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May Sales Still Seeing Increases

Greater Toronto Area Real­tors reported 4,476 trans­ac­tions through the Toronto MLS sys­tem dur­ing the first 14 days of May. This result rep­re­sented a decline of 9.7% com­pared to the same period in 2012. Sales declines were larger for the City of Toronto, at 11.4%, ver­sus the sur­round­ing regions where sales were down by 8.6% year-over-year.

Com­ment: We should also note that new list­ings were down 3.3% over all, so the decline was more like 6.4% if we take that into account. And really, both 9.7% and 6.4% are marked improve­ments over Q1′s decline of 17%!

Despite fewer sales this year com­pared to last, com­pe­ti­tion between buy­ers in most seg­ments of the mar­ket remained strong enough to pro­mote annual rates of price growth above the rate of infla­tion. A house­hold earn­ing the aver­age income in the GTA can com­fort­ably afford the mort­gage pay­ments asso­ci­ated with the pur­chase of an aver­age priced home,” said Toronto Real Estate Board Pres­i­dent Ann Hannah.

Com­ment: And that is all that mat­ters. Price-to-income and rent-to-price ratios be darned.

The aver­age sell­ing price dur­ing the first two weeks of May was $543,838 – up by 5.4% in com­par­i­son to the same time frame last year. Price growth was strongest for low-rise home types, but pos­i­tive price growth for condo apart­ments in the City of Toronto was also reported.

Com­ment: It would seem that rumours of the condo market’s demise have been greatly exag­ger­ated. Again.

Con­tin­u­ing the pre­vail­ing trend over the last year, the low-rise seg­ment of the mar­ket drove over­all price growth dur­ing the first half of May, as months of inven­tory remained below his­toric norms for key home types,” said Jason Mer­cer, TREB’s Senior Man­ager of Mar­ket Analysis.

Sum­mary of Toronto MLS Sales and Aver­age Price – May 1–14

City of Toronto (“416″)
2012 Sales: 1,685 | Avg Price: $594,789 | New List­ings: 3,499
2013 Sales: 1,901 | Avg Price: $573,137 | New List­ings: 3,767

Rest of GTA (“905″)
2012 Sales: 2,791 | Avg Price: $513,077 | New List­ings: 5,661
2013 Sales: 3,054 | Avg Price: $480,578 | New List­ings: 5,089

All of the GTA
2012 Sales: 4,476 | Avg Price: $543,838 | New List­ings: 9,160
2013 Sales: 4,955 | Avg Price: $516,089 | New List­ings: 8,856

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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.

—————————————————————————————————–

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.

—————————————————————————————————–

Analysis: Canadian housing — bursting bubble or gentle landing?

Andrea Hop­kins – Reuters

It’s look­ing like an unset­tling spring in Cana­dian hous­ing, a mar­ket that has proven far more even-keeled and less scary for investors in recent years than in the United States.

In what is tra­di­tion­ally the best sea­son of the year for real estate agents, Toronto agent Ecko Jay says the indus­try is see­ing far fewer buy­ers, a result of tighter lend­ing rules, high prices and fear of a bub­ble. In Toronto alone, sales dropped 40 per­cent in the first quar­ter from a year ear­lier, mak­ing home­own­ers and investors jumpy.

Com­ment: That is total BS. Sales dropped 17%, NOT 40%. Please, try to keep the exag­ger­a­tions from sound­ing like out­right lies.

Some peo­ple want to cash in and pull out now,” said Jay, a 26-year vet­eran of the Toronto hous­ing mar­ket, not­ing some are spooked by worst-case pre­dic­tions of a 20 per­cent drop in prices from cur­rent levels.

Com­ment: And those who did that before lost a lot of money. The sin­gle pre­dic­tion of a 25% drop was made over a year ago – and prices ROSE 6% since then. So do you really believe that when it has been shown to be wrong?

They say, ‘Before it gets low, let’s sell,’” Jay added. “And some of my clients want to sell and rent, hop­ing that when it goes down they will pick up some­thing at a bet­ter price. Nobody has a crys­tal ball.”

Com­ment: But prices are ris­ing, every month. Why would any­one sell? There are no indi­ca­tions of a drop com­ing, noth­ing at all. Sup­ply is less than demand, demand is strong, rates are low, rentals are tight, immi­gra­tion is high, incomes are ris­ing – where is the trig­ger for any­thing to fall? Nowhere!

But then there are Cana­dian pol­i­cy­mak­ers, econ­o­mists and mar­ket watch­ers who have the next best thing to a crys­tal ball. Their data and analy­sis point not to a burst­ing of the bub­ble like in the United States in 2007-08, when prices from peak to trough dropped 35%, but rather a gen­tle eas­ing in Cana­dian hous­ing prices, or per­haps just a momen­tary pause.

Com­ment: And there you have it, the voice of rea­son. Some areas of the coun­try will see a lit­tle drop, some a flat­ten­ing, some just slower growth. But over­all, the trend will be flat or small increases. Over any 5–10 year period, prices will only ever go up.

Naysay­ers believe Canada may be too opti­mistic and rely­ing heav­ily on that old saw that Canada is not nearly as reck­less as the United States. After all, the debt-to-income ratio of Cana­di­ans is at a record high, close to the lev­els expe­ri­enced in the United States before its mar­ket crashed, and home own­er­ship is at nearly 70%, also a record and five points more than its neigh­bors to the south.

Com­ment: Debt to income really does not influ­ence house prices. It only comes into play if things go south – which they are not going to do. What hap­pened in the US was due to lying banks, preda­tory lend­ing and out­right crim­i­nal activ­ity. That cou­ple with dumb buy­ers who did not read the fine print and mort­gages whose rates tripled from one month to another. There are no sim­i­lar­i­ties, none.

But Canada does have some things going for it, most notably a move by the gov­ern­ment to tighten mort­gage lend­ing rules four times in five years, most recently in July 2012, which has taken some buy­ers out of the mar­ket, damp­en­ing demand.

Com­ment: And made sure that those who did buy were put through very strin­gent guidelines.

If you look at the devel­op­ments over the last year in Canada and com­pare them to the sit­u­a­tion in the U.S. before the cri­sis, there is a clear dif­fer­ence,” said Julien Rey­naud, an econ­o­mist at the Inter­na­tional Mon­e­tary Fund who fol­lows Canada.

It is not just a ques­tion of hous­ing sup­ply and demand; it is rather a dif­fer­ence in the sys­tem of mort­gage finance.”

Cana­di­ans have more equity in their homes than Amer­i­cans did, the default rate is lower, the sub-prime mar­ket is tiny, and mort­gage inter­est is not tax-deductible, so there’s no incen­tive to build up debt.

Com­ment: Their default rate hit 35% in some areas, fully 1 in 3 mort­gages were not paid. Our rate in Canada is 0.34%. Barely a third of a per­cent. To put that in per­spec­tive, their rate is 100x higher than ours. And in absolute num­bers, with 10x the pop­u­la­tion, it means the US had 1,000 times more mort­gage defaults than Canada. Three orders of mag­ni­tude. So yeah, our default rate is just a lit­tle lower.

Finally, mort­gages are struc­tured as recourse loans in which assets other than the house are held as col­lat­eral. That makes Cana­dian home­own­ers less likely to walk away than their Amer­i­can cousins.

What makes Cana­dian hous­ing dif­fer­ent makes it stronger,” says Tom Lewandowski, who analy­ses Cana­dian banks for Edward Jones in St. Louis.

LEARNING FROM THE NEIGHBORS

Lewandowski believes Canada will not suf­fer a U.S.-style hous­ing crash sim­ply because pol­i­cy­mak­ers had the ben­e­fit of watch­ing it hap­pen next door.

What we expe­ri­enced here in the U.S. with hous­ing mar­kets and reg­u­la­tors goes directly to the atti­tude and changes the min­is­ter of finance has made in Canada. A reg­u­la­tor who is being proac­tive is tak­ing Step One in mak­ing sure the hous­ing mar­ket doesn’t find itself in a bub­ble,” Lewandowski said.

Both Bank of Canada Gov­er­nor Mark Car­ney and Finance Min­is­ter Jim Fla­herty have been on the march against a hous­ing bub­ble for years, aware how low rates and loose lend­ing stan­dards in the United States ignited a boom and bust there.

The cen­tral bank has held rates low since the global finan­cial cri­sis because growth remains tepid and global woes weigh on Canada’s export mar­ket, and Cana­di­ans can find a five-year mort­gage rate below 3%.

But the government’s grad­ual tight­en­ing of rules for bor­row­ers – a firm admis­sion that the mar­ket was hot­ter than any­one was com­fort­able with – has taken some steam out of the mar­ket, and econ­o­mists, like Car­ney, seem to believe a soft land­ing may be at hand.

We’re encour­aged by the fact the level of hous­ing starts has come down to slightly below demo­graphic demand, as we see right now, there’s still more adjust­ments to go,” he said in tes­ti­mony to Par­lia­ment last week. “We’re encour­aged by the evo­lu­tion of house prices in a num­ber of mar­kets. We’re on the path to a bal­anced evo­lu­tion of the house­hold sec­tor and we all have to con­tinue to be vigilant.”

—————————————————————————————————–
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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