Sunny Batra
Active Member
Sunny, what are the new asking price for 507sft and 511sft models?
I was told from the developers office that prices of these units on higher floors would be between 340k - 350k
Sunny, what are the new asking price for 507sft and 511sft models?
No one seems to be talking about the immigration. Approximately 100,000 people immigrate to Ontario every year out of which 80% immigrants settle in GTA. Assuming that these 80% or 80,000 people have family of four that means 20,000 families settling into GTA every year. That means we need about 20,000 more homes each year in GTA to shelter these immigrants. So demand is there. Those people have to live somewhere and that demand will result in increased home prices.
Prices in Toronto are still low compared to some of the major cities in North America. London and Manhattan cities are averaging at $2,000 per square foot and Vancouver is around 1000 - 1200 per square foot. Toronto is still around 500 - 600 per square foot. Therefore Toronto seems to attract investors from around the world.
I have mentioned some of these in my February's newsletter http://sunnybatra.posterous.com/hot-real-estate-market-continues-its-trend-in
Also there isn't much land left in Toronto. Most of these building are being built on parking lots. We are beginning to see developers buying older developments and demolishing them for the purpose of building a condo. Some of the examples would be X2 Condos, One Bloor, Five Condos, Chaz On Charles etc. It reminds me of an old expression, “Have you bought your land yet, we are not making any more!"
If you are buying for the purpose of flipping then you might win some and might loose some similar to stock market. This is not investing; it is called gambling. However if you are buying with the intention of keeping it for lets say 10-15 years or even more you will surely enjoy very good returns.
View attachment 4368
Invest with confidence and stay away from gambling.
No one seems to be talking about the immigration. Approximately 100,000 people immigrate to Ontario every year out of which 80% immigrants settle in GTA. Assuming that these 80% or 80,000 people have family of four that means 20,000 families settling into GTA every year. That means we need about 20,000 more homes each year in GTA to shelter these immigrants. So demand is there. Those people have to live somewhere and that demand will result in increased home prices.
Prices in Toronto are still low compared to some of the major cities in North America. London and Manhattan cities are averaging at $2,000 per square foot and Vancouver is around 1000 - 1200 per square foot. Toronto is still around 500 - 600 per square foot. Therefore Toronto seems to attract investors from around the world.
I have mentioned some of these in my February's newsletter http://sunnybatra.posterous.com/hot-real-estate-market-continues-its-trend-in
Also there isn't much land left in Toronto. Most of these building are being built on parking lots. We are beginning to see developers buying older developments and demolishing them for the purpose of building a condo. Some of the examples would be X2 Condos, One Bloor, Five Condos, Chaz On Charles etc. It reminds me of an old expression, “Have you bought your land yet, we are not making any more!"
If you are buying for the purpose of flipping then you might win some and might loose some similar to stock market. This is not investing; it is called gambling. However if you are buying with the intention of keeping it for lets say 10-15 years or even more you will surely enjoy very good returns.
View attachment 4368
Invest with confidence and stay away from gambling.
Regarding immigration: It is true that for the last decade there has been a huge influx of immigration. However, as was pointed out, historical trends do not inherently guarantee future trends. Immigration may shift location, province. Prices rely also on the general state of the economy.No one seems to be talking about the immigration. Approximately 100,000 people immigrate to Ontario every year out of which 80% immigrants settle in GTA. Assuming that these 80% or 80,000 people have family of four that means 20,000 families settling into GTA every year. That means we need about 20,000 more homes each year in GTA to shelter these immigrants. So demand is there. Those people have to live somewhere and that demand will result in increased home prices.
Prices in Toronto are still low compared to some of the major cities in North America. London and Manhattan cities are averaging at $2,000 per square foot and Vancouver is around 1000 - 1200 per square foot. Toronto is still around 500 - 600 per square foot. Therefore Toronto seems to attract investors from around the world.
I have mentioned some of these in my February's newsletter http://sunnybatra.posterous.com/hot-real-estate-market-continues-its-trend-in
Also there isn't much land left in Toronto. Most of these building are being built on parking lots. We are beginning to see developers buying older developments and demolishing them for the purpose of building a condo. Some of the examples would be X2 Condos, One Bloor, Five Condos, Chaz On Charles etc. It reminds me of an old expression, “Have you bought your land yet, we are not making any more!"
If you are buying for the purpose of flipping then you might win some and might loose some similar to stock market. This is not investing; it is called gambling. However if you are buying with the intention of keeping it for lets say 10-15 years or even more you will surely enjoy very good returns.
View attachment 4368
Invest with confidence and stay away from gambling.
Re: "running out of land"
You have got to be kidding! There's enough vacant and underused land in Toronto, south of the 401, to house another 10 million people! That's without knocking down a single pre-1970 building!
I will say one thing. I don't know if posting here and talking about Sunny so much helps him get referrals and known. They say there is no such thing as bad publicity, just publicity , and he is certainly getting that.
I am not here to get any publicity of any kind rather I am posting my opinion similar to you. Yes I am realtor but that does not stops me to post my opinoin let it be good or bad regardless of my profession. You can certainly agree or disagree with my opinion and I respect that as I would expect the same from you in return.
All I know is that investing in Real Estate runs in my blood since my family has been investing in Real Estate for the last 30 years. They haven't flipped any property rather they kept it till today (long term investing). They bought it for just few thousands back then and are worth in millions today. In last 30 years market has gone down a few times but good thing with Real Estate is that it goes back up again and Real Estate does not dissappers like few companies on stock market.
A common question I get all the time is,†is it too late to buy? Have prices gone up too much and should I wait for them to fall before I enter the market? I have tracked home prices since 1970 when they were $29,492. I am sure there are people from 1970 still waiting to buy when prices come down! As the population increases, demand causes prices to increase. Over a long period of time, you cannot make a mistake of buying a home. If you want to speculate, buy today and sell tomorrow, that is a risky business. For the long term investor or the home owner who plans to live in the home 5-10 years there is no better investment than real estate.
so is there any bad investments in real estate in the downtown core? because a lot of the attention is focused on buying buying buying generalizing that buying anywhere in the downtown core will generate a "good return". So what are there even any bad investments in the downtown core?
Because a good investment, you should be able to calculate the Rate of Return. If you can't then you are just speculating and a lot of assumptions.
I'm not trying to argue against anything, or try to offend anyone, but it just really annoys me to hear from so many real estate agents saying "buy buy buy, ALL real estate prices will go up! and you will get a GOOD return"....
Even if ALL real estate in the downtown core do go up...i would not want to tie up a lot of cash to make so little, relative speaking. Especially with pre-constructions nowadays requiring 20% down within ONE year! Why not just buy an existing building that just built 2 years ago for less psf and have a tenant build up your equity right away if you are going to put 20% down in ONE year!
Not feasible, IMHO. But i'm just a humble investor. That's all.
Sorry, just my rant about 100s of realtors I've encountered at "VIP events" saying the same thing...
Even if ALL real estate in the downtown core do go up...i would not want to tie up a lot of cash to make so little, relative speaking. Especially with pre-constructions nowadays requiring 20% down within ONE year! Why not just buy an existing building that just built 2 years ago for less psf and have a tenant build up your equity right away if you are going to put 20% down in ONE year!
Not feasible, IMHO. But i'm just a humble investor. That's all.
...
One additional point. As an investor, you appreciate that real estate is a highly leveraged investment, long term asset financed with short term (say 5 year or variable mortgages). Hence, the past few years it has been a wonderful investment. However, if it goes the other way, leveraging very quickly wipes out your hard earned equity.