 135,182 sales July to September, up 18% from the year-ago period, and the largest jump since 2002.
National average prices rose 11% to $327,736 in the third quarter. Sales up 28% in Toronto and 108 per cent in Vancouver drove the upswing.
But the impressive numbers, pushed by low interest rates, pent-up demand and short supply, have some economists wondering if the market can plow blithely upward.
“The spectre of higher interest rates early in the new year will put an end to the mini-boom we are experiencing,” says Peter Norman, senior director of economic consulting at Altus Group. “… typically, when labour markets are weak, housing doesn’t do well, but here you have resale markets that are above where they were before the recession.
Comment: What spectre of higher interest rates? The Bank of Canada has pledged to keep rates where they are through June 2010. So there is a chance of higher rates in the latter part of the year. And we should all be terrified of this potential, this chance? Uh… nope.
“Prices are being bid up not by speculative buying, but by a severe shortage of homes for sale,” said Scotiabank Group economist Adrienne Warren.
Comment: Which is why this is not a bubble. Which is why this is not going to collapse or explode tomorrow.
With Toronto area unemployment rate hitting 10 per cent, some economists think the real estate market is defying economic gravity. It also puts the Bank of Canada in a quandary.
Comment: Yet it will likely go down, as the nation rate has. Canadian unemployment dropped 3.4% last month – Toronto is sure to follow soon enough. What will the naysayers do then, I wonder?
The bank might decide to raise historically low interest rates sooner rather than later to cool a potential asset bubble. But a rising Canadian dollar relative to the U.S. dollar has them in a bind.
Comment: Exactly. As long as the dollar stays high, rates will stay low. And with oil and gold prices continuing to rise, our dollar (which is tightly bound to commodity prices) will stay high. Thus rates are not going to rise any time soon.
Raising interest rates would make houses less affordable, taking some buyers out of the market. But it also would drive the loonie higher, putting more heat on Canada’s beleaguered manufacturing sector.
“While the hot housing market cries out for rate hikes, the runaway loonie screams no,” writes BMO Capital Markets economist Douglas Porter in an economic note.
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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information - 416−388−1960
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Ontario housing conditions will stabilize
Exchange Magazine
Stable economic conditions across the province will help stabilize housing demand in 2010 according to the 2009 Third Quarter CMHC Housing Market Outlook – Canada Edition released today.
Highlights of the Ontario forecast include:
The Ontario economy will stabilize at year end before gradually recovering in 2010.
Ontario real estate sales will stabilize and range between 160,000 and 190,000 unit sales this year and next – reaching 174,0001 units in 2009, and 166,750 units in 2010.
Resale volumes will be down from the peak in 2007 but will be in line with volumes earlier this decade.
After experiencing buyers market conditions early this year, balanced market conditions will be sustained through 2010 – real estate prices will rise by 1.6% in 2009 and 0.8% in 2010.
Comment: Toronto is in the throes of a serious sellers market, though. With record sales volumes in June, July and August, and inventory levels falling to 38% in August – there are just fewer and fewer homes to buy. This is creating bidding wars (1 in 6 sales in Toronto in August were multiple offers) and pushing prices upwards.
After declining in 2009, new home starts will edge up and reach 50,000 units in 2010 but owing to economic uncertainty will range between 45,800 and 60,000.
High levels of affordability will support demand for detached housing in the immediate term but a shift to more inexpensive multi-family housing will occur as affordability erodes in late 2010.
Hamilton, Thunder Bay, Ottawa and Kitchener new home markets will enjoy greater growth prospects as these centers represent the tightest Ontario resale markets.
“A gradually improving provincial economy, improved financial market conditions and high levels of affordability will help stabilize housing activity next year” said Ted Tsiakopoulos, CMHC’s Ontario regional economist. “However, less pent-up demand and cautious consumer spending resulting from modest employment and personal income gains are factors that will temper Ontario‘s housing recovery in 2010,” added Tsiakopoulos.
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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information - 416−388−1960
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