LMVDR
Active Member
The whole 'rents are skyrocketing' narrative is a giant lie and a red herring used by the gutless politicians to placate the angry masses.
Are rents up overall? Yes. Are they up 20% year over year across the whole GTA rental market spectrum, incl pre-1991 buildings? Not even close. My guess is the number is under 10% and even so good for the landlords! They took risk and are being rewarded. And just look at the spillover benefits to bedroom communities and cities of the booming GTA housing market. Hamilton, KW, Guelph and even London are seeing a resurgent in demand. That's how open markets function. Ironically the strength has slowly begun to kickstart actual new rental construction which would have a moderating impact on rents if the cowards in office didn't interfere and potentially reverse that trend.
But media pick up on the odd anecdotal experience of a downtowner who says her contracted rent climb from $1600 a month to an asking renewal price of $2500 a month and then invent a rental crisis! If they looked at the stats they'd notice that YOY rents in downtown Toronto were actually down in March! Maybe said downtowner could look farther afield for a new place or heaven forbid move into a building without a concierge! Did anyone think that because the condo rental market is compromised mostly of mom & pops that perhaps they underpriced their units at the time the initial lease was signed? Or maybe the landlord's maintenance fees jumped $300 per month over the lease period as is common in new buildings.
There's nothing a single digit sitting government about to booted from power loves more than a crisis to boost its popularity.
Are rents up overall? Yes. Are they up 20% year over year across the whole GTA rental market spectrum, incl pre-1991 buildings? Not even close. My guess is the number is under 10% and even so good for the landlords! They took risk and are being rewarded. And just look at the spillover benefits to bedroom communities and cities of the booming GTA housing market. Hamilton, KW, Guelph and even London are seeing a resurgent in demand. That's how open markets function. Ironically the strength has slowly begun to kickstart actual new rental construction which would have a moderating impact on rents if the cowards in office didn't interfere and potentially reverse that trend.
But media pick up on the odd anecdotal experience of a downtowner who says her contracted rent climb from $1600 a month to an asking renewal price of $2500 a month and then invent a rental crisis! If they looked at the stats they'd notice that YOY rents in downtown Toronto were actually down in March! Maybe said downtowner could look farther afield for a new place or heaven forbid move into a building without a concierge! Did anyone think that because the condo rental market is compromised mostly of mom & pops that perhaps they underpriced their units at the time the initial lease was signed? Or maybe the landlord's maintenance fees jumped $300 per month over the lease period as is common in new buildings.
There's nothing a single digit sitting government about to booted from power loves more than a crisis to boost its popularity.