Posts Tagged ‘Toronto’

RIDING THE … REAL ESTATE ROLLER COASTER

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Heather Harding and her husband, film editor Graham Withers, have been on the real estate sidelines looking for a home for the past 18 months. The Toronto couple, renters, started their search when the market was at the top and every home they looked at was “just too expensive.”

But now that prices are finally falling and affordability is increasing, there is another major stumbling block in their search: Job security.

“There just seems to be so much uncertainty. Prices in the range we have been looking at haven’t changed all that much, either,” said Mr. Withers.

“We keep waiting for the big housing crash,” said Ms. Harding.

They look to the situation in the United States and see prices dropping by as much as a third in many markets, but that hasn’t happened here. The Canadian Real Estate Association said prices across the country in the first four months of 2009 were down 6.7% compared with a year ago.

That’s the real-estate rub: Sales have stalled as vendors refuse to lower prices while buyers sit on the sidelines waiting for a deal after more than a decade of rising prices.

To be sure, the deals have finally begun to materialize, although not from plummeting prices. Rather, record-low interest rates, whether consumers are borrowing long-term or short, are a key factor in the new real-estate affordability.

Consider a $300,000 mortgage. At the 3.75% rate some mortgage brokers claim they can get for a five-year closed mortgage, the monthly payment is $1,537.67, based on a 25-year amortization. A couple of years ago, when the rate was closer to 5.75%, the same mortgage would cost 22% more, or $1,875.07 a month.

Cheap money has created a classic economic battle. In one corner stands the real estate industry, trying to lure buyers with rates so low it is now cheaper to own than to rent. In the other is the skittish consumer who is too focused on job concerns to care about interest rates.

For the first time this decade, the Royal Bank of Canada’s Affordability Index, which measures the percentage of household income needed to carry a home, is declining.

“We’ve seen affordability improve across the board, but especially in some centres where it had deteriorated over the past few years,” said Robert Hogue, senior economist with RBC.

Financial Post — Peter J Thompson

reviewed by Moishe Alexander, CFC CEO

Luxury Homes Sales Rebound: Moishe Alexander inform

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009
May 2009 strongest month on record for luxury home sales, says RE/MAX
Sales of luxury properties in the Greater Toronto Area posted their strongest performance on record in May 2009, according to RE/MAX Ontario-Atlantic Canada.
Two hundred and seventy-three high-end homes changed hands in May 2009, up six per cent from 258 reported during the same period one year earlier, and the highest number of sales over $1 million in a one-month period in the history of the Toronto Real Estate Board. The previous record was set in May of 2007 at 266 sales.
“Confidence is slowly returning to the marketplace,” says Michael Polzler, Executive Vice President, Regional Director, RE/MAX Ontario-Atlantic Canada. “Traditional market indicators are in place – the stock market has made tremendous gains in recent months, crude values have risen significantly, and the Canadian dollar has gained almost 10 points in the past month. Combine these influences with pent-up demand and growing economic stability and you have the ingredients for solid sales in the top-end of the market.”
Further evidence of a rebound is the recent sale of a Bridle Path home priced at over $13 million, the first sale over the $10 million price point in more than a year. The 18,000 sq. ft. gated estate, situated on more than two acres, was listed by Barry Cohen, Broker, RE/MAX Realtron, and featured a spectacular backyard with a negative edge waterfall pool, fountains, hot tub, and tennis court.
Demand for homes priced in excess of $1 million has increased steadily since the beginning of the year, says Polzler, mimicking the overall real estate market. Seven hundred homes have changed hands year-to-date, compared to 944 in January to May of 2008. Given current momentum, however, it’s likely that activity will continue at a healthy pace for the remainder of the year – with sales at year-end at least on par or ahead of 2008 levels.
RE/MAX is Canada’s leading real estate organization with over 17,600 sales associates situated throughout its more than 677 independently-owned and operated offices across the country. The RE/MAX franchise network, now in its 36th year, is a global real estate system operating in more than 70 countries. Over 6,700 independently-owned offices engage nearly 100,000 member sales associates who lead the industry in professional designations, experience and production while providing real estate services in residential, commercial, referral, and asset management. For more information, visit: www.remax.ca
David Pylyp Specific review of the W08 neighbourhood revealed 11 sales between 1.0 and 1.5MM in the last 30 day period (eom May 09)
http://eleganthomesinwesttoronto.blogspot.com/2009/06/luxury-homes-sales-rebound.html

Residential Home Values Toronto, Ontario – June 2009

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Home values Toronto monthly report : June 2009

Residential home values and monthly trends for Toronto Metro Area, Ontario Canada

Home Values TORONTO,
Residential For Sale – June 2009

<=> May
– 4br $700.000,00 +25%▲
– loft $440.000,00 +13%▲
– single family $420.000,00 =
– 3br $420.000,00 =
– 1br $390.000,00 =
– 2br $380.000,00 =
– duplex $370.000,00 -18%▼
– studio $340.000,00 =

Home Values Service © 2009 Homes-Market.com – Real Estate Search

Home Values TORONTO,
Residential For Rent – 06/2009

<=> May
– loft $1.400,00 =
– duplex $1.300,00 =
– 3br $1.300,00 =
– 2br $1.300,00 =
– 4br $1.200,00 -25%▼
– studio $1.000,00 =
– 1br $940,00 =

Home Values Service © 2009 Homes-Market.com – Real Estate Search

Brouth by Moishe Alexander, CFC CEO