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Baby, we got a bubble!?

Canadian housing market defies doomsayers with spring surge Add to ...
Andrea Hopkins

TORONTO — Reuters

Published Monday, Jul. 01 2013, 7:46 AM EDT


Daniel DiManno sold his Toronto house for less than he had hoped and wanted to see if prices would cool before he bought a new one. But Canadian mortgage rates are rising again and that’s spurring DiManno and others to jump back into the market, cutting short an already brief housing downturn.

“I saw that they are going to increase rates, so I called my bank last Friday and locked in 2.5 per cent for 120 days,†said the 31-year-old accountant, starting the clock on a four-month search for a new home before borrowing gets more expensive.

After nearly a year of cooling sales and plenty of concern that Canada could head for a U.S.-style housing crash, demand has roared back in key markets. What’s still unclear, however, is whether the recent surge is a reinflation of a real estate bubble, a final rush of buyers before rising rates choke off demand, or just a sign of market resilience.

The rise in mortgage rates comes after North American bond yields jumped on fears that an improving U.S. economy will cause the Federal Reserve to wind down its monetary stimulus program, known as quantitative easing, more quickly than expected.

After a long, cold spring that dampened house hunting, May sales of existing homes rose 3.6 per cent, the biggest monthly gain in almost 21/2 years, returning the market almost to where it was before Canada’s Conservative government tightened lending rules in mid-2012 to stave off a housing bubble.

Housing starts also jumped much more than expected in the month, adding to evidence that late-spring buyers have breathed life back into a market that some had forecast was heading over a cliff.

Toronto real estate agent Steven Fudge said he was starting to believe the market was back in balance after a cool-down. But the spectre of higher rates has brought buyers back, marking either a new phase of a bubble or the last kick of a dying mule, he doesn’t know which.

“In the last couple of weeks, there’s been a real strong murmur ... anticipating a bump in rates,†said Fudge, a sales representative at Bosley Real Estate Brokerage, which operates the Toronto property website urbaneer.com. “It’s like fuel on the market. There’s now a whole bunch of buyers locking in 60- to 90-day mortgage pre-approval.â€

One of his clients lost a 17-player bidding war this week for a downtown Toronto house. The home, listed at $499,000, sold for more than 25 per cent over asking.

“I’ve been counselling buyers to be cautious,†he said. “It really feels like almost anything can happen.â€

The question of whether the late-spring surge marks a reinflation of a real estate bubble is hanging over the industry.

The federal housing agency, the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., this week revised up its outlook for sales, construction, and price increases in 2013 and 2014, effectively declaring the downturn over.

“The market was moderating in the second half of 2012. Then we’ve had an inflection point, and went into a moderate positive trend since the beginning of 2013,†said Mathieu Laberge, deputy chief economist at CMHC. “We should see this type of trend for housing starts going forward.â€

The agency, which insures the majority of mortgages Canadian banks issue, expects average national prices to rise 1.6 per cent in 2013 and 2.1 per cent in 2014, which would be the “soft-landing†policy makers want and a long way from dire predictions of a 10-per-cent to 25-per-cent price crash.

“I’d say we feel good. I mean, we’re not out of the woods yet, but we feel good,†said Brian Hurley, chief executive officer of Genworth Canada, a unit of Genworth MI Canada Inc. and the largest private residential mortgage insurer in Canada.

Hurley acknowledges he was feeling afraid last year when sales dropped and analysts worried that tighter mortgage rules had squeezed too many buyers out of the market.

Prices fell in Vancouver, which had been Canada’s hottest market, but national prices gains never slowed below an annual 2 per cent.

To be sure, some say it is too soon to celebrate the end of the mild downturn, and a spring bounce is not a measure of strength. If buyers want to get into the market before rates rise, won’t that just steal demand from the future?

Mortgage rates have begun to inch higher as global bond yields climb. Canadian mortgage rates are typically priced off the government’s five-year bond, which now yields 1.80 per cent, up from a 60-year low of 1.076 per cent in June last year.

But others believe the spring surge may reflect demand that was held back by the tighter rules, and the housing market’s failure to really cool means a bubble is starting to inflate again. Official Canadian interest rates are not expected to rise until late 2014, so mortgage rates won’t rise fast or furiously.

“A lot of forecasters like myself are expecting a relatively flat market, but there’s a significant upside risk that if rates remain at current levels indefinitely, you’re going to start to heat the houing market back up,†said Craig Alexander, chief economist at Toronto-Dominion Bank, Canada’s second-largest lender.
 
Everything is easy on paper.
A soft landing in the actual conjuncture would be a miracle
I would love to see prices going up or down. Flat means stagnation and staying ill longer time.
I don't think that we are like Japan, quite the opposite.
Anyway, let's see the bond market this next weeks and the stats for July




Canadian housing market defies doomsayers with spring surge Add to ...
Andrea Hopkins

TORONTO — Reuters

Published Monday, Jul. 01 2013, 7:46 AM EDT


Daniel DiManno sold his Toronto house for less than he had hoped and wanted to see if prices would cool before he bought a new one. But Canadian mortgage rates are rising again and that’s spurring DiManno and others to jump back into the market, cutting short an already brief housing downturn.

“I saw that they are going to increase rates, so I called my bank last Friday and locked in 2.5 per cent for 120 days,” said the 31-year-old accountant, starting the clock on a four-month search for a new home before borrowing gets more expensive.

After nearly a year of cooling sales and plenty of concern that Canada could head for a U.S.-style housing crash, demand has roared back in key markets. What’s still unclear, however, is whether the recent surge is a reinflation of a real estate bubble, a final rush of buyers before rising rates choke off demand, or just a sign of market resilience.

The rise in mortgage rates comes after North American bond yields jumped on fears that an improving U.S. economy will cause the Federal Reserve to wind down its monetary stimulus program, known as quantitative easing, more quickly than expected.

After a long, cold spring that dampened house hunting, May sales of existing homes rose 3.6 per cent, the biggest monthly gain in almost 21/2 years, returning the market almost to where it was before Canada’s Conservative government tightened lending rules in mid-2012 to stave off a housing bubble.

Housing starts also jumped much more than expected in the month, adding to evidence that late-spring buyers have breathed life back into a market that some had forecast was heading over a cliff.

Toronto real estate agent Steven Fudge said he was starting to believe the market was back in balance after a cool-down. But the spectre of higher rates has brought buyers back, marking either a new phase of a bubble or the last kick of a dying mule, he doesn’t know which.

“In the last couple of weeks, there’s been a real strong murmur ... anticipating a bump in rates,” said Fudge, a sales representative at Bosley Real Estate Brokerage, which operates the Toronto property website urbaneer.com. “It’s like fuel on the market. There’s now a whole bunch of buyers locking in 60- to 90-day mortgage pre-approval.”

One of his clients lost a 17-player bidding war this week for a downtown Toronto house. The home, listed at $499,000, sold for more than 25 per cent over asking.

“I’ve been counselling buyers to be cautious,” he said. “It really feels like almost anything can happen.”

The question of whether the late-spring surge marks a reinflation of a real estate bubble is hanging over the industry.

The federal housing agency, the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., this week revised up its outlook for sales, construction, and price increases in 2013 and 2014, effectively declaring the downturn over.

“The market was moderating in the second half of 2012. Then we’ve had an inflection point, and went into a moderate positive trend since the beginning of 2013,” said Mathieu Laberge, deputy chief economist at CMHC. “We should see this type of trend for housing starts going forward.”

The agency, which insures the majority of mortgages Canadian banks issue, expects average national prices to rise 1.6 per cent in 2013 and 2.1 per cent in 2014, which would be the “soft-landing” policy makers want and a long way from dire predictions of a 10-per-cent to 25-per-cent price crash.

“I’d say we feel good. I mean, we’re not out of the woods yet, but we feel good,” said Brian Hurley, chief executive officer of Genworth Canada, a unit of Genworth MI Canada Inc. and the largest private residential mortgage insurer in Canada.

Hurley acknowledges he was feeling afraid last year when sales dropped and analysts worried that tighter mortgage rules had squeezed too many buyers out of the market.

Prices fell in Vancouver, which had been Canada’s hottest market, but national prices gains never slowed below an annual 2 per cent.

To be sure, some say it is too soon to celebrate the end of the mild downturn, and a spring bounce is not a measure of strength. If buyers want to get into the market before rates rise, won’t that just steal demand from the future?

Mortgage rates have begun to inch higher as global bond yields climb. Canadian mortgage rates are typically priced off the government’s five-year bond, which now yields 1.80 per cent, up from a 60-year low of 1.076 per cent in June last year.

But others believe the spring surge may reflect demand that was held back by the tighter rules, and the housing market’s failure to really cool means a bubble is starting to inflate again. Official Canadian interest rates are not expected to rise until late 2014, so mortgage rates won’t rise fast or furiously.

“A lot of forecasters like myself are expecting a relatively flat market, but there’s a significant upside risk that if rates remain at current levels indefinitely, you’re going to start to heat the housing market back up,” said Craig Alexander, chief economist at Toronto-Dominion Bank, Canada’s second-largest lender.
 
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/repo...-for-toronto-condo-investors/article12911613/

Prognosis grim for Toronto condo investors
SHERYL KING

Special to The Globe and Mail
Published Tuesday, Jul. 02 2013, 5:00 AM EDT
Last updated Tuesday, Jul. 02 2013, 9:30 AM EDT

Warren Buffet is fond of saying that “you never know who is swimming naked until the tide goes out.” Well, when interest rates start to climb, Toronto’s condominium investors may be about to get a lesson in the perils of swimming in the buff.

Bond yields worldwide jumped in recent weeks as the Federal Reserve hinted its bond-buying program could soon begin to wind down. The Canadian bond market has not been immune to this force, with 5-year government bond yields up from 1.33 per cent five weeks ago to 1.84 per cent last week.

Ten-year yields are up 80 basis points over the same short time span. (A basis point is 1/100th of a percentage point.) Posted mortgage rates in Canada have moved higher in lock-step, with the cheapest five-year fixed mortgage rate up 65 basis points over the same period, putting it back above 3 per cent.

This puts significant pressure on Toronto condo investors. Yet a recent blog post on Urbanation, a website that tracks Toronto’s condo market, touted the invest-to-rent option – presumably because the previously popular invest-to-flip option is no longer profitable – noting that the average rent for a Toronto condo is now $1,856, handsomely up 10 per cent from two years ago.

Based on the average condo sale price of about $330,000, this appears to be a healthy rental yield of 6.7 per cent – on the surface, it’s a tidy sum compared to the low-risk option of parking money in a “return-free” savings account at a chartered bank. What the report failed to mention, however, were the carrying costs.

So, here are the sober math facts of the net rental yield. Interestingly, banks do not charge a premium for an investment-property mortgage (under a puzzling assumption that there is no added default risk to investment properties versus owner-occupied purchases) so the posted rates apply to an investor.

Based on a 3.05 per cent mortgage rate, a five-year fixed mortgage with 20 per cent down-payment and 25-year amortization period requires a payment of $1,265 per month or $15,187 a year on an average condo, a 7-per-cent increase from just one month ago. Monthly maintenance, including utilities, will set the investor back conservatively $4,000 per year on a one-bedroom downtown condo. Take another $2,600 per month off for real estate and income taxes.

All that is left is $535 per year, for a net rental yield of 0.16 per cent. And a repair or a paint job could wipe out that profit in a flash.

The question becomes, why would an investor take on the risk of owning a condo for virtually no annual return?

The answer: They are not. Even before rates began to spike in May, Toronto condo sales were flagging, with sales down a whopping 55 per cent in the first quarter of 2013 versus a year ago. Diminished affordability was no doubt a contributor to the sales slump as the market felt the pinch from the new regulations requiring a shortened amortization period – the equivalent of a 100-basis-point increase in the five-year mortgage rate.

However, potential buyers are also worried about a price correction. Price gains in the condo market were a skimpy 1.2 per cent in May, which is a far cry from the 10-per-cent-plus returns investors had come to expect before the federal government’s mortgage crackdown. Double-digit returns made condo purchases worth the risk; 1 per cent annual returns, not so much.

Added to the reduced affordability and flagging price expectations that have beaten down demand is that builders are using flawed demand projections. Urbanation cites the latest household formation number for Toronto of 34,000 units per year, according to the Census published by Statistics Canada, as the expected annual sales figure for condominiums.

The problem is that – at best – only half of those households are interested in high-rise living. According to the same Census report, the true household formation rate for condo demand is 17,000. This 50/50 split between single-family households and multi-unit dwellers has not changed in Toronto in the past 10 years. As such, the often-heard argument that shifting demographics will absorb this excess inventory does not stand up to the facts.

With these facts in mind, the pipeline of condo construction becomes much more daunting. Condominium builders completed 17,000 units in the past year, yet still have more than 50,000 units under construction. As such, the facts are that builders are sitting on more than three years’ supply at a time when it will only take another 50 basis point rise in mortgage rates to put a rental investor into a position of negative carrying costs.

From oversupply, to reduced price expectations, to surging mortgage rates, the Toronto condo market is feeling the squeeze from all sides now. Here’s hoping the spike in mortgage rates is short-lived.
 
June numbers are out

TORONTO, July 4, 2013 -- Greater Toronto Area REALTORS® reported 9,061 sales through the TorontoMLS system in June 2013 – down by less than one per cent compared to June 2012. Over the same period, new listings were down by a greater rate than sales, suggesting market conditions became tighter.

"The sales picture in the GTA improved markedly in the second quarter of 2013. While the number of transactions was still down compared to 2012, rates of decline were substantially improved compared to the first quarter," said Toronto Real Estate Board President Dianne Usher.

"As a growing number of homebuyers, many of whom put their purchase on hold due to stricter lending guidelines, now reactivate their search, the expectation is for renewed growth in home sales in the second half of 2013," added Ms. Usher.

The average selling price in June was up by 4.7 per cent year-over-year to $531,374. In line with the 2013 norm, June price growth was driven by the single-detached and semi-detached market segments, particularly in the City of Toronto. Over the same time period, average condominium apartment selling prices remained in line with 2012 levels.

"The short supply of low-rise home types in many parts of the GTA relative to the number of households looking to buy continued to prompt strong upward pressure on selling prices of singles and semis," said Jason Mercer, TREB's Senior Manager of Market Analysis. "We have also seen enough buyers in the better-supplied condo apartment market to provide support for selling prices at current levels."
http://www.torontorealestateboard.c...ket_updates/news2013/nr_market_watch_0613.htm
 
Average apartment size is still shrinking, therefore flat average sale prices imply the $/sqft is increasing. As confidence returns to the condo market this Summer and Fall, an increased number of larger sized condos will pull up that average sale price stat.

Beneath all these numbers, the Toronto real estate market is very healthy and moving forward based on solid local variables. In addition, mortgage rates will remain very low for many many years to come. Just look at the eye watering levels of gov't debt in the western world. Central banks won't be allowed to raise rates until gov'ts can afford to pay them. I'm not holding my breath...
 
Average apartment size is still shrinking, therefore flat average sale prices imply the $/sqft is increasing. As confidence returns to the condo market this Summer and Fall, an increased number of larger sized condos will pull up that average sale price stat.

Beneath all these numbers, the Toronto real estate market is very healthy and moving forward based on solid local variables. In addition, mortgage rates will remain very low for many many years to come. Just look at the eye watering levels of gov't debt in the western world. Central banks won't be allowed to raise rates until gov'ts can afford to pay them. I'm not holding my breath...

You don;t have a single number to support all the above nonsense
You sound like a RE pumper, worse than a misinformed investor
 
Does anyone know how pre-construction sales are counted? I.e. are they counted in the month the deal is signed, are they counted upon occupancy, or are they counted when the final deal closes at registration?
 
Does anyone know how pre-construction sales are counted? I.e. are they counted in the month the deal is signed, are they counted upon occupancy, or are they counted when the final deal closes at registration?

After you sign the deal, there's a 10 day cooling off period, if you wish to proceed after that you are bound to the contract. That's when the sales are counted.
 
You really need to learn to try to make your case without insulting people. Tone it down and try to learn tact and you won't be ignored as much.
No need for that
One of your assumtions is being invalidated as we speak.
Bond are going up pushed by good news coming from US.
Your very low for many years estimate is a complete fantasy
 

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