Johnzz
Active Member
Common sense does not imply that at all and I have no idea how it would
I guess you lack common sense then. Do you not think that someone earning 200k/year might perhaps have a larger % of their net worth tied up in equities vs someone earning 30K/year.
Even if you did factor in the possibility of a lesser number of expensive homes being sold, a conservative estimate would still probably lead to around 10%.
So you don't agree that removing a large number of $5 million plus home sales will decrease the average price significantly? Perhaps you should look up the definition of average vs median...
Toronto never had a huge run-up in prices compared to some of western Canada because our economy at the time wasn't thriving like Western Canada..
Well, 5% GDP growth in Alberta is good but does it justify home price increases of 30%+ a year? I guess you think it does.
Any reasonable person and anyone who did not have their own interests ahead of them would absolutely advise a person to at least wait it out a month or a few to see where prices are going in the near-future.
I agree with this statement. However, even in the current market, you may find unique opportunities others miss because they're on the fence. A home is not just a short term investment, it's primarily a long term lifestyle choice.
My main point (which Poppajojo fails to grasp) is that we're unlikely to experience a house price "crash" here in Toronto. Something gliding 2 feet above the ground cannot "crash".