Tag Archives: toronto real estate boom
Putting Toronto’s housing boom in perspective
Dr. Sherry S. Cooper – Financial Post
Housing is a key sector in any economy and many developed countries pride themselves on a high level of home ownership. Certainly that is the case in Canada and the U.S., and increasingly the case in emerging economies such as China where home ownership has grown very rapidly. But, as we have painfully seen in recent years, over-investment in housing creates fault lines that result in enormous economic instability and dislocation.
Case in point is Spain, where the housing bubble has caused an economic disaster. For nearly a decade starting in 1999, house prices exploded in Spain as both domestic buyers, and more notably, foreign buyers poured money into residential real estate. Europeans, Russians and others were using the Costa del Sol as their vacation hideaway and condo building in all parts of Spain exploded. The return on investments in residential real estate majorly outpaced the return on any other asset class, so even ordinary Spaniards bought second and third homes expecting to rent and flip them for astonishing gains.
The growth boom in Spain was focused on housing, and households invested a significant portion of their assets in residential real estate. At its peak in 2008, nearly 80% of Spanish household assets were in real estate, well above current levels in the U.S. and Canada. For Canadians, the share (39% in 2011Q4) is close to a record high, at least as far back as 1990 when the data first became available. The Toronto condo boom has raised the spectre of a Spanish-style housing bubble fuelled in large measure by foreign capital and domestic investors — but the numbers so far pale in comparison to what happened in Spain or the U.S.
As the U.S. housing market is bottoming, Spain’s housing collapse likely has much further to go and it is taking the Spanish economy down with it. In Spain, house prices have already fallen 21% from their peak in Q1 2008 and some estimate that they will ultimately be down more than 55% before this is over. This compares to the total decline in U.S. house prices of just under 35%.
Normally, in such a situation, one part of the adjustment process is a devaluation in the domestic currency; but, because of the euro, this adjustment mechanism is not available. Instead, a hugely painful internal devaluation of wages and prices must occur.
The housing bubble in Spain was proportionately 2.5 times bigger than in the U.S. and the decline in the U.S. dollar has helped to offset some of the effect on the U.S. economy as net exports and corporate spending cushioned some of the impact. In Spain, there is no such cushioning, so the economy is in free fall and exacerbating the situation are the draconian fiscal cuts forced on the Spanish government by the stronger countries of Europe. The overall jobless rate has risen to nearly 25% and youth unemployment now exceeds 50%.
In addition, mortgages in Spain, unlike the U.S., are recourse loans so there are no ‘strategic foreclosures’ where homeowners walk away from their homes, but keep the rest of their assets. In Spain, as in Canada, losing your house means losing everything. Even with unemployment at Great Depression levels, homeowners are trying to make their mortgage payments, but many are at risk of losing everything. As well, banks are reluctant to foreclose to avoid further reductions in their already depleted capital. It has been reported that, in some cases, they are reducing monthly payments by converting amortized loans into bullet loans, increasing the risk to the bank.
Most Spanish banks have not fully reported the decline in their asset values. The cost to the government to return their banks to solvency is likely larger than currently recognized. Moreover, Spanish bank exposure to commercial real estate is also relatively high and commercial developers are largely near bankruptcy.
Lessons Learned for Canadians
Too much reliance on housing appreciation for wealth accumulation and retirement security is very dangerous. Retirement nest eggs in Spain have been obliterated, and nest eggs in the U.S. have shrunk considerably. Too much household debt is also very dangerous. It increases vulnerability to interest rate risk and to economic risk of income losses or job losses. Canadians are in much better shape than so many in the rest of the world, but Canadians have taken on far more risk than ever before. As more and more of us depend on RRSPs rather than traditional pensions and will need to rely, as well, on home equity to assure financial security, we are more vulnerable than ever to market swings and economic risk. At a time when more of the population than ever before is running out of runway before retirement, stepped-up saving and significant debt reduction are more important than ever.
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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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Government is to blame for Canada’s housing bubble
Jesse Kline – National Post
Canada’s housing market has been relatively stable over the past year, with the notable exception of Toronto, which has overtaken Vancouver as the country’s hottest real estate market. Prices in Canada’s largest city have risen 10.5% over the past year and there are now three times as many cranes dotting Hogtown’s skyline as there are in the Big Apple.
Many analysts are becoming increasingly concerned that some cities — notably Toronto, Vancouver and possibly Calgary — are in the midst of their own U.S.-style housing bubble. A document written by the country’s financial regulator and obtained earlier this year through an access to information request, expresses concern over the “emerging risk” of Canadian loans that “have some similarities to non-prime loans in the U.S. retail lending market.” Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney continued to sound the alarm as well last week over the growing level of household debt, while maintaining the overnight lending rate at a near-record low level of 1%.
Comment: Huh, what? We have loans that look like sub-prime ones? Seriously… No, we don’t. Well, we do – we have about 0.2% of our mortgages in that sort of area. As in 2 out of 1,000. That does not weigh very heavily on my mind, nor should it on yours.
The question remains as to why prices in Toronto and Vancouver — where the economy is stagnant — are rising so fast, and not in cities like Edmonton and Saskatoon — where the economy, and population, is booming. Financial Post columnist Diane Francis caused quite a stir recently, by arguing that the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation’s (CMHC) policies have led to a “deluge of hot money from abroad that is creating an artificial and potentially dangerous real estate bubble.” Her solution: “A ban on foreign buying of residences.”
Comment: Wrong. Toronto’s economy is anything but stagnant. Incomes are rising and we are the center of the app development world. There is a reason 110,000 people immigrate to this city every year. Vacancy rates are low, home ownership rates are high. There is a lot of money in Toronto and it grows every year.
Ms. Francis is at least partially correct. The CMHC controls a majority of our mortgage insurance and security markets, and guarantees 100% of the principle and interest on insured residential mortgages. Meanwhile, the Bank of Canada has maintained interest rates at artificially low levels, which only serves to temporarily inflate the market, instead of allowing any correction that would take place under normal market conditions. These two policies make Canadian real estate a very attractive investment — for both foreign and domestic buyers.
Comment: The BoC has kept the prime rate low, which affects variable rate mortgages. It does not influence fixed rates. That is the bond market, which the government does NOT control. And the market was booming as much as it is now a few years back, when rates were higher. In fact, 2007 still stands as the record year for sales volume – when mortgage rates hit 6.75%. So it ain’t rates baby!
But saying that foreigners are wholly responsible for creating a housing bubble is nothing more than fear-mongering, with people who don’t look or sound like us, being cast as the boogeyman. After all, what’s wrong with foreign investment? Foreigners bring money into the country, which creates jobs and drums-up business here at home. Developers make money, construction companies hire employees and buy capital equipment, the rental supply increases and local businesses profit the whole way through. It’s a win-win for everybody.
Comment: The foreign money is going more into $300,000 new condos from builders. That is certainly not pushing prices up in any appreciable way. The Bugaboo mafia and their stab-you-in-the-eye bidding wars are the main driver of prices increases in Toronto. One bungalow in North York does not a trend make. And the very idea is racist and wrong and offends me to my core.
The Statue of Liberty calls for “your tired, your poor, your huddled masses.” If we were smart, we’d engrave the CN Tower with a call for “your innovations, your money and your wealthy investors.” We should want to be known as a country that welcomes investment.
Comment: We are – and look how it benefits us!
What we don’t want is an artificially inflated housing market that will bring the whole economy crumbling down when the bubble bursts (see the United States, circa 2008). But if some parts of Canada are indeed in the midst of a housing bubble, the blame can be placed squarely on government policy.
Comment: But it is not artificially inflated. Anyone who says that has nothing to back it up. To compare Canada or Toronto to the US of 4 years ago is misleading and kind of dumb. They had sub-prime issues, we do not. They were bleeding money fighting wars, we are not. They were losing jobs, we are gaining. I could go on, but the only similarity between them and us is the fact that we are noth part of North America.
By guaranteeing 100% of CMHC-insured mortgages and 90% of privately insured loans, the government removes the risk from banks and investors, making it much easier to get loans. And although the government has tightened lending standards recently and may do so again in the near future, a report from the Reason Foundation in the U.S. found that government guarantees always under price risk, drive mortgage investment into unsafe markets and inflate housing prices by distorting the allocation of capital. Government simply cannot price risk accurately; while private lenders, if unencumbered by market-distorting policies, have every incentive to price risk appropriately.
Comment: Easy to get loans? Are you serious? Ask my clients how easy it is… Or go try it for yourself. Our banks are evil and stingy with their money. They really do make people jump through hoops and are very careful who they lend to. That is why our default rate is barely 1 in 1,000, if even that. Our banking system is the envy of the world and our mortgage system is solid as a rock.
In order to prevent a U.S.-style housing bubble, we should not hang a “closed” sign on our border and prevent inflows of capital; we should instead push to privatize the CMHC and allow private companies to assume the mortgage risk, instead of the taxpayer. We also need a monetary policy that allows interest rates to rise and fall with market forces, instead of at the whim of central planners.
Comment: Hear, hear! I like the idea of more private mortgage insurers. We do have GEMI already, CMHC is not the only game in town (which this writer either ignores or does not know). But other insurers would soften the risk to the government.
Only by removing policies that artificially inflate the market in the short term, will we be able to create a real estate market that is sustainable in the long run.
Comment: What policies are these? The prime lending rate? That is the only thing the government has control of. The market is what it is because of the 1,000,000 buyers, sellers and their agents that exchange properties every year in Canada.
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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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