TheKingEast
Senior Member
And so it begins...
My point was that your link shows a much less dire view of Canadian debt than your own opinion. Maybe those daily numbers aren't as bad as we think?
KA1, CN, Interested,
what do you think? First serious cracks on the horizon? Dare to predict the next 6 months?
I stand by my prediction given in March of last year: 18-24 months for clear cracks to show up. So here we are, 18 months later...
Total damage over several years 25%+ from the peak.
I am no expert. Looked at the published figures and ratios, looked at other countries, looked at what's
happening with my rental properties ... came up with the conclusion noted above ... call it a semi-educated
guess. I always assumed that the guy who started this thread wanted other people to answer two simple
questions: when and by how much. So I tried to do it.
There is an article today that Vancouver is coming down a lot faster than thought. If that happens in Toronto as well, psychology will change quickly.
We can overshoot. I stand by idea that we could retest 2008 prices.
However, I also believe that the stock market will correct vastly by 2014 or 2015 when everyone realizes that QE3 has worked poorly(which i expect) and people grow fearful. However, prices may not go that far because people may hold onto investment real estate as a place to get yield.
So I think 15% but 25% not out the realm of possible. Condo market will be hit more than SFH.
those who bought over $550/sq.ft. will regret the decision for mid-upper product that is currently $600-$700+. Hi end will encounter the $1000/sq.ft. ceiling and have difficulty. Just my guesses (re Precon in the core).
What would you consider as the ideal price for condos in term of $/sq.ft?
IMO, $400-425 psf for mid $ - range product in dt core.
mid $ - range = pretty much everything in the market except Yorkville proper or luxury products like SL, 4S, Ritz, etc.
IMO, $400-425 psf for mid $ - range product in dt core.
mid $ - range = pretty much everything in the market except Yorkville proper or luxury products like SL, 4S, Ritz, etc.
So a 500sqft condo in Toronto should be worth $212,500?
It doesn't seem realistic at all when considering the low interest rates & job growth in the GTA. Current Min Wage can handle this mortgage.
At these prices, you will have bidding wars and the price will jump again.
The truth is there is a lot of well employed people in the GTA and a lot of well off immigrants.
Your ideal prices will only make sense if jobs disappear to due economic head winds. Interest rates go over 5%.
What would you consider as the ideal price for condos in term of $/sq.ft?
I disagree. Under no circumstance will prices in the downtown core ever hit $400 psf again. U can hold me to that statement and laugh me out the room if that ever happens.
i'm going to guess that you're under 35 years olds and never experienced a housing recession beyond 2008, which was an anomoly due to gov't interference via changes in CMHC rules and drastic lowering of B of C bank rate from 4.75% at November 2007 to 0.50% at April 2009.
long term, prices follow inflation and local incomes.
i'm going to guess that you're under 35 years olds and never experienced a housing recession beyond 2008, which was an anomoly due to gov't interference via changes in CMHC rules and drastic lowering of B of C bank rate from 4.75% at November 2007 to 0.50% at April 2009.
long term, prices follow inflation and local incomes.
low interest rates will rise.
one should be considering the 25+ years of an amortization on a mortgage, not just your current term.
Interest rates over 5% is possible and probable. In fact, 5% is under the historical average for the Bof C bank rate, and bank prime rates are definitely higher than the BofC bank rate.
http://www.bankofcanada.ca/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/selected_historical_page1_2_3.pdf
http://www.fin.gov.bc.ca/PT/bcm/ref/cibcHistoricalPrime.pdf
re: job growth in the GTA
as of June 2012 -
Canada’s unemployment rate: 7.3 %
Ontario’s unemployment rate: 7.8 %
Toronto's unemployment rate: 9.0%, its highest level since October 2010 and the highest among all Ontario economic regions.
http://www.servicecanada.gc.ca/eng/on/offices/2012/06-olmb-june.shtml