From the front lines
I've been living in a great furnished sublet for the past year, which is now ending. Originally I was planning buying this fall, but after more research on the markets (housing and otherwise) have since decided to wait another year (or maybe two).
As such, I'm making the rounds looking at various rental/lease units. Most of the ones I'm looking at are broker represented MLS listings.
I'm finding a lot of newly built units listed for sale, but now coming on the market for rent. Whenever I meet a new agent, they consistently give me the same patter:
"a beautiful unit in a great building ",
"Had someone look it yesterday...we're just finalizing the offer",
"won't last".
At the same time, I'm getting lots of anxious follow up calls a couple of days after asking if I've made a decision, or telling me that their client might be willing to move on the price.
Whenever they hear that I had been thinking about buying, they seemlessly transition into "Let me help you buy a place" mode.
When I tell them my thoughts on the T.O. market (down a further 15%+ by the end of next year), then without skipping a beat they transition to the same soundbites:
"no one can predict the market",
"now is exactly the best time to buy",
"we're not like the US",
"things are going great for me and I'm seeing lots of activity in the market".
"don't think in investment terms, think about owning your own home"
They run out of patter when I push back with my detailed understanding of the market (earning to price ratios, 14 yr real estate cycles, TREB market watch reports, consumer debt to earnings ratios, Toronto historical peaks/valleys 1978-2008, Canada tracking the US 2 yrs behind, etc).
But I must admit, these cats are smooth. They are charming, personable, and have useful facts/soundbites at their disposal. If I wasn't pre-prepared, I'd be easy pickings.
Anyway, my plan is to eventually lease the space that meets my needs, but is also willing to accept an offer 15%+ below listing.
In relation to the topic thread, what I'm saying is don't listen to what they tell you. Don't listen to the offer they make/advertise. Offer/ask for what you want, and let them think you are going to walk, and then see what they are willing to offer you. My 2 cents.