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Kensington Market

There are few parts of down­town more sto­ried than Chi­na­town and Kens­ing­ton Mar­ket. Cit­i­zens of all stripes spend leisurely Sat­ur­days wan­der­ing the fish stalls on Bald­win, the used cloth­ing stores on Kens­ing­ton and Augusta or the fruit ven­dors on most cor­ners. And few neigh­bour­hoods are as starkly dichotomous—the dis­tinct cul­tures of Chi­na­town and the mar­ket mix only as much as geog­ra­phy requires.

The market’s infa­mous pop­u­la­tion of neo-hippies and other left-leaners typ­i­cally live and wan­der west of Spad­ina; the few Chi­nese fam­i­lies that are left after var­i­ous exo­duses tend to con­gre­gate east of Spad­ina, where family-name social clubs are still a com­mon sight among the old houses on D’Arcy and Cecil. Caribbean and South Amer­i­can stores spice up the area. Bald­win Street, chock­ablock with restau­rants, has a social scene all its own. Street­cars reg­u­larly rum­ble past Spadina’s late-night eater­ies, dis­count shops and green grocers.

To the south sits Alexan­dra Park, whose Victorian-style houses, built in the 1880s and ’90s, share the area with a mass of social hous­ing from the 1960s. The res­i­den­tial aspects of the neigh­bour­hood vary widely, as do the res­i­dents: arts pro­fes­sion­als on Sul­li­van Street, in the Grange and on Kens­ing­ton proper; busi­ness folk in the gra­cious town­houses on Phoebe; condo dwellers in the Kens­ing­ton Mar­ket Lofts; and stu­dents tucked into what­ever ram­shackle cub­by­holes are available.

Kensington Real Estate Map

Kens­ing­ton Real Estate Map

With Toronto’s real-estate boom going strong all around it, Kens­ing­ton can’t remain tatty for­ever. For years, Kens­ing­ton worked because it didn’t quite work. The market’s eclec­tic chaos evolved organ­i­cally, thanks to gen­er­a­tions of immi­grant mer­chants oper­at­ing in tiny shops on nar­row lots, many with res­i­dences open­ing onto rear ser­vice laneways. The streets aren’t eas­ily nav­i­gated, and frac­tured land-ownership pat­terns allowed Kens­ing­ton to remain essen­tially unchanged for decades.

The major­ity of homes in this cul­tur­ally diverse neigh­bour­hood are decoratively-accented Vic­to­rian style, small to mid-size, 1870 – 1890 vin­tage — many with mar­ket stalls in front. Newer homes include con­do­mini­ums at Kens­ing­ton Mar­ket Lofts, 21 Nas­sau Street and 160 Bald­win Street – and “New Vic­to­rian” town homes on Oxford Street. One of a num­ber of pre­dic­tions for the future is that some of the Market’s nar­row alleys will be restored as pedes­trian mews.

For res­i­dents of Kens­ing­ton Mar­ket homes, if the mar­ket doesn’t have it, there’s handy access to the stores of Por­tu­gal Vil­lage, Lit­tle Italy, Chi­na­town, or the fash­ion­able shops of Queen Street West. Street­car ser­vice is excel­lent, and Toronto’s down­town shop­ping, din­ing and enter­tain­ment is a quick con­nect for motorists via the Gar­diner Expressway.

The Eng­lish, Scots and Irish skilled trades­men and labour­ers who built homes here left their own mark in street names as British as fish-and-chips – Bald­win and Oxford Streets, Kens­ing­ton and Wales Avenues, and others.

Kensington Market

Kens­ing­ton Market

Next to arrive, in the early 1900s, were Jew­ish immi­grants from East­ern Europe, many of them mer­chants. Start­ing out sell­ing door-to-door from hand­carts, they later began sell­ing from their carts in front of their homes… and Kens­ing­ton Mar­ket was born. Soon after, the ground floors of Kens­ing­ton Mar­ket homes were being extended and turned into store fronts.

Since then, each suc­ces­sive arrival of immi­grants has influ­enced the evo­lu­tion of Kens­ing­ton Mar­ket — from Por­tu­gal in the 1950s, from the Caribbean in the late 60s, and more recently from South and Cen­tral Amer­ica, Viet­nam and China.

In 2008, a 100-year con­tri­bu­tion to the life of the city was rec­og­nized when Canada’s only year ‘round mar­ket was des­ig­nated a National His­toric Site by the fed­eral government.

Any change may well be a tough sell for the market’s famously anar­chic denizens. The city’s tra­di­tional approach to the area has been one of benign neglect – a stance that helps sus­tain its funk­i­ness and resilience. For the past few years, how­ever, the city has had no sec­ondary plan for Kens­ing­ton, which is des­ig­nated as a his­tor­i­cally sig­nif­i­cant dis­trict in the offi­cial plan.

If the city moved to make the market’s warren-like laneways more acces­si­ble – a process that would involve expro­pri­a­tions, public-space improve­ments and changes to the city’s pol­icy of reject­ing laneway devel­op­ment – it could trig­ger a jump in real-estate prices as gal­leries, bou­tiques and cafés move in to these newly cre­ated mews.

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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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  • 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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