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Every real estate cycle comes to an end. As long as we get a few iconic projects out of this I will be content - Mirvish/Gehry, Oxford/SNF, the rumoured Middle East supertall! The infrastrcuture is a seperate discussion. City smply needs to get off its ass - dont balem the developers.
 
Five reasons not to buy a Toronto condo

Read More: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/glob...d-year-to-buy-a-toronto-condo/article8440509/

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1) Sales of new and existing condos are weakening

Sales of existing condo units, as measured on the Multiple Listing Service, have fallen in both the 905 and 416 regions. January sales in the 416 declined 6 per cent from a year earlier and 9 per cent in the 905 over that same time period.

The story is even worse in the new condo market where as the attached chart shows, sales of new units fell 53 per cent in December compared to last year. Falling sales have been accompanied by rising inventory through the second half of 2012. Rising supply and falling demand are destabilizing factors in a real estate market.

2) Inventory of unsold condos is now rising rapidly

January saw a significant rise in the MLS condo inventory across the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) over the same month last year, with condos for sale rising 28 per cent in the 416 — including a 42-per-cent jump in the downtown core — and 49 per cent in the 905. Weakening sales and rising inventory is a clear indication that supply and demand is increasingly out of balance.

3) There is an unprecedented supply of new condos in the pipeline, with a record number of units set to complete in 2013

Given the number of cranes that fill the Toronto skyline, it will likely come as no shock to Toronto residents that the number of condo units under construction is at an all-time high at just under 55,000 units. See the attached chart for a look at the historical comparison.

Of these, an estimated 25,000 to 28,000 units are set to complete in 2013, representing an enormous amount of potential new inventory. If current trends persist, these units will be completing, and a portion of them hitting the market, at a time when existing inventory is already high and sales are relatively weak.

4) Population growth is slowing

What’s ultimately needed to deal with what appears to be a potential condo oversupply problem is strong population growth in the GTA. While we often hear that the GTA attracts some 100,000 new individuals annually, it appears that population growth is slowing. In fact, if we look at net population change in Ontario, we find that our population as a province is growing at the slowest pace since 2007. See the attached chart for details.

In a recent report, the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation discussed the effect of slowing population growth on real estate in Toronto:

“At least part of the reduction in ownership demand (in Toronto) over the second half of 2012 can be linked to weaker migratory flows into the region. Net migration for Ontario over the past year ending in September 2012 declined by more than 20 per cent as a decreased number of people from other countries came to live in the province and an increased number of Ontarians migrated out. This suggests that the GTA (which doesn’t have updated data for 2012 but represents roughly 70 per cent of the province’s migration flows), saw the number of net new people decline to below 60,000 for the first time since the late 1990s.”

Population trends are notoriously difficult to predict, but the fact that Toronto’s population growth is slowing dramatically as we head into 2013 is one more reason to be concerned.

5) Condo prices are now falling

Finally, and perhaps as a logical result of the weakness in the condo market in late 2012, prices are beginning to fall. The final chart attached shows the year-over-year change in the median resale price of condos and single-family homes in the GTA, as reported by the Toronto Real Estate Board. Put simply, when the trend is below zero per cent, it means prices are falling compared to the previous year.

Resale prices for condos are now slightly below what they were a year ago. Barring a major change in current sales and inventory trends, it doesn’t appear that prices will rebound soon, a topic I will address further in this upcoming seminar. For prospective first-time buyers looking at jumping into the condo market, it certainly looks like 2013 will be a great year to sit on the sidelines and watch how this plays out. For condo owners looking to sell, be aware of the current state of the market and set your price and expectations accordingly.

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When Toronto starts getting condos/apartments of this size, then we will know the condo boom has gone too far. Many people here think 350 square feet is tiny but look how small apartments are getting in Manhattan. CRAZY![video=youtube_share;Q4FoAr8i26g]http://youtu.be/Q4FoAr8i26g[/video]
 
When Toronto starts getting condos/apartments of this size, then we will know the condo boom has gone too far. Many people here think 350 square feet is tiny but look how small apartments are getting in Manhattan. CRAZY![video=youtube_share;Q4FoAr8i26g]http://youtu.be/Q4FoAr8i26g[/video]

Doesn't building more condos (aka condominium apartments) prevent stuff like this? If there no more new housing, then there would have be more 78 sqft apartments because no one can afford regular housing. You can see even in Toronto, a lot of the old houses in the inner city have been converted into apartments. Buying or renting an entire house downtown is too expensive for most people.
 
It's been suggested that places around the world wish to Vancouverize, but places in Canada seem to reject it, with nimbyism, trouble getting midrises approved, and corruption in some Canadian cities.
 
The "number of dwellings under construction" graph posted by MARK is quite telling and excellent evidence of overbuilding.

On the other hand the "Year-over-Year population increase of Ontario" graph is less clear or insightful evidence. As dominant as Toronto is in Ontario it is still a small sub-population of the Province as a whole. Similarly, total net demographic trends speak nothing about internal migration trends. My gut feeling is that much of the drag on overall population numbers is coming from other Ontario population centres in the South-West, East and North, where real population declines and a rapid aging of the population is occuring. That is not to say Toronto and the GTA aren't experiencing real declines in population growth, but the central city (where most of the multi-residential household formation is occuring) is growing faster and getting even younger even as the rest of the Province ages and declines in overall population.
 

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