simuls
Senior Member
Hi Simuls,
Your steady eddy 9% is an assumption. From 1992-2004, in Toronto, housing prices appreciated 0% above the rate of inflation.
I have no idea where you got this from. I'm going to leave it you to prove it to me.
Here you go.
http://www.torontohomes-for-sale.com/4a_custpage_2578.html
As you'll note, I was wrong, and housing prices have just caught up with their value in 1989. That means a 0% increase in the last 20 years if you'd bought at peak in 1989. If you'd bought in 1992 or 1987, you wouldn't have earned a dime until about 2004.
It is true that if you'd bought in 1996, you would've done well - although I would suggest that this is mostly relegated to the detached home market. Condos were still selling for under $200/ft in 2001 - the same as they were selling at in 1988.
I'm not saying there's not money to be made. This condo run has been very very good to me and given me returns I simply could not have dreamed possible and if I believed I could continue this trend I would. But everything I see indicates otherwise.
As for the 15 000 new units in the downtown core. These are not part of the "inventory" of unsold units. These are units that have already been bought by someone. Conservative estimates suggest 30% investors. Who is moving into these units? People who've been living with their parents? Sure. Some of them. But more likely? People who are already renting condos. This has the potential to lead to a double or triple whammy effect on supply. Only 1500 new units have registered in the downtown core in the last 18 months - that is why there is low supply. 15 000, in such a concentrated area, in the next 18 seems too scary a number to just dismiss.
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