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Tag Archives: toronto condo builders

The 2013 Toronto Area Condo Market

Keep Calm and Carry On

Zoe Ackah – Epoch Times

Not every­one we inter­viewed agrees totally, but what we can say is there’s no need for panic. Toronto has a hous­ing short­age, and con­dos are a great way to buy an afford­able place to live. They are the main source of new rental hous­ing. There is a healthy mix of investors, end users, and tenants.

Com­ment: Amen! Thank you for a ratio­nal view­point, one informed by the infor­ma­tion and not just neg­a­tive hyperbole.

Sorry, there is very lit­tle chance of sig­nif­i­cant price decline, but we sug­gest you think of the GTA as a group of inde­pen­dent sub-markets. What is true for Markham may not be true for Eto­bi­coke, so do your home­work before you buy or sell.

Look­ing back a decade, you’ll see a year that is shap­ing up to look rather like 2006 – very average.

A greater vari­ety of unit sizes and con­fig­u­ra­tions can be expected in the next decade.

Pre­pare to engage in increas­ingly seri­ous con­ver­sa­tion around infra­struc­ture build­ing, tran­sit fund­ing, and use of sec­tion 37 funds.

All in all, the adjust­ment to Places to Grow leg­is­la­tion, increased immi­gra­tion to the GTA, and the price of gas are push­ing our city toward matu­rity. It’s time to effec­tively plan and thought­fully build a city that has suf­fi­cient tran­sit, com­mu­nity facil­i­ties, and hous­ing options for everyone.

BILD Pres­i­dent talks low-rise, tran­sit, and devel­op­ment charges

Com­ing down from the fever­ish high-rise explo­sion of 2011–2012, Build­ing Indus­try and Land Devel­op­ment Asso­ci­a­tion (BILD) pres­i­dent Bryan Tuckey feels the future requires rethink­ing some plan­ning habits.

Is there a future for tiny units in giant tow­ers, ultra-costly tran­sit options, and huge devel­op­ment charges passed on to consumers?

Wel­come back the walk-up

As we begin to explore the space between rugged, sin­gle fam­ily indi­vid­u­al­ity and mega-tower enforced col­lec­tiv­ity, Tuckey is putting forth a mod­est sug­ges­tion – six-storey wood-frame construction.

It’s much more flex­i­ble,” says Tuckey. Not to men­tion less expen­sive to build. Here is where Tuckey thinks fam­i­lies will find the larger and more afford­able units they need.

Today in Toronto you can build a max­i­mum of four floors framed with wood. Allow­ing for six is not just less costly to build, but also less costly to the environment.

Tra­di­tional cement releases lots of CO2. Tuckey says wood is actu­ally “much more sus­tain­able from a car­bon sequester perspective.”

So what does that mean for you? Get ready to take the stairs to your sixth floor pad, and the bus to work.

Bus shel­ter

At the recent BILD High-Rise Forum, there was a lot of transit-related frus­tra­tion. It’s some­thing all Toron­to­ni­ans share.

Though devel­op­ers work­ing on the water­front are still wait­ing for their light rapid tran­sit, Tuckey is actu­ally rather bull­ish on bus rapid transit.

I think buses are really under­val­ued in how much they can move and how flex­i­ble they are. There’s poten­tial for buses.”

Hav­ing worked exten­sively on the Shep­pard sub­way, he feels we need to be ask­ing what we can afford plenty of, because we can all agree solu­tions are needed fast.

Megacity-mortgage

Most peo­ple agree the city would be bet­ter served if there were increased coop­er­a­tion between local res­i­dents, munic­i­pal politi­cians, and builders.

These con­ver­sa­tions (after we col­lec­tively grieve fed­eral and provin­cial tran­sit fund­ing short­falls) will revolve around what is done with—and what we should do about—the enor­mous devel­op­ment charges col­lected on new hous­ing in the GTA.

You have to have an adult con­ver­sa­tion around all these things,” say Tuckey. “You’re ask­ing the new home­owner to pay for infra­struc­ture that lasts for 70 to 100 years, and pay for that infra­struc­ture on their mort­gage. Is that fair when munic­i­pal gov­ern­ments can get that money for per­cent­ages less?”

Not to men­tion how these fees impact the price of hous­ing. There is no doubt we need them, but how can we keep them in the com­mu­ni­ties that paid for them in the first place?

They can’t cap­ture a lot of the rev­enue they gen­er­ate,” say Tuckey. “Much of the dol­lars from Toronto and the GTA don’t stay here in ser­vice or infrastructure.”

Small price decline for GTA real estate market

Marc Pin­son­neault, a senior econ­o­mist from the eco­nomic and strat­egy team of the National Bank, feels the GTA real estate mar­ket will see a mod­est decline in prices through 2013.

I think that prices are going to decline some­what for 2013 as a whole. For the Toronto mar­ket we expect a decline of 2.5%.

Com­ment: And what will drive this decline? Low inter­est rates? Shrink­ing sup­ply? Increased demand? Prices will rise around 3–4% in 2013, all the major real estate play­ers agree. Econ­o­mists have NEVER been right about the real estate indus­try, not for 10 years. NOT ONCE.

Over­all the price decline in the GTA will be lower than the national aver­age,” he explains.

Com­ment: The national aver­age price is unlikely to decline either, even with Van­cou­ver sink­ing like a stone. Again, no major real estate player thinks so, and they have been right EVERY year. While econ­o­mists, again, have been WRONG EVERY YEAR.

High­rise will feel it most

Pin­son­neault feels high­rise prices will decline most, and notes the large amount of prod­uct cur­rently on the mar­ket for sale.

Sta­tis­tics for March pro­vided by Real­Net indi­cate that of all 445 active projects, 80% of the units are sold, with 229 cur­rently under con­struc­tion being 89%, and 144 in pre-construction already 56% sold.

Com­ment: Take note of that. Read it again. When you see a crane, that means almost 90% of the units are sold. They are not all flood­ing the mar­ket once the build­ing is built. They are sold before they are even built.

Even if the pre-sale rate is quite good, the num­ber of projects that have been launched and the num­ber of units it implies is so large that the num­ber of unsold new con­dos is still quite large,” Pin­son­neault says.

Com­ment: But the 10% inven­tory fig­ure is right in line with the long term aver­age, so where is the con­cern? Urba­na­tion and those who track con­dos for a liv­ing see no problems.

He feels hav­ing inven­tory is less of a prob­lem when a build­ing is not in the mid­dle of construction.

He thinks devel­op­ers will hold back on build­ing until the mar­ket absorbs some of the units and the price begins to rise.

Com­ment: They might. But with­out know­ing for sure that some have held back, and talk­ing to each and every one of them, this is all just pure spec­u­la­tion and com­pletely mean­ing­less. Projects could be on old due to the plan­ning depart­ment, size changes, per­mits, trades, sup­plies, you name it. Just because a project is delayed does not mean that builders are hold­ing back to pre­vent flood­ing the market.

As of the end of Feb­ru­ary, the CMHC recorded 1,026 com­pleted but unsold condo units in the GTA. The num­ber of unbuilt units on the mar­ket may increase in the months to follow.

Com­ment: So a thou­sand unsold con­dos is the cri­sis? Really?

Want to know when prices will begin to rise? Pin­son­neault sug­gests we take a close look at the num­ber of units cur­rently on the mar­ket. He thinks prices will begin to rise again when the num­ber of units avail­able begins to drop.

Com­ment: Which is now. April is see­ing more sales and less inven­tory – and higher prices. Natch.

Sim­ply let the price adjust for a few quar­ters,” he says. “Prob­a­bly houses or con­dos will become more afford­able after the cor­rec­tion. We don’t see sales recov­er­ing in 2013, that’s for sure.”

Com­ment: Cor­rec­tion? What cor­rec­tion? Oh right, the one econ­o­mists have been pre­dict­ing for 10 years… the one that has never happened.

Happy medi­ums for GTA

We’ve been build­ing and design­ing a gen­er­a­tion of small units. It’s fine that these work now, but in 10 or 20 years, how is urban liv­ing going to evolve?” asks Mimi Ng, Menkes res­i­den­tial sales & mar­ket­ing vice-president.

As Places to Grow pushes devel­op­ment ver­ti­cal, the ques­tion becomes cre­at­ing some­thing for everyone.

There’s a grow­ing num­ber of move-up buy­ers, sec­ond and third-time condo buy­ers who don’t want the work of a house, but need some­thing big­ger,” says Ng. “We’re start­ing to see it already.”

Com­ment: And this is what is cre­at­ing the pres­sure on houses. There are not enough big­ger con­dos, or afford­able larger con­dos, for move-up buy­ers. And since no new houses are being built, all of these con­dos buy­ers cre­ate an ever big­ger demand for a sta­tic sup­ply of homes.

Ng pre­dicts more town­houses in the 416. The tall tow­ers and mega projects near tran­sit were con­ceived of five to seven years ago and are what devel­op­ers are just deliv­er­ing now.

Per­co­lat­ing in the col­lec­tive builder con­scious­ness today, and slated for deliv­ery in the next decade, are projects decid­edly more mod­er­ate in scope.

Mid-rise and medium den­sity is going to be a grow­ing wave in the future,” Ng says. But think rooftop ter­race, not small back yard.

Tall orders

That’s not to say we won’t see any more “sexy tow­ers.” There will always be a mar­ket for big, glam­orous projects in the down­town core.

As a city, Toronto is still fairly under­de­vel­oped. We have all these huge pock­ets of the core that are not devel­oped,” says Ng.

She sees Toronto’s devel­op­ment as long over­due, but expects a few grow­ing pains.

There is a grow­ing dis­con­nect between what Toron­to­ni­ans need and what the city can offer.

We are being hin­dered by a lack of infra­struc­ture. Lower ranked cities have bet­ter infra­struc­ture. What major city in the world has no tran­sit fund­ing, yet this city is the engine of Canada?” asks Ng.

She also feels the pace of devel­op­ment has out­stripped the pace of com­mu­nity ser­vices down­town. Though tran­sit may be serv­ing an area and there may be bars and restau­rants, new com­mu­ni­ties lack parks, com­mu­nity cen­tres, after school pro­grams, and other fam­ily ori­ented ser­vices you would expect in a sub­ur­ban environment.

There is a bit of a mis­match that over time will bal­ance out. The pop­u­la­tion is already demand­ing it.”

Flex­i­ble pro­por­tions required for Canada’s kitchen

Toronto is the first stop for many new Cana­di­ans when they decided to set­tle here. The first thing they do while wait­ing for res­i­dent sta­tus is rent an apart­ment in Toronto.

The CMHC says 22.3% of condo units are rental units. Its final 2012 report noted that con­dos were “vir­tu­ally the only source of new rental sup­ply in the GTA.”

Com­ment: Which is the main dri­ver of the invest­ment condo mar­ket. Investors do not buy them to flip them, they buy them to rent them out and hold them for years. With vacancy rates under 1%, ten­ants are liv­ing up for rentals. Some have bid­ding wars. Investors are thrilled to buy con­dos know­ing that they get their pick of qual­i­fied tenants.

The GTA vacancy rate rose slightly to 1.7%, but the CMHC is pre­dict­ing the num­ber will shrink to 1.5% over the next year.

Com­ment: I was told under 1% last month. Even if it is 1.7%, that is still VERY low.

Con­do­minium vacancy rates held steady at 1.2%, and the CMHC noted that demand for these units matched supply.

It’s a hot rental mar­ket,” says Kwok Anson Kwok, VP of sales and mar­ket­ing for Pin­na­cle International.

Peo­ple say there are tons of cranes, but it’s like turn­ing on a bunch of ovens. You don’t know what peo­ple are baking.”

Though there appears to be many units on the mar­ket, they will all be com­pleted at dif­fer­ent times.

Com­ment: And they are bought and paid for, they are not all going to be put up for sale, as so many peo­ple think. Even with 28,000 com­ple­tions this year, at least 90% are sold Of the remain­ing 10%, the builder will keep some and rent some, so they won’t all be listed. Nor will they all go on MLS. Even so, what is another 2,500 con­dos in a mar­ket that sees over 85,000 sales a year?

Landlord-lite

Who are these “investor-landlords?” Accord­ing to Kwok, today’s buy­ers are sur­pris­ingly diverse, and the line between investor and end user is very, very blurry.

Some are older peo­ple who pur­chase three units, one to live in and two to rent out for retire­ment income; par­ents buy­ing for their stu­dent chil­dren who will rent or sell the unit when their adult child mar­ries; or fam­i­lies buy­ing in the same build­ing to stay close to each other, but will rent out units as cir­cum­stances change.

Kwok feels that unit size and lay­out need to be as flex­i­ble as pos­si­ble so buy­ers have mul­ti­ple options.

A lot can hap­pen in a cou­ple of years, so think­ing about poten­tial life changes is key.”

Com­ment: Which is why you see many con­dos for sale right after a build­ing is com­pleted. Peo­ple bought these up to 5 years before, lots of things in your life can change in that period of time.

For Kwok, a one plus den in the 575–700 sq. ft. range or junior two-bedrooms in the 880 sq. ft. range pro­vide opti­mum flexibility.

They are “small enough so I can sell it or rent it out, but it’s big enough so I could live in it.”

Flat until fur­ther notice

Pres­i­dent of Cityzen Devel­op­ment Group, Sam Crig­nano, is sur­pris­ingly relaxed con­sid­er­ing all the doom and gloom being bat­ted around about the GTA condo mar­ket. He’s a guy who’s been through a cycle or two.

Com­ment: Because the doom and gloom is just words. It is not real­ity. It has no basis in real­ity. It is just the neg­a­tive spin of the media and some pro­fes­sional spoil sports. Who cares, the data and infor­ma­tion out there con­tra­dicts their every word. As I point out as much as I can!

I believe the mar­ket will remain flat for the first half of the year and we’ll begin to see some signs of life in the sum­mer with a bet­ter­ing in the fall.”

Com­ment: Bingo! Maybe even sooner. The first half of April was 180 degrees from what we saw in Q1 this year.

Any aver­age year will pale when com­pared to 2011/early 2012′s fever pitch. This year is shap­ing up to be rather aver­age, and maybe that’s a good thing.

Com­ment: Which is what every­one seems to for­get. The past cou­ple of years were off the charts, record-setting, just plain crazy. So now a drop to the still-very-high 5–10 year trend is not a sign of impend­ing col­lapse. It is a return to the high side of nor­mal. Which is still fair above what we had seen before a few years ago.

The mar­ket now is tak­ing a healthy pause,” says Crig­nano. “We didn’t see any wild fluc­tu­a­tions on the cost side or on the sales side. I don’t think there’s going to be much down­ward movement.”

Com­ment: You said it!

As sup­ply and demand bal­ance out, but if you’re wait­ing for a large price cor­rec­tion, well…

Com­ment: … you are going to be wait­ing a long time.

The rental mar­ket con­tin­ues to be tight. That sig­nals a ten­ta­tive buyer that’s on the side­lines wait­ing to see what hap­pens. I don’t think much is going to happen.”

Sam’s top 3 tips:

1. Look­ing for a deal? When you’re ready to move, the sales office is not the only place you can buy new. “Look for a unit pur­chased by an investor,” he says. They sell before occu­pancy because they bought low early on. This gives investors flex­i­bil­ity on the price, so bargain.

Com­ment: Hah! Like any investor is going to just give you a deal and lose money… But buy before reg­is­tra­tion, prices gen­er­ally rise 10% after the condo reg­is­ters. Assign­ments can be a good deal. Look for those who NEED out, they are moti­vated. Investors are not moti­vated, they can keep the unit and rent it out.

2. Be first, if you can wait. “The first pur­chasers who visit the sales office are usu­ally the ones who get a bet­ter deal. Try and get in there early on with an agent.”

Com­ment: But you have to be one of the first peo­ple through the door. A week later, you are too late.

3. Don’t choose build­ing over neigh­bour­hood. Shop neigh­bour­hood first, and con­sider what you will be sur­rounded by in five years when you finally take occupancy.

Sunny out­look long-term

The indus­try might have taken a bit of a break to re-evaluate, but I think every­body is opti­mistic about sum­mer and fall,” says Brian Brown, vice-president of Life­time Developments.

His opti­mism is shared by many real estate bro­kers he works with, he says.

Com­ment: Yes, those of us who work in the indus­try and know what we are talk­ing about. I really don’t care about the oth­ers, this is not what they do for a living.

I know there’s been some con­cerns, but a lot of devel­op­ers are feel­ing more com­fort­able these days. Even in talk­ing to the city, it’s not as if the num­ber of re-zoning appli­ca­tions they receive has slowed down.”

Brown does note that buy­ers are becom­ing more selec­tive. “It just goes to show if you have the right site at the right price it will do very well.”

Will there be some deals to be had? “Some of the devel­op­ers are being a lit­tle more cre­ative with incen­tives and pack­ages,” Brown says, but over­all he doesn’t see huge dis­counts hap­pen­ing any­where downtown.

Brian’s top 3 tips:

1. Choose a rep­utable builder. Be sure to visit the developer’s pre­vi­ous projects. Ask your bro­ker to see the project’s finan­cial infor­ma­tion. Financ­ing prob­lems could mean the build­ing may not achieve the build qual­ity you were promised.

Com­ment: No one is going to show you their finan­cial infor­ma­tion, that is just stupid.

2. Don’t buy purely on price. The loca­tion is most impor­tant. Who will be your neigh­bour in five years? Is there exist­ing tran­sit, retail, and schools?

Com­ment: Amen. Price should be the last thing you con­sider. Look at the neigh­bour­hood, builder, build­ing, view, units, size, etc. Then think about price if every­thing else checks out.

3. Deals on the last few units. Some devel­op­ers sell until they reach the amount of sales at which they can get con­struc­tion financ­ing, then pull the remain­ing prod­uct off the mar­ket, sell­ing the last units at a pre­mium price after the build­ing is com­plete. Other builders pre­fer to sell their entire inven­tory, short­en­ing the sales process (it costs money, too). The final few suites may be priced very well, or offered with extra incen­tives. These units aren’t “left-overs.” You may just find what you’re look­ing for.

Com­ment: No, the last ones are the ones that no one else wanted. And likely you will not want either. Builders will hold a unit for years instead of cut­ting the price $5,000. Trust me, there are NO deals with builders.

—————————————————————————————————–
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.

—————————————————————————————————–

Fearing crash, Toronto condo builders retreat

Bloomberg News

Toronto condo builders are slowing development in a bid to avoid a crash after a decade-long boom led to 159 towers now under construction.

Comment: Are they slowing down for that reason, or are you just creating a newsy headline? Have builders told you this? No? Ah right, so it could just be a lull, a seasonal thing. Maybe because of the terrible weather we had all of the first part of this year? Maybe the city was slow with permits? Could be 100 different reasons, but you are going to speculate the worst reason you can think of so that the news looks bad. Nice…

So far this year, they’ve announced 13 new condominium projects, the fewest since the recession in 2009, when there were just three over the same period, figures from real estate researcher RealNet Canada Inc. show. In the same period last year, 29 new projects were announced, including Tridel Corp.’s Ten York, the third-tallest residential tower in the country at 75-stories when it was first marketed.

Comment: Q1 2012 had 20 degree weather on February – we have feet of snow the same time this year. If you don’t know that real estate is weather-dependent, then you have no right writing real estate stories.

“Most developers have their hands in their pockets right now,” said Brad Lamb, president of Brad J. Lamb Realty Inc., a developer and the city’s largest condominium broker. His firm, which is marketing more than 45 high-rise developments in the city, won’t start a new project until 2014, Lamb said in an interview at Bloomberg’s office in Toronto. Lamb said he has eight projects in Toronto and Ottawa “on the drawing board.”

Comment: Yet he did not say that he was not building because he was afraid and was trying to avoid a crash. Does Mr. Lamb know you put those words in his mouth, by implication? I would think he would not like that very much.

The slowdown comes as a near-record supply of condos comes to market in a city with the most towers being constructed in the world, according to BuzzBuzzHome, a Toronto-based real estate listings and research firm. Developers are trying to manage the slowdown as buyers retreat amid tighter mortgage rules, a slowing economy and the burden of record consumer debt.

Comment: Comes to market? You mean complete. That means that units that are already BOUGHT AND PAID FOR are done and people take possession of them. They are not being offered for sale and flooding the market. Figures from Realnet, who you quote above, show that around 10% of new condos are offered for sale once the owners take title. So even a heavy year like 2013 will be, with some 28,000 completions, will see around 2,800 new listings added to an annual sales total of around 85,000. So maybe 3% more… wow… so much extra inventory, what will we ever do?

The supply of new high-rise units reached 21,262 in February, 34% more than the same period a year ago and close to a record 21,696 in October 2012, RealNet figures show. About 61,000 units are currently under construction — the most ever — and a record 35,757 residential units will come on stream next year, RealNet said.

Comment: Clarify your data. Are there 21,262 new condos currently for sale? And the 35,757 coming “on stream” – what does that mean? Built? Sold? Offered on MLS? You are throwing around numbers that mean nothing. Like 61,000 units for sale. It can take 3 years or more for a large tower to be built, once ground is broken. Those 61,000 units could complete this year through to 2016 or beyond. It means nothing.

Canceled lumen

Developer Concord Adex postponed its previously announced Lumen this year, a 30-story building in a cluster of condos near the Gardiner Expressway, a major highway that connects the western suburbs with the city, according to BuzzBuzzHome.

Comment: Why did they cancel it? No sales? Crappy design? Bedrooms with cars zooming past the windows? Did they need 38 storeys to make financial sense and the city would only approve 30 storeys? You cannot simply through stuff like this around without context. Unless you are just trying to write a negative story.

Menkes Development Ltd was one of the first to announce this year, putting its 29-story 365 Church development on sale for purchase in March. Due for completion in 2017, unit size starts at 323 square feet among the smallest in the city.

“Condo prices are not going up now the way they have been,” said Finn Poschmann, vice president of research at the C.D. Howe Institute in Toronto. “From the developers’ side, they’re saying, ‘OK, enough is enough right now. We’re digesting a shift in the market as it is, and we really don’t need to be beat up more.’”

Comment: Builders have realized that they have hit the wall in terms of what first time buyers and investors will buy. But they are shrinking units, which pushes up the cost per square foot. Trust me, condos are not going down in price any time soon.

Sales dropping

Sales of high-rise homes in the city have dropped 34% since 2011 after rising 64% in the past decade until 2012. Prices have declined 5.5% over the past two years, according to RealNet.

Comment: New condos we are talking about here, let’s be clear. And if there are a record number of completions, how could there be less sales? More completed condos means more were bought. And taking a slice out of a longer term is cherry picking the data. Your two data sets overlap – how could sales drop from 2011-2013 when sales rose from 2002-2012? If sales rose in 2011 and 2012, how did they drop? Your math makes no sense…

Sales are weakening after the government tightened mortgage rules to curb record household debt and orchestrate a so-called “soft landing” in the housing market. Benchmark interest rates held at 1% since 2009 in the longest pause since the 1950s stoked a housing boom. The government has been trying to rein it in, shortening amortizations in June to 25 years from 30 years, the fourth time in four years it tightened home loan regulations. The Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions also introduced tougher standards for lenders.

Comment: And it worked – sales fell around 10-15%. But once we hit July and have two months with the same mortgage rules, we will not be talking about less sales anymore. The funny part is that numbers will probably rise again through the end of next year and will look strong against the weaker 2012 numbers. And the press will go on about rising sales – just as they did about the dropping sales – with no context. Mark my words!

The government has also pressured banks not to cut home loan lending rates below 3%, with Finance Minister Jim Flaherty saying March 19 that “we don’t want a race to the bottom on mortgage rates.” Manulife Financial Corp. withdrew a promotional 2.89% five-year fixed mortgage rate after the finance department called the bank to express the minister’s “displeasure.”

Comment: No, Flaherty did not tell banks to stay above 3% – he just said he was not happy when BMO offered the lower rate. They responded by offering 2.79% to their best clients, secretly. And I have seen ads in CIBC offering 2.99% mortgages with 3% cash back.

Governor warns

The effect of the government’s focus on rates and borrowing was that many first-time home buyers were priced out of the market and grew cautious as Mark Carney, the Bank of Canada governor, emphasized the risk to an over-heated housing market, Poschmann said.

“Everyone knows that soft landings are difficult to negotiate,” Poschmann said. “So you use multiple tools, you push on multiple buttons, and that’s what the government has done.”

Comment: And finally one worked. But most first-timers will just wait and save more, or buy something different, or look outside the 416.

Investors are beginning to hear about the high amount of supply and are backing off, Will Dunning, president of real estate market analysis firm Will Dunning Inc., said in a phone interview from Toronto. The government’s mortgage tightening has taken at least a quarter of condominium buyers off the market, he said.

Comment: No, they certainly are not. Why would they? Not when they can buy a condo and have a line up to rent it out. Vacancy rates are like 0.8% now, there are bidding wars on rentals. Landlords have their pick of tenants. This is exactly what investors want. I have heard from builders that they are banging on their doors asking why they are not building. The buyers taken out of the market are first-time buyers, owner-occupiers, not investors.

Attractive investment

“Low interest rates made condos a very attractive investment, I wouldn’t say a bubble but I would say too much activity,” he said. “There are multiple outcomes, including the investor saying ‘It’s time to get out of this market’ and if a lot of them say that at the same time, then you see prices fall.”

Comment: No bubble. There is no sudden increase, in sales or prices. Prices have risen around 3-8% annually since 1996 – how is that a bubble? And take off 2% for inflation, so it is more like 1-6%. Whoo. And sales have remained awfully steady for a decade now, how is that a bubble? Sure, more condos that houses, but if you can’t see the demographics behind that, then I can’t help you.

Prices of single-family homes in the city are continuing to rise due to the lack of available properties and space constraints on building. Homes are at a record premium of $204,000 ($200,866) to their high-rise counterparts, according to RealNet data. Since 2009, condo prices have risen steadily 25%, compared to a 45% spike for low-rises over the same period.

Comment: The difference can be even higher than that. I think you are talking new, since Realnet tracks new developments. But in the resale market, condos are averaging around $350-360,000 while detached homes are now over $900,000 – on average.

Still the Toronto Real Estate Board, or TREB, forecasts the slowest overall growth since 2008 this year, with average home prices of $515,000 in 2013, a 3.6% advance over 2012. The board forecasts 80,000 total housing sales this year, a 6.5% decline from last year and what would be the steepest decline since 2008.

Comment: What? We are now calling “only” a 3.6% price rise a problem? This is a sign of somethign bad? Seriously? People used to say 8% annual increases were a sure bubble, now 3.6% is a sign of market collapse? Really? And we tend to forget that 2011 was a crazy year and last year would have been just as bad had the new mortgage rules not changed things halfway through the year. If we have 80-85,000 sales, then it is right in line with the 10-year trend. Again, not the beginning of the apocolypse. Please, context folks. Saves me a lot of typing!

Two markets

“It’s a tale of two markets when it comes to price growth,” said Jason Mercer, head economist at TREB. “On the low-rise side of the market it’s been extremely tight. There’s a lot of competition out there and lots of inventory. On the condo side, you’ve got quite a bit of supply.”

Comment: Yet they both sell and both increase in value over time.

The boom in some ways has helped regulate the supply coming to market, Lamb said. Developers are all simultaneously building a record number of units, which means there isn’t enough construction equipment such as cranes, or enough workers to go around, delaying sales, construction, and occupancy. Developers saw this coming more than a year ago, Lamb said.

That may not be enough to engineer a soft-landing.

“We had a housing bubble in 1989 that burst, so there’s an example of where the government policy did not create a soft landing,” Craig Alexander, senior economist at Toronto-Dominion Bank, said in a phone interview from Toronto. “Real estate has generally been more volatile than the overall economy and it’s tended to underperform during recessions and then rebound early in the economic recovery.”

Comment: There was no government policy in 1989. People went crazy speculating and pushed prices up 127% in about 15 months. Then, it stopped. Dead. And prices dropped. But they never went below where they were when it began. Sure, if you bought at the peak you had to wait until about 2006 to see your house worth the same again, but that was something very very different than now. People need to stop comparing it. A 127% jump in a little over a year is very different that 5-6% a year for a decade and a half.

Land demand

Demand for space to develop downtown remains strong. Residential land transactions hit a record $2.75 billion dollars last year, encompassing all transactions for residential property, land to build residential properties, and for mixed- use purposes, according to RealNet.

Housing starts have also begun to rise again after reaching the lowest level in almost two years in January. They rose for a second month in February to a 184,028 annual rate.

“On lower volume, the housing price is still creeping higher — in the equity market that doesn’t last, it’s a divergence,” said Jeffrey Burchell, fund manager at Aston Hill Financial Inc., which manages $6.7 billion in North America. “You run for the hills when you see that.”

Comment: What? That does not even make sense to me… And why are we asking an asset manager to comment on real estate? I don’t comment on the stock market.

Aston Hill owns shares of InterRent Real Estate Investment Trust, an Ottawa-based residential multiresidence manager that owns about 4,700 units in Ontario.

“If you see the market going up on low volume, you just sell everything and walk away for a while,” Burchell said. “It’s bizarre that housing prices are still going up but volume’s down because all it does is it takes less to tip it all over.”

Comment: That does not make sense either. If volume is down, it is because there is less supply. High demand and low supply means lower overall sales. High demand and lower supply also pushes prices up. I am confused how this is read as a bad thing.

—————————————————————————————————–
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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  • As condo sales slide, 3 projects test market

    Susan Pigg – Toronto Star

    Three major new condo devel­op­ments will launch over the next two weeks – includ­ing the tallest build­ings to hit Toronto’s water­front – as devel­op­ers brace for the ulti­mate test of the state of the condo market.

    The projects will be far more than just glass-and-steel tow­ers. They will be giant ther­mome­ters pro­vid­ing a quick read­ing of how much heat is left in a condo mar­ket that’s cooled con­sid­er­ably since last year’s fever­ish pace of sales.

    Tridel will launch sales Sat­ur­day of its much-anticipated Ten York project. Orig­i­nally slated to be 75 storeys, and the high­est build­ing on Toronto’s water­front, it’s now down to 65 storeys and 695 suites because of issues with the small site and protests the project was too tall for such a prime location.

    It will be over­taken in two weeks when Empire Com­mu­ni­ties launches Eau du Soleil on the Eto­bi­coke water­front with two tow­ers, 66 and 44 storeys, and a stag­ger­ing 1,250 suites.

    In the next few days, the 44– and 48-storey King Blue project will also launch sales of some 800 units planned for King and Peter Sts. in the down­town enter­tain­ment district.

    King Blue Condos at King & Blue Jay Way

    King Blue Con­dos at King & Blue Jay Way

    The flurry of big condo launches is highly unusual for this late in the year, but reflects the fact that devel­op­ers have been hold­ing their breath, and hold­ing off on launches, try­ing to get a bet­ter sense of where the new condo mar­ket is headed after last year’s record 28,000 sales.

    The fact that condo sales have been drop­ping dra­mat­i­cally and inven­tory ris­ing has prompted hous­ing ana­lyst Ben Rabidoux to describe Toronto’s condo mar­ket as “a fly in search of a windshield.”

    Devel­op­ers, how­ever, remain cau­tiously optimistic.

    We’ve spent a tremen­dous amount of time review­ing this project, look­ing at the num­bers and mak­ing sure we have it right,” says Tridel vice pres­i­dent Jim Ritchie.

    There is obvi­ously a seg­ment of the mar­ket­place that thinks this is not a good time to buy, but we believe we’ve found enough (buy­ers) who have a longer-term vision. Even if there are ups and downs in the mar­ket in the short term, these units won’t be up for five years. This is build­ing for the future.”

    Empire toyed with delay­ing its sales launch until the busier spring sea­son, said exec­u­tive vice-president Paul Golini, but decided it might actu­ally have a mar­ket advan­tage going head to head against just two other projects.

    We’re not going to get con­fused with a myr­iad of devel­op­ments and we’re all dis­tinct and in very dif­fer­ent areas of the city.”

    Ten York Condos

    Ten York Condos

    Tridel believes its key advan­tage with Ten York is loca­tion – just steps from the bur­geon­ing rail­way lands and down­town core – and has already had 5,000 buy­ers express interest.

    While investor inter­est has def­i­nitely cooled, it remains strong, Ritchie and Golini believe. And these projects will def­i­nitely test that belief.

    The num­bers from condo research firm Urba­na­tion paint a sober­ing pic­ture of the condo mar­ket now com­pared to last year’s record year for sales and launches.

    As of the third quar­ter of 2011, there were 87 condo projects with 19,028 units announced across the GTA. This year launches are down about 20%, to 68 projects and 15,221 units, Urba­na­tion reports.

    While a record 28,190 new con­dos sold in 2011, shat­ter­ing all pre­vi­ous records, they’re expected to come in closer to 17,000 this year, bet­ter reflect­ing long-term trends insists Ritchie.

    Rabidoux is highly crit­i­cal of the “eye-popping pace” of new condo launches with tens of thou­sands of con­dos already under con­struc­tion and the eco­nom­ics mak­ing less and less sense for investors.

    With new con­dos now aver­ag­ing $600 to $700 per square foot in the down­town core – Tridel’s one bed­rooms will be about $626 per square foot – it’s becom­ing increas­ingly dif­fi­cult for investors to cover their costs with rents, says Rabidoux.

    But Ritchie remains real­is­tic. None of these new projects will go ahead unless some 70% of the units are pre-sold, and that’s unlikely to hap­pen, as it did rou­tinely last year, in just a few weeks.

    In fact, Tridel has given Ten York 18 months – six months longer than his­toric sales norms.

    What hap­pened in 2011 was once in a life­time. We’re just return­ing to a nor­mal mar­ket, and that’s good.”

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