Toronto Loft Conversions

We know classic brick and beam lofts! From warehouses to factories to churches, Laurin and Natalie want to help you find your perfect new loft. More »

Modern Toronto Lofts

Not just converted lofts, we can help you find the latest cool and modern space. There are tons of new urban spaces across the city. More »

Unique Toronto Homes

Not just lofts, we can also help you find that perfect house. From the latest architectural marvel to a piece of Toronto\'s Victorian past, the best and most creative spaces abound. More »

Condos in Toronto

We started off selling mainly condos, helping first time buyers get a foothold in the Toronto real estate market. Now working with investors and helping empty nesters find that perfect luxury suite. More »

Toronto Real Estate

For all of your Toronto real estate needs, contact the Jeffrey Team. Laurin and Natalie are dedicated to helping you find that perfect and unique new home to call your own. More »

 

Tag Archives: toronto market

You want that dream home? Why you’ll have to join the line in this thin housing market

Car­olyn Ire­land – The Globe and Mail

Toronto real estate agent Monte Bur­ris looked out the front win­dow of a Sun­ny­side Avenue house recently and saw a small crowd lined up on the side­walk. That was 45 min­utes before he was sched­uled to receive the hordes at the first open house as the prop­erty hit the mar­ket with an ask­ing price of $1.45-million.

One week later, the sell­ers had accepted an offer of $1.65-million.

Dur­ing the inter­ven­ing days, they had also repelled a hand­ful of bully offers and turned down the seven other bid­ders on offi­cial offer night.

It was obvi­ous early on that every­one wanted the prop­erty,” says Mr. Bur­ris of Keller Williams Real Estate Inc.

The red-brick detached house has six bed­rooms and five bath­rooms. Recently ren­o­vated, it has a gas fire­place in the foyer, a large kitchen, and an expanse of glass over­look­ing the deck and backyard.

When the first bul­lies launched their open­ing salvo, Mr. Bur­ris advised his clients to wait until the sched­uled night for review­ing offers. Bul­lies often step up with an eye-popping offer, but with the pro­viso that it’s only good for a short time. They gen­er­ally refuse to par­tic­i­pate in a bid­ding war.

But list­ings for detached houses are so thin that Mr. Bur­ris knew the prospec­tive buy­ers would likely come back to the table.

I was pretty con­fi­dent they would all show up on offer night. There’s still very lit­tle inven­tory on the market.”

This one sale is emblem­atic of the fickle Toronto mar­ket right now – or as agents like Mr. Bur­ris are say­ing more and more – the two Toronto markets.

Com­ment: True enough. I have a lit­tle semi in Hill­crest that peo­ple are lin­ing up to get into. Open house is today, I am afraid of the hordes that will come…

Con­dos are a com­pletely dif­fer­ent mar­ket,” says Mr. Burris.

That seg­ment is awash in “inven­tory” as agents say. Sell­ers are forced to cut their prices or wait a long time for a sale in some cases.

Com­ment: For some, not for all. Any­thing generic is sit­ting, as there are tons of sim­i­lar units avail­able. The larger or unique ones, with a view or in a bou­tique build­ing, they are still mov­ing nicely. The prob­lem is that there are more and more bor­ing lit­tle white boxes, the condo mar­ket is awash in sameness.

Detached houses will gen­er­ally attract mul­ti­ple offers if they are ren­o­vated and located in a prime neigh­bour­hood. Condo and loft units will attract mul­ti­ple offers in many cases if they are in a bou­tique build­ing or supremely well located. They need to stand out from the competition.

The num­bers show how unpre­dictable the mar­ket is now: sales in the Greater Toronto Area remained flat with a dip of about 1% in the first half of April com­pared with the same period last year. That’s not as grim as the double-digit drops recorded in pre­vi­ous months, but it’s not the spring bounce many agents were hop­ing for.

Com­ment: Sales jumped 16% from –17% to –1% and that is not a big bounce? Sure looks like a large increase to me.

Mean­while, the aver­age price rose 4.3% in the first two weeks of April from the same period last year. List­ings rose 16% in the first half of April com­pared with the first half of April, 2012.

Com­ment: After list­ings being down, sell­ers had held back when things looked bad. Less list­ings and fewer sales, now more list­ings and higher sales. Seems sim­ple enough. And bet­ter weather helps for sure. Spring 2012 saw 25 degrees in Feb­ru­ary for Pete’s sake, which really boosted sales. This year it was cold and crappy until almost the end of April. These things make a difference.

The num­bers were buoyed by sales of single-family homes in the sub­urbs, accord­ing to the Toronto Real Estate Board.

In the City of Toronto, sales of detached houses slipped 3.4% com­pared with the first half of April last year. Condo sales in Toronto declined 4.3% year over year for the same period.

Chan­der Chad­dah of Sut­ton Group-Associates Bro­ker­age Inc. spe­cial­izes in the Ron­ces­valles area. He says sales are def­i­nitely down and the mar­ket remains spotty.

He’s advis­ing his clients who want to buy to aim for a house that does not incite a frenzy.

I had to talk clients out of an offer last week.”

The house was listed with an ask­ing price of $849,000 and Mr. Chaddah’s clients thought they might be able to stretch to an offer of $875,000 or so. Mr. Chad­dah checked out the num­ber of bids on the offer date and told his clients not to get their hopes up. “We don’t have a chance,” he advised them.

The house sold for $1.020-million.

Mr. Chad­dah says many buy­ers seem to fall into the trap of bid­ding for a house as soon as they know that other peo­ple want it.

Com­ment: I can­not say that I have ever seen that. But I have seen them try to throw in a low bid “just in case” they get it. The prob­lem is, they won’t. And if there are 20 bids, at least 10 of them are hail mary bids hop­ing beyond hope that it goes for list price or less. It won’t. What that does, though, is push up the seri­ous bids. All you have to go on in a bid­ding war is the num­ber of bids. And gen­er­ally you see the sale price around $5–10,000 per bid over ask­ing. So 10 bids could push an $849,000 house to $900,000 but 20 will eas­ily send it to $1,020,000. The peo­ple who do not want the price to go too high are the very ones push­ing it up. Had they stayed out of it, the house would have sold for $100,000 less than it did. Now, the next house on the street is listed for $899,000 with bids and sells for $1,100,000 and so on… The peo­ple who were never in the run­ning for the house have now pushed the prices even higher. Exactly what they com­plain about. I try to explain this to peo­ple but they just get mad at me. They think it is their right to make an offer… “just in case”…

There’s no ques­tion that there’s this per­verse need for affirmation.”

He says house hunters who hear that sell­ers who find out that they won’t have to join a con­test – either because the sell­ers haven’t set an offer date or because no rivals have shown up – then start to ques­tion their own judgment.

The ques­tion starts to creep in, ‘what am I missing?’”

Lots of good houses are over­looked that way, he says, and he thinks buy­ers often end up pay­ing too much as a result.

I do more talk­ing peo­ple out of houses than I ever do talk­ing peo­ple into houses,” he says.

Usu­ally buy­ers know pretty quickly if a house feels right to them. If it does, he encour­ages them to be grate­ful if other buy­ers are pass­ing it buy.

Com­ment: Exactly. Your gut tells you it is the right place. If you don’t know it the moment you walk in, then it is not for you. You should never have to con­vince your­self or jus­tify it.

If we think it’s a good house, it’s a good house and we don’t need three other peo­ple to con­firm that. Then I’ll tell them, let’s see if we can go in and knock a cou­ple of bucks off the ask­ing price.”

Mr. Chad­dah is wish­ing that many more sell­ers will decide to list soon. Often peo­ple who are think­ing of putting a “for sale” sign on the lawn will wait for spring flow­ers and bud­ding trees.

More prod­uct,” says Mr. Chad­dah. “That’s what I hope happens.”

At the same time, he tells condo sell­ers that they have to be patient.

There’s a ton of prod­uct out there.”

A really slick condo town­house, or a high-rise unit with a really good view will some­times stir up com­pet­ing bid­ders, he says.

He worked with a buyer recently who bought a nicely ren­o­vated condo on Que­bec Avenue in High Park. The ask­ing price was $489,000 and the buyer beat out the other con­tenders with an offer of $511,000.

Even when it goes over list, it’s more mea­sured,” Mr. Chad­dah says of the action.

—————————————————————————————————–
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.

—————————————————————————————————–

The buyer/seller standoff in Toronto real estate is over

Car­olyn Ire­land – The Globe and Mail

The forces guid­ing real estate are always local, but in the choppy Toronto mar­ket of 2013, the talk has turned to “hyper-local” strategies.

The var­i­ous lay­ers and pock­ets of the mar­ket are behav­ing so dif­fer­ently that buy­ers and sell­ers need to shift quickly – even as the Big Bank econ­o­mists see the over­all mar­ket waft­ing to a soft land­ing. Nation­ally, real estate prices have declined for five con­sec­u­tive months, the Teranet-National Bank house price index shows.

Van­cou­ver has had the great­est pull but Toronto is also one of the mar­kets drag­ging down the over­all index.

Com­ment: With Toronto prices ris­ing around 4% annu­ally, month over month, how can Toronto be drag­ging prices down?

But if you’re a seller in Toronto, the mar­ket looks very dif­fer­ent depend­ing on whether you’re sell­ing a gleam­ing condo suite for $899,000 or a slightly tired bun­ga­low for $549,000.

To Ricky Chadha, a real estate agent with Royal Lep­age Estate Realty, hyper-local in the condo mar­ket means he takes an inven­tory of what’s for sale down the hall – or in the build­ing next door. He doesn’t need to look far­ther. If plenty of units are up for sale in the same con­do­minium build­ing, he may advise the seller to wait a week or two to see if there’s less com­pe­ti­tion. But he doesn’t rec­om­mend that they wait any longer because try­ing to pre­dict the direc­tion of the mar­ket is too challenging.

Com­ment: Yet peo­ple who do not even work in real estate are happy to make those pre­dic­tions all the time.

I always tell peo­ple to move when it’s the right time for them to move – not to try to play the mar­ket,” Mr. Chadha said.

He says bid­ding wars are com­mon for houses in that cov­eted $500,000 to $600,000 range that attracts move-up and first-time buy­ers. Buy­ers are will­ing to com­pete for houses in that range if they are close to tran­sit, rea­son­ably move-in ready and in an appeal­ing neigh­bour­hood, Mr. Chadha said.

He con­trasts that with the spring of 2012 when buy­ers were scrap­ping even over run­down prop­er­ties near the train tracks.

Last year almost every­thing was going in mul­ti­ples because peo­ple were just so frus­trated at los­ing on so many bids.”

Unless they have a prime prop­erty, Mr. Chadha is not advis­ing sell­ers to hold off on look­ing at offers.

That’s a risky game to play these days.”

He recently sold a house in Pick­er­ing with­out an offer date because that’s an area where buy­ers have more to choose from than they do down­town. So he was pleas­antly sur­prised when two buy­ers tabled bids a cou­ple of days after the house arrived on the mar­ket with an ask­ing price of $409,900. It sold for $417,000.

We made short work of it. It was sold in two days, firm.”

Mr. Chadha said con­dos have been sell­ing more quickly recently in the seg­ment below $400,000 but have remained slug­gish at the higher end – espe­cially those con­sid­ered lux­ury units. The buy­ers are still look­ing, he said, but they often have more time to make a deci­sion because they’re less likely to have their tim­ing dic­tated by the school cal­en­dar and fac­tors like that.

I think the condo buy­ers are seek­ing out more deals.”

Com­ment: Buy­ers have been look­ing for deals since 2006 – and not find­ing them. I had a client wait, she was sure the prices would come down. Even­tu­ally, prices rose enough that she could not buy any of the con­dos we orig­i­nally looked at. There are no deals, prices are not going to drop 25%. Even if 2013 sees a net drop, it will be 5% or less. Back to where we were in 2011.

Christo­pher Bibby, an agent with Sut­ton Group-Associates Realty Inc., said he had a flurry of condo deals in Jan­u­ary after a very slow fall mar­ket. Of seven condo list­ings he sold in Jan­u­ary, five of those were holdovers from 2012, he said.

He sold, for exam­ple, a sin­gu­lar unit in the But­ton Fac­tory Lofts that had been listed since last Sep­tem­ber with an ask­ing price of $1.495-million. The prop­erty sat through the fall but in Jan­u­ary show­ings sud­denly picked up and the seller signed off on a deal at slightly less than the ask­ing price.

Com­ment: But million-and-a-half lofts do not sell fast in gen­eral, we all know that.

Through the last quar­ter of 2012, buy­ers seemed timid and sell­ers were stub­born, says Mr. Bibby.

He believes that both groups have fresh mind­sets for 2013: The stand-off has given way to a more active mar­ket where buy­ers are will­ing to step up with offers and sell­ers are will­ing to nego­ti­ate. He esti­mates that prices have come down between five and 10% from the fall but adds that they seem sta­ble at the moment.

Com­ment: As I have explained ad nau­seum, prices peak first in the spring, then again in the fall. December-January is a low point, as is August. Com­par­ing yearly high points to low points proves nothing.

The sell­ers’ expec­ta­tions are a lot more rea­son­able. Nego­ti­a­tions are tak­ing a lot longer,” he says. “But It’s healthy. It’s fine. I’m sup­port­ive of the process.”

As for where the mar­ket goes from here – espe­cially for con­dos – Mr. Bibby says it’s going to be inter­est­ing to see what hap­pens. The car­pen­ters and plumbers are fin­ish­ing up new units every day.

A lot of really good inven­tory is going to come onto the mar­ket,” said Mr. Bibby of some of the new mar­quee addresses. But he acknowl­edges that the increase in sup­ply could pro­vide buy­ers with a lot to choose from. Still, he thinks plenty of buy­ers will be attracted to the gleam­ing new kitchens and bathrooms.

At Cap­i­tal Eco­nom­ics, econ­o­mist David Madani is stand­ing by his view that real estate prices in Canada will decline by 25% over the long term.

Com­ment: If he keeps say­ing it, one day it might hap­pen. I believe he made that pre­dic­tion in 2011 first, and prices have only risen almost 10% since then. So now prices actu­ally need to fall 35% to make him right. Which is even less likely to hap­pen than it was the first time. It was a stu­pid pre­dic­tion, made only to get his name in print. Which worked. Funny thing is, no one is call­ing him on it. No one is point out that he was – and is – WRONG.

The declines so far will prob­a­bly con­tinue this year, he said, even with­out an obvi­ous trig­ger for a cor­rec­tion. He said those insist­ing a trig­ger is nec­es­sary need look no fur­ther than the Van­cou­ver mar­ket where prices have already fallen by more than 5% from a year ago even as inter­est rates have remained unusu­ally low and the job­less rate has not increased.

Com­ment: Declines? What declines? Van­cou­ver has been drop­ping for years now, shed­ding about 35% since their high point. Why look at it if you live in Toronto? Why not look at Hal­i­fax or Cal­gary where prices have risen over that same time? They have no bear­ing on the Toronto real estate mar­ket, none of them.

—————————————————————————————————–
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.

—————————————————————————————————–


Incom­ing search terms
  • bid­ding wars in real estate toronto march 2013
  • Mizrahi Developments’ Toronto condo project defies Canada’s softening real estate trend

    Toronto’s condominium sales may be cooling overall, according to the latest figures from the Canadian Real Estate Association, but there’s a hot spot in Yorkville that’s defying the sharp downward trend in the hardest hit segment of the market, producing sales results that one expert called “revolutionary.”

    In October 2012, at a time when the condo market’s fast-cooling trend was creating significant trepidation and fears of a severe correction, Mizrahi Developments launched 181 Davenport, a building of 110 units, in Toronto’s Yorkville neighbourhood. Amidst gloomy media reports about a persistent downturn in the condo market and uncertain economic conditions, 181 Davenport has defied market predictions. In just over 60 days of the launch date, over 50% of the residences have sold. Occupancy is scheduled in 2015.

    At the start of January 2013, Mizrahi Developments achieved a weekly record in dollar-figure sales with customers purchasing homes at both 181 Davenport and Mizrahi Developments’ adjacent luxury condo building, 133 Hazelton.

    Mizrahi Developments entered the luxury condominium market in Toronto in the fall of 2011, when it launched 133 Hazelton in Yorkville, a mid-rise boutique building on the northern edge of Toronto’s mid-town heritage neighbourhood with 35 residences and three townhouses. Within the first 60 days, over 50% of the residences had sold. When construction began in June of last year, 95% of the building, on schedule for occupancy in 2014, had sold in less than 9 months.

    Sales in luxury residential buildings, which constitute the top 5% of the condominium market in Toronto, have slowed in excess of the rest of the condo market, which has seen a 30% decline in sales, quarter over quarter, since 2011, according to Ben Myers, editor and executive vice-president of Urbanation Inc, a market research firm specializing in condominium development in Toronto. “In 2007 and 2008, there were very strong sales in the luxury Toronto market with the new Four Seasons, The Ritz Carlton, the Shangri-La, Museum House and 77 Charles, but there has been significant cooling since then, and some projects have had to be pulled from the market. Mizrahi Developments has been extremely successful in the face of this slowing in the luxury market,” says Mr. Myers.

    Mizrahi Developments, which has experience in real estate development and the building of luxury homes in Toronto, entered the condominium market in 2011, offering homes with unique features such as indoor/outdoor fireplaces and a high degree of custom-design flexibility, provided at no extra cost.  They became known for superior standard finishes and a degree of craftsmanship reminiscent of another era.

    At 133 Hazelton, condominiums were priced over $1,250 per square foot. The largest suite is 4,125 square feet with a panoramic view and over 2,000 square feet of outdoor terrace. 181 Davenport offers suites ranging in size from 7,000 square feet to 750 square feet. The average price in the building is $1,000 per square foot.

    “At a time of economic uncertainty, we created certainty with a quality product with superior craftsmanship in Toronto’s most valuable location,” says Sam Mizrahi, president of Mizrahi Developments. “Toronto is transforming itself into an international city. The immigration behind Canada’s growth was driving an international style of building. That’s what we went out to create: an old-world style of building with craftsmanship that reminds people of a more international, European sensibility,” explains Mr. Mizrahi. “People were looking for homes, not condominiums, and so we made sure we provided the kind of finishing details that you would find in luxury homes. It’s about perfection. That’s what luxury is.”

    “The rate of sales success that Mizrahi Developments has had is revolutionary, not at all the norm in a market of high-end customers, who are the ultimate discretionary buyers. They buy not because they need to, but because they want to,” says Mark Cohen, founding partner of The Condo Store, who has worked in the Toronto condo development market for 30 years. “With many luxury projects, many people don’t want to buy until they can see the completed building. But with these projects from Mizrahi, the customer recognizes the value of the location combined with the attention to detail and the ability to custom-design their spaces. Mizrahi Developments has created buyer confidence, and their Yorkville projects are a testament to the high-end discretionary buyer wanting and recognizing something better.”

    “What this sales shows is that when you see a slowdown in condo sales generally, you do not see a slowdown when you’re dealing with a real quality project that’s giving people what they want,” comments Jimmy Molloy, sales agent with Chestnut Park Realty in Toronto. “Mizrahi Developments has a great understanding of what the market wants. They read the market and then they respond with the right product.”

    —————————————————————————————————–
    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.

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


    Incoming search terms
  • interior designer 133 davenport condo mizrahi
  • litton town suites by oxygen toronto
  • luxury condos toronto mizrahi
  • underground path compare yorkville
  • 181 Davenport floorplans
  • floor plans for 19 elgin avenue toronto
  • show
     
    close
    You want that dream home? Why you'll have to join the line in this thin housing market http://t.co/IRN3rvwxjE