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A few that I looked at were good deals IMO. Either older units with dated and worn interiors, or else newer ones with crappy tenants. However, they were usually significantly cheaper than comps in the same building or nearby buildings, making it much easier to justify a nice reno - new floors and kitchen update.

BTW, one place I checked out had a full-wall mural of The Simpsons in one bedroom. It wasn't exactly an As-Is sale in terms of what that often implies, but besides the mural it was a bit rougher around the edges (fixable easily DIY) and was cheaper than the comps.

BTW 2, one place I looked at had tenants that refused to leave the unit. They were still in bed in fact. WTF. We left pretty quickly. I wonder how long that one took to sell.
 
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haha, I've had the tenants in bed thing when condo-shopping too. Maybe it was the same people :)

I've also had "please don't go on the balcony in case the cat gets out" signs

And people wonder why some units are tough to sell

(And I saw a place that had a set of handcuffs hanging off the bedpost)
 
Before Tuesday, the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce had already posted a four-year fixed product offering a teaser rate of 1.99% for the first nine months. The remainder of the term is calculated at 2.83% – equating to a blended rate of 2.69% for four years.

Teaser rate anybody? Just in case you can't cash flow the punitive 2.83% interest rate. ;)
 
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/repo...fed-hints-at-june-rate-hikes/article23520781/

Bye Bye $CDN.

We've already seen Canadian houses depreciate 20%+ due to the falling loonie. This announcement will likely spur further reductions. In a sense, the crash is already happening.

Like many, I have been waiting for this so called "crash", but I am beginning to think it will not happen, especially in many parts of Toronto.

I have seen the prices of homes continue to go higher and higher. If I look back to May of 2014 and then now, the market has completely changed.

In my area, a town home was listed in May 2014 for $449,000 and sold for $498,000. Fast forward to March 2015, a town home in my area was listed for $550K and sold within a few days for $563K. Another town home was listed for $550K and sold for $555K in 1 day. I see these town homes going for over $600K late Summer.

The market is absurd. Interest is low, low inventory. I can only see even more record pricing in the Spring and Summer.

Does it make sense? Not to me. As much as I want the market to tank, I just don't see it happening anytime soon.
 
People have to live some where. As long as the rental industry thrives and rents remain high, property prices will be supported. Choosing to spend $2300 a month to rent a house or $2500 a month to buy a townhome isn't a very difficult decision if a family have the down payment. Especially when over 50% of a mortgage payment is actually your own equity.

Think about the rent that you have paid over the past 5 years and compare it to the purchase of a similar property in the same area 5 years ago. How much have you spent in rent and how much would you have paid back in equity if you chose to purchase your own home. This is why people are choosing to buy.

Real-estate is just that, real, and it remains with the owner. You either pay for someone else's ownership or ask the bank to assist you in attaining your own. Even if a crash happens, everyone still need to live somewhere.

Now that being said, when you start to see articles on high rental vacancy rates in your area, consider selling. Because a non- balanced real-estate market feeds on speculation, in bad economic times it could remain rebust because people have no better places to park their capital, but the second there are market disturbances we risk a crash (big crash).
 
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I'm guessing that interest rates will remain low for the remainder of the year. I wouldn't be surprised if the Federal Reserve maintains their "patience" on interest rate hikes in the U.S. too despite their recent announcement. Typically Canada would follow suit after the fact but with our economy hammered by the energy sector, I think the Bank of Canada will hold steady for as long as possible.
 
I'm guessing that interest rates will remain low for the remainder of the year. I wouldn't be surprised if the Federal Reserve maintains their "patience" on interest rate hikes in the U.S. too despite their recent announcement. Typically Canada would follow suit after the fact but with our economy hammered by the energy sector, I think the Bank of Canada will hold steady for as long as possible.
I agree James. Interest rates in the US may be delayed and will not go up much or in april and even when they go up it will be perhaps 0.5% in total for the year but unless there is a significant change in the price of oil or the Canadian economy starts firing better, the next interest rate for BOC will be down and certainly not up
 
Interesting story in the Globe and Mail about the Vancouver market. As I've indicated in the past, I think our hot Toronto market is going to be buoyed in the short-to-mid term by financial assistance from the parents to their adult children via downsizing, gifting or inheritance.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/glob...chance-in-hot-housing-market/article23516653/

Great jobs, cash in hand, but no chance in hot housing market
KERRY GOLD
VANCOUVER — Special to The Globe and Mail
Published Wednesday, Mar. 18 2015, 11:41 AM EDT

This is the first in a series of stories looking at the challenges faced by different generations of people who are in the market for a home – from first-time buyers, to growing families, to boomers who are downsizing.

Judith Silverman and Jeffrey Giffin illustrate perfectly how wrong it can go when a city’s property market is burdened by soaring prices.

The couple, who immigrated to Vancouver from Colorado a decade ago, are educated and employed in jobs with promising futures. She’s a research scientist with a PhD; he’s an energy efficiency manager and holds a masters in engineering. They have a child, they cycle to work, and with three years of savings and the support of family, they’ve scraped together a decent down payment. It has also helped that family support came in U.S. dollars.

As far as contributing members of the community go, they check all the boxes. And yet, after six months of searching for a townhouse not too far from their jobs at the University of British Columbia, they are about to give up. They are frustrated by the lack of affordable housing.

“Every time we walk into an open house, there are 35 people already there and the selling realtor is telling us, ‘We are accepting offers tonight.’ So you have to put together an offer where there are no subjects [conditions] – and you only get to see the house maybe once,†says Ms. Silverman, 33. “You’re making the largest financial decision of your life, and a highly competitive market doesn’t allow you to do your due diligence. It’s frustrating. I didn’t realize it would be so bad.â€

Their budget is in the $600,000 range and they have a down payment of about 20 per cent. The couple is on the hunt for a townhouse or two-level condo on the west side, in Kitsilano. But Ms. Silverman says properties in their price range are sadly lacking. They are often dark, with few windows, and some don’t even have en suite laundry.

In six months of searching, they found just one property that worked for them, so they made an offer. However, so did seven other prospective buyers, and the property sold for $30,000 more than the asking price.

It’s a scenario that’s been playing out in Vancouver since January. The mild winter has kick-started an early buying season for young couples and families trying to squeeze into the market. Their demographic is driving house prices in large pockets of Vancouver, Toronto and even Calgary, despite that city’s softened market.

They want detached houses, but those who can’t afford them are fuelling the market for central townhouses and duplexes.

Matthew Boukall, researcher for real estate analysts Altus Group, says Calgary families are increasingly looking to inner city townhouses instead of the usual suburban house. They can get a 1,500-square-foot townhouse for $550,000 that’s still close to downtown and within reach of amenities.

“They get to live in a community that was built in the 1950s that has parks and schools, and everything they need. That’s where I think we’ll see more and more families move.â€

In hot markets like Vancouver, young couples have adjusted to low interest rates and know money is cheap, and they’re not expecting a drop in house prices any time soon. They’ve finished school, have entered the work force and, more often than not, have received inheritances or financial support from parents.

They’re ready for a home that fits their needs, but are confronted by the realization that there are hundreds of buyers just like them. The competition is fierce.

As Ms. Silverman puts it: “It’s been disheartening to spend literally three out of four weekends in Vancouver going to open houses.â€

Real estate agent Keith Roy recently listed his own home, on the city’s east side, for $999,000. After living in it for three years, the house had gone up so much in value that he felt he had no choice but to sell. Upon listing, he received 13 offers. They all came from couples between 30 and 40 years of age. Several of them had received family inheritances. He sold the house in seven days, for $1,167,850.

“I hear grandparents’ inheritances are helping a lot,†says Mr. Roy, also 33, but doesn’t think he’ll have the benefit of inheritance. “They’re helping to push that part of the market. We have enormous wealth transfer coming down the pipeline.

“Last year, I sold a couple of grandparents’ estates, and the parents got the money, and they gave it to the kids to buy houses.â€

That equity transfer was a hot topic for marketer Bob Rennie in his address to the Urban Development Institute in Vancouver last year. Mr. Rennie told the crowd of developers that people 55 and older are sitting on real estate equity valued at $163.4-billion.

That sum is steadily trickling down to children and grandchildren, fuelling the first-time home buyers market. An inheritance of $300,000 to $500,000 is a solid down payment on a house. The benchmark price of a detached house in Metro Vancouver is $1,026,300, which suddenly becomes affordable.

Add low interest rates to the mix, and it’s a shopping frenzy. February sales for Metro Vancouver were 20 per cent higher than February of 2014.

“They are so used to low interest rates, they are not afraid of a five-year renewal at this point,†says Mr. Roy. “There is so much confidence in the market that people are not afraid to come to the table with their best possible offer. There is also a sense that people have to pay more than the previous owners paid.

“And these buyers are accountants, lawyers, engineers, doctors, tech people. And they are double income. So you’ve got two people making six figures.â€

The problem is, however, that inventory is low. “Good stuff comes up, but it’s gone in a week,†says Mr. Roy. “Virtually every sale is an auction.â€

Ms. Silverman knows how that feels. After recently viewing a property that was perfect in every way – but noisy with bus traffic – she and her husband have decided they might try a different tack.

“We just had discussion about how, right now, we can’t afford what we’d want to live in. So, we may need to take the money we pulled together and invest it wisely, and see if in two years we are in a better position to buy.â€
 
The Market Manuscript by Ben Myers: Real Estate Research

Have a look at this recent report The Market Manuscript by Ben Myers. He goes into detail of the current residential housing situation in Canada, and in the major markets of Ottawa, GTA, Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary, and Edmonton.

Market-Manuscript.jpg
 

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Still waiting on the massive correction. It's coming....eventually....right?

Prices IMO are not dropping anytime soon in most markets in Toronto. As long as there are foreign buyers coming here and buying up a storm (which is still likely to happen given the $ and low interest rates) I don't see prices dropping anytime soon. Couple that with the fact that the city has major traffic and transit issues...people are ditching their cars and moving closer to the downtown core. Lack of rentals or affordable housing doesn't help either.

Unless you have a great job that can weather the storm of a dip in the economy (you won't lose your job) and a massive downpayment, I don't see how a correction will benefit anyone but the people with deep pockets. The mini correction 6 or so years ago benefited those with deep pockets who were able to take advantage of people handing away their properties and builders dumping inventory. Young people in Canada aren't really standing on sound footing given employment numbers...so how does a young buyer win?
 
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