CITY_LOVER
Active Member
I make it a point to trust folks with Booty in their screen name!
I have to agree with Mike & condo George on this one (please save the you're biased because you're in real estate comment, heard it, I evaluate the numbers and have nothing to do with this project or this developer)
Here is the hard data: Wellesley on the Park launched at $684 psf on average per RealNet Canada Inc. and is 80% sold in two months.
Average resale values on a per square foot basis for the last five quarters per data from Urbanation Inc
Burano: $661, $686, $684, $721, $728 (15-20 transactions)
Murano - South Building: $657, $688, $751, $718, $738 (5-10 transactions)
Both buildings have ridiculously high sales-to-listings ratios as well.
Now several of these resales would include a parking spot or locker in that index price, so are not apples-to-apples with the Wellesly on the Park index price.
Investors buying now are buying a condominium market future, ie paying a down payment now for the right to buy a unit at $684 psf in June of 2018. Assuming parking at $15 psf, the current resale market is commanding $710 to $720 psf based on the net resale values for Murano and Burano (College Park units are actually trading higher), values could stay the same over the next four years and Wellesley would still look like a relatively good bet, if prices drop 5% or more, then the comparison gets murkier.
However, what is the value of being right on Yonge, what is the value of everything being brand new and never lived in, what is the value of a new home under warranty?
Comparing new vs resale is difficult and picking a singular unit that is 300-400 sf larger than the average unit trading in the other building is not an accurate way of evaluating the merits and value proposition of a new project.
Hi, what's your take on Lumiere Condos? They don't seem to get as much ... attention ... as the other condos around it (for better or for worse)...