Glen
Senior Member
The propoganda machine avoided MoM price changes. Those paint a different picture.
Sotheby’s International Realty is seeing a surge in demand from wealthy Syrians, Egyptians and Europeans looking for a safe and relatively stable place to park their millions — Canada’s softening real estate market.
There has been an uptick in “very significant transactions” in tony areas like Oakville and North Toronto by Europeans, many with young families who originally had planned to settle in the U.S. but fell in love with Canada instead, says Sotheby’s Canada CEO Ross McCredie.
It drives me nuts when Toronto attempts to justify high real estate because Manhattan is expensive. Hello? NYC is one of the largest cities in the world (~18M+ people) that built up over 100 years, and only Manhattan is expensive. You can live off the Manhattan island for a lot less (Jersey City or Newark are dirt cheap), and they have a much cheaper and better subway system. In GTA even the suburbs are overpriced. Over $500K for a nondescript suburban home in places like Markham... you can much more for you money in the USA. Plus car insurance and gas is way cheaper in the USA, so you don't need public transport in most places. Toronto also has a big problem with providing decent rentable units. Not everyone moving to Toronto for work wants to buy in Toronto. They should just stop building condos and build more affordable apartments (not tchc but not high end either).
GTA should be compared to a more equal size city in the Midwest like Chicago that is also on the great lakes. Chicago is much more affordable.
Market prices are increasing, yes. But the point is you cannot say that the high prices in Vancouver or anywhere else reveal something specific about Toronto's market. Context: http://www.torontorealtyblog.com/archives/toronto-vs-new-york-city/8794
I want toronto prices to go down.
That's assuming it's a bubble at all and not a sign of some lasting demographic trend.
That's assuming it's a bubble at all and not a sign of some lasting demographic trend.