afransen
Senior Member
That would have been a disastrous strategy if you had done that any time in the past 20 years.
|
|
|
Not sure how people are rationalizing selling their house and then immediately going and buying another house...
You're selling at a high, and buying at a high. Just go rent and ride it out for a couple of months.
With respect to downtown Condos, wait until Feb and if you have cash, just buy as many units as you can.
Not sure how people are rationalizing selling their house and then immediately going and buying another house...
You're selling at a high, and buying at a high. Just go rent and ride it out for a couple of months.
With respect to downtown Condos, wait until Feb and if you have cash, just buy as many units as you can.
I don't agree.You don't win timing the market. Good to buy and sell in the same market.
Whenever you see bidding wars on old 30 year old homes in the suburbs, that isn't a regular market.
I don't agree.
This is not a "regular" market.
Whenever you see bidding wars on old 30 year old homes in the suburbs, that isn't a regular market.
When the majority get in, you get out.
Builders are smart. Their prices are inflated by at least 15% right now. The crash happens, they go back to their regular prices.
Not in Bradford, East Gwillimbury, Innisfil, etc.I think that's been the case for years now thanks to the bubble. It's gotten more intense during COVID, but bidding wars were a thing well before COVID.
This is not what others (who appear to have facts) are saying. "Homes across the country posted eye popping gains in real estate over the past year, with the area around Toronto leading the pack, according to statistics published by a national association of realtors."Due to the epidemiological situation with the pandemic, the demand for real estate has dramatically decreased.
Due to the epidemiological situation with the pandemic, the demand for real estate has dramatically decreased.
the only type of home people will be able to afford after the new omicron lockdown
Homes across the country posted eye popping gains in real estate
If you're a young adult you may be daft to live in the GTA. Family obligations or friends? Your (and my) immigrant parents didn't let that stop them from abandoning the old country to make a new start here, and neither should you. When I moved to Fredericton with the grandkids I saw my Toronto-based parents more then than when I lived in the GTA, since they'd come and visit and stay several weeks.
The GTA is no longer a place for young adults to start a career and buy their first home. But much of the rest of Canada certainly is.
How do you see this working when most of the jobs are in Toronto and employers are dead set against remote work?It's a big province and an even bigger country. If you can't afford the GTA and you're single or otherwise mobile, move. If I was a young person there's no way I'd live in Toronto.