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Power back in the buyers' hands

cdr108

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Power back in the buyers' hands

"I think we are getting back to the days when sales people in new condo projects can't just be order-takers"
TERRENCE BELFORD

From Friday's Globe and Mail
November 14, 2008 at 12:00 AM EST

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20081114.reBelford1114/REStory/RealEstate/home

Dig through the clutter of statistics — of sales declines, project launches, economic growth forecasts, volatile investment markets — and the future for Toronto condominium sales does not look bad at all.

In fact, according to a number of industry experts, we are probably heading into a buyers' market.

"I think we are getting back to the days when sales people in new condo projects can't just be order-takers," says Barry Lyon of N. Barry Lyon Consulting Ltd.. "Buyers are no longer going to be numbers on a chart. Developers are going to have to be a lot more innovative and offer incentives to make sales.

"I can see the next six months as being a great opportunity for new condo buyers."

What leads Mr. Lyon and others to that conclusion is a series of events that started this past summer as the international credit crunch began to take hold.

First, many developers decided they had better get projects to market before the situation got worse, so in some cases they brought forward launch plans. Then they found their lenders demanded higher presales figures before they would consider advancing a dime to build new projects. If the requirement in the past was 60 per cent of the units be presold, now it is more likely to be 70 per cent.

The pressure was on to do deals.

The result was a near-record number of projects launched this fall. George Carras, president of RealNet Canada Inc., says his company recorded 36 new condo developments launched between Aug. 25 and the end of October. Right now, there are more than 330 of them on the market across the Greater Toronto Area.

But at the same time, buyers stayed away in droves. Whereas last year sales campaigns geared to a project launch resulted in 47 per cent of the suites being sold in a matter of a month, if not a week or two, this fall that figure dropped to just 27 per cent, Mr. Carras says.

The slow uptake of new suites in what is traditionally the hottest period in the sales cycle came on the heels of September statistics that showed the market was down 28 per cent from last year, and 3 per cent lower than in 2006.

Now that may seem to spell doom and gloom to the layman, but veteran market watchers such as Jane Renwick, executive vice-president of Urbanation Inc., say that not too much should be read into that big dip.

Last year, the condo market broke all records, she explains. It was an anomaly, the equivalent of the condo industry winning Lotto 6/49.

"I think what we are looking at is just a return to more normal market conditions," Ms. Renwick says.

That is a view shared by both Mr. Carras and Mr. Lyon. They see perhaps another six months of uncertainty. Some developers will delay plans to launch projects. Buyers, especially first-timers, will be more cautious when it comes to making a decision to invest in a new condo.

But that wait-and-see attitude will bring benefits as well. Mr. Carras and Mr. Lyon say they have already seen a drop in the price of land suitable for future projects. As fewer developers butt heads over who gets a specific chunk of land, demand drops and with it the owner's asking price.

The same will likely be true for construction costs. Again, fewer projects means less competition for available labour and materials. Less competition means less upward pressure in price.

"I don't see prices going down on new condos, but I can see any increases slowing," says Ms. Renwick.

What gives the experts the most comfort are four key factors, Mr. Carras says. The first is the fact that the GTA continues to be the destination of choice for half of Canada's net immigration — 100,000 people a year all looking for a place to live.

No. 2 is intensification. The province has mandated that Toronto grow up not out. That means condos, not single-family homes, are the way of the future.

The third factor is rental apartments. Few developers are building them any more. That means, in the future, those units will have to come from investors who buy condo suites and then rent them out.

Finally, while the experts predict the GTA will see about 18,890 condo suites coming on the market this year, that flood tide of new units is really just a drop in a very large ocean. RealNet says there are 1.9 million private dwellings in the GTA, so even though the numbers are impressive they reflect only a 1-per-cent increase in supply.

So, back to Mr. Lyons and his contention that buyers will indeed benefit in the coming months.

"I think this is a great time for people to educate themselves about what is out there and to shop around," he says.

"As developers jockey to make sales, I can even see them offering incentives such as help with down payment requirements. Over all, I think there is a great opportunity for buyers ahead."
 
Power back in the buyers' hands

"I think we are getting back to the days when sales people in new condo projects can't just be order-takers"
TERRENCE BELFORD

From Friday's Globe and Mail
November 14, 2008 at 12:00 AM EST

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20081114.reBelford1114/REStory/RealEstate/home

Dig through the clutter of statistics — of sales declines, project launches, economic growth forecasts, volatile investment markets — and the future for Toronto condominium sales does not look bad at all.

In fact, according to a number of industry experts, we are probably heading into a buyers' market.

"I think we are getting back to the days when sales people in new condo projects can't just be order-takers," says Barry Lyon of N. Barry Lyon Consulting Ltd.. "Buyers are no longer going to be numbers on a chart. Developers are going to have to be a lot more innovative and offer incentives to make sales.

"I can see the next six months as being a great opportunity for new condo buyers."

What leads Mr. Lyon and others to that conclusion is a series of events that started this past summer as the international credit crunch began to take hold.

First, many developers decided they had better get projects to market before the situation got worse, so in some cases they brought forward launch plans. Then they found their lenders demanded higher presales figures before they would consider advancing a dime to build new projects. If the requirement in the past was 60 per cent of the units be presold, now it is more likely to be 70 per cent.

The pressure was on to do deals.

The result was a near-record number of projects launched this fall. George Carras, president of RealNet Canada Inc., says his company recorded 36 new condo developments launched between Aug. 25 and the end of October. Right now, there are more than 330 of them on the market across the Greater Toronto Area.

But at the same time, buyers stayed away in droves. Whereas last year sales campaigns geared to a project launch resulted in 47 per cent of the suites being sold in a matter of a month, if not a week or two, this fall that figure dropped to just 27 per cent, Mr. Carras says.

The slow uptake of new suites in what is traditionally the hottest period in the sales cycle came on the heels of September statistics that showed the market was down 28 per cent from last year, and 3 per cent lower than in 2006.

Now that may seem to spell doom and gloom to the layman, but veteran market watchers such as Jane Renwick, executive vice-president of Urbanation Inc., say that not too much should be read into that big dip.

Last year, the condo market broke all records, she explains. It was an anomaly, the equivalent of the condo industry winning Lotto 6/49.

"I think what we are looking at is just a return to more normal market conditions," Ms. Renwick says.

That is a view shared by both Mr. Carras and Mr. Lyon. They see perhaps another six months of uncertainty. Some developers will delay plans to launch projects. Buyers, especially first-timers, will be more cautious when it comes to making a decision to invest in a new condo.

But that wait-and-see attitude will bring benefits as well. Mr. Carras and Mr. Lyon say they have already seen a drop in the price of land suitable for future projects. As fewer developers butt heads over who gets a specific chunk of land, demand drops and with it the owner's asking price.

The same will likely be true for construction costs. Again, fewer projects means less competition for available labour and materials. Less competition means less upward pressure in price.

"I don't see prices going down on new condos, but I can see any increases slowing," says Ms. Renwick.

What gives the experts the most comfort are four key factors, Mr. Carras says. The first is the fact that the GTA continues to be the destination of choice for half of Canada's net immigration — 100,000 people a year all looking for a place to live.

No. 2 is intensification. The province has mandated that Toronto grow up not out. That means condos, not single-family homes, are the way of the future.

The third factor is rental apartments. Few developers are building them any more. That means, in the future, those units will have to come from investors who buy condo suites and then rent them out.

Finally, while the experts predict the GTA will see about 18,890 condo suites coming on the market this year, that flood tide of new units is really just a drop in a very large ocean. RealNet says there are 1.9 million private dwellings in the GTA, so even though the numbers are impressive they reflect only a 1-per-cent increase in supply.

So, back to Mr. Lyons and his contention that buyers will indeed benefit in the coming months.

"I think this is a great time for people to educate themselves about what is out there and to shop around," he says.

"As developers jockey to make sales, I can even see them offering incentives such as help with down payment requirements. Over all, I think there is a great opportunity for buyers ahead."

Great article! Hopefully builders now realize that they are going to have to do a lot more for the masses in order to sell their projects! An article that takes into account a lot of the factors that make Toronto great, as well as a realistic view on future conditions in the Toronto condo market...
 
Did a quick google search of the three companies listed in article.....be careful of biased opinions is all I can say。
 

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