Archive for February, 2016

The real estate technique fuelling Vancouver’s housing market

Saturday, February 6th, 2016

Kathy Tomlinson
Other

They had a deal.

The Rappaports’ home, on Vancouver’s West Side, would net the couple $5.2-million last year. Jo and her husband had bought the stately Craftsman home in 1987 for $362,000. They raised their sons there and loved it. But the neighbourhood had changed. Investors were razing the houses and it was time to move on.

“It used to be the prettiest block,” Ms. Rappaport said. “And it has been a construction zone for the last two years.”

The couple suspected the house would be torn down, like so many others on their lush and lucrative street, but they stood to profit nicely. There was some toing and froing over details, then a slight change of plans. For reasons the Rappaports never quite grasped, they were no longer selling their property to the foreign businessman whose offer they had accepted. Instead, they were selling to his real estate agent, Wayne Du of Amex Broadway West Realty, who told the Rappaports that he and the businessman’s wife would be purchasing instead, as co-owners.

The Rappaports weren’t thrilled, but there was nothing they could do to prevent it. Their contract, after all, contained what’s called an “assignment clause,” which gave the businessman the option to sell or transfer his interest in the property before the closing date.

Three months after the deal closed, the new broker-owner relisted the house – which he then had a stake in – and resold it for $6.2-million, a substantial if not unusual price increase that works out to roughly $11,000 a day. Mr. Du is now advertising the house for sale again for $6.58-million. It’s all perfectly legal, even if it displeases the Rappaports.

“It’s obscene,” Ms. Rappaport said. “I had no idea our house was going to be resold. We were shocked when it was flipped.”

Assignment clauses are an obscure but increasingly ubiquitous feature of domestic real estate transactions in B.C.’s Lower Mainland, where feverish real estate prices have triggered a frenzy of buying and selling, and a national debate about the risks of an overheated market and the role of foreign investment. As part of an ongoing investigation into the phenomenon, The Globe and Mail examined scores of transactions and hundreds of records, and spoke with more than a dozen real estate agents and observers to understand the role of assignments in the Vancouver market.

The findings shed light on an opaque and speculative realm of the housing market, in which properties are traded one or more times before a deal closes – legal but controversial flipping that creates opportunities for agents to make multiple commissions and investors to profit tax-free from houses that are not yet technically in their possession.

Because assignment sales are rarely listed publicly, they have created a thriving grey market that is accessible largely to investors, speculators and real estate agents who have insider information.

What’s more, the assignment market appears to reward neither the original seller nor the ultimate buyer, despite pushing prices higher and higher: Sellers receive less for their properties than what buyers are finally willing to pay at the end of the chain. And buyers – many of them foreign or backed by foreign investors – pay more than they would have to if the middlemen weren’t involved.

The resulting distortions threaten to strain the public’s trust in the real estate brokerage business, according to some in the profession, while others openly question the sustainability of a market they are heavily invested in – and helped create.

“It worries me a lot that this could all come crashing down. I worry about it all the time,” said one Re/Max agent, Khalid Hasan, who said he owns or co-owns 15 to 20 properties, all destined for resale.

“A lot of people are just assigning and flipping in this market – because they can make more money,” said Mr. Hasan, who said he’s bought several properties through assignments. “We witness assigning all the time – crazy assignments.”

Mr. Hasan cited one recent case, in which two investors paid $2.5-million for side-by-side properties, then quickly assigned the contracts to a foreign buyer for $3-million.

“They got half a million dollars for doing nothing,” said Mr. Hassan, who – like many real estate agents who spoke with The Globe for this story, whether anonymously or on the record – would only refer to transactions without identifying the properties in question.

Easy money

While many agents make quick, easy money charging fees for arranging assignments – up to $50,000 a deal – others go for bigger profit by buying and selling houses themselves.

While it is virtually impossible to determine the degree to which real estate professionals are personally invested in the market, anecdotal evidence of a brisk insider game abounds – the vast majority of it legal, though some running afoul of regulations enforced by the Real Estate Council of British Columbia.

In an effort to get a glimpse of how many real estate agents trade in property, The Globe and Mail reviewed more than 2,000 public records – including building-permit data, sales transactions and land titles. The method is imperfect, but no one keeps track of how much trading is being done by and among agents.

In one sample of 250 houses sold and resold in Vancouver’s West Side for more than $2-million in recent years, 11 per cent involved buyers and sellers with the same names as real estate brokers. Some listed their occupation as “Realtor,” several others as “businessperson.” In Vancouver, 1 per cent of the population are brokers – meaning that figure is is potentially 10 times what might be expected.

The Globe also reviewed records of 1,585 building permits issued in the suburb of Richmond since 2011. More than 200 of the single-family properties – 14 per cent – were owned by people who were brokers or shared a name with a broker; or by a numbered company with a broker listed as a director. Some owned multiple properties. A sample of 2015 Vancouver building permits yielded similar results. (Building permits are instructive because broker-owners often demolish an older house, build a new one and sell it for up to double their purchase price.)

In an already tight market, analysts said, all of this activity ties up inventory, contributing to unhinged prices, as brokers and investors hold property and trade empty houses.

“It does propel the market upward,” said housing-market analyst Ben Rabidoux, who does market research for institutional investors. “They are feeding into the market and making it hotter, while padding their commissions. It’s just so toxic.”

The Globe also reviewed several MLS ads, where an investment property owned by an agent is listed for sale by themselves or their brokerage firm. Other agent-owned houses are not on the market, but sitting empty – possibly being held until prices go even higher. Empty houses are a bone of contention for many Vancouverites, given the lack of affordable housing.

Agents who say they are not involved in speculation said it feels like a rigged game. “With upset clients – that’s where it leaves me,” long-time broker Carsten Love said. “They aren’t given the time and the chance to go after properties. Everything moves so quickly.”

The amount of money being made in some deals is astonishing, particularly when buyers purchase, demolish, rebuild and resell.

Nan Zhang, of Royal Pacific Realty, was in the process of getting her real estate licence in 2014, when she bought an older house in Vancouver for $2.8-million. She had it knocked down, then rebuilt. Nineteen months later, she sold her property for $5.6-million – netting an estimated $2-million profit, after substantial effort of her own.

The original seller, Hong Shen, said she was shocked when The Globe informed her how the broker had profitted. “I’m very angry,” she said, acknowledging there was not much she could do after the fact. “The buyer would buy the house with no conditions, so I said yes.”

By law, brokers must tell buyers and sellers, in writing, if they have a personal interest in a deal before the offer to purchase is accepted. They’re also required to inform sellers if they plan to resell.

When she purchased Ms. Shen’s house, however, Ms. Zhang was not yet a licensed real estate broker, so she had no obligation to disclose her intention to resell or rebuild the property. She did nothing wrong.

“It was my husband’s deal,” Ms. Zhang told The Globe by telephone. She considered it an unremarkable transaction in a market such as Vancouver’s. “There are lots of successful investments,” she said, questioning why one like hers was drawing attention.

Quick deal, long close

In faster deals involving assigments, brokers or their assistants often entice homeowners to sell by knocking on their door and offering a clean deal on the spot.

After the offer is accepted, however, the buyer doesn’t close on the deal. Instead, the broker arranges to assign the contract, sometimes more than once, for fees that range from $20,000 to $50,000, according to real estate experts and court records.

Routine real estate deals close within 30 to 60 days, in most cases. By contrast, assignment deals often involve long closes, which provide an even greater window of opportunity for flipping. Sellers who agree to a quick sale in a hot market often demand closing periods of up to six months, so they can find where they’re going to live next. Often, the seller has no idea their property is being resold before they move out. Realtors told The Globe the downside to flipping through assignment is that they can’t show the house to the end buyer, for fear of upsetting the seller, who is in the dark about what is going on.

“There should not be a Wild West mentality where Realtors can just knock on homeowners’ doors to get a sale, then use a sales contract to reassign it to numerous investors,” said Mr. Rabidoux, the market analyst. “They have no idea that when they are talked into selling their property, they are effectively selling a call option that is going to be assigned to other buyers.”

Middlemen do not pay land-transfer taxes on assignment deals because the property is not technically changing hands. The transfer tax – $38,000 on a $2-million sale in B.C. and increasing with the price – is triggered only at closing, when a final buyer assumes the title. And while assessment takes into account any price changes between offer and close, this leaves an unusual loophole in which assignment flipping is effectively tax-free. This loophole diminishes the effectiveness of the tax as a deterrent to speculation.

Assignment deals can also lead to litigation. Broker Leo Zhang of Sincere Real Estate Services is accused by seller Wen Hsien Tsai of devising a scheme to acquire Mr. Tsai’s home for less than it was worth, then make a profit assigning the contract. In a lawsuit filed in B.C. Supreme Court, Mr. Tsai alleges Mr. Zhang approached him at his West Vancouver home last year, saying he had a buyer who would pay $5.1-million, on the spot. Mr. Zhang would get commissions from the buyer and the seller, which is allowed under B.C.’s real-estate rules.

Mr. Tsai accepted the offer with no conditions. In the six months before the closing date, he alleges, Mr. Zhang and the buyer, Zhixiang Li, assigned the contract to a numbered company, which then assigned it again – to an end buyer – for $7.2-million. Mr. Tsai claims the broker stood to make $50,000 extra for arranging the deal, while the other middlemen split the remainder of the $2-million “lift.” No money changed hands, however, because the seller refused to complete the deal.

In court filings, Mr. Zhang claims the original buyer legitimately wanted to move, but couldn’t sell his house. He also alleges Mr. Tsai approached him, wanting to sell, not the other way around. Mr. Zhang’s statement of defence also pointed to the contract, which contained a standard clause allowing it to be assigned.

Both Mr. Tsai and Mr. Zhang declined comment. None of the allegations has been settled in court.

Assignment clauses are intended to give buyers a legal way to back out of a purchase if their circumstances change. In that way, they also protect sellers, whose deal is protected so long as another buyer or assignee is found. They became an issue about six years ago with presale condominiums that hadn’t been built yet. Buyers were assigning the contracts for a higher price. Many condo developers put a stop to that, however, by removing or altering the clauses allowing it.

In the Lower Mainland’s red-hot, high-end housing market, however, the assignment clause is a powerful instrument to make profit; it is, paradoxically, both cause and effect. Many sellers, though, don’t even know these clauses exist – let alone that they agreed to one in their sales contracts.

“A properly advised seller would insist on a no-assignment clause in the contract – but I have never seen that on a house sale,” said Ron Usher, a lawyer with the association representing B.C. notaries.

Phil Sunderland and his sister sold their parents’ house – where they grew up – for $1.6-million, to real estate broker P.K. Kainth of New Coast Realty. Mr. Kainth wasn’t the original buyer, however. He got in by assignment before the deal closed. He then built two new houses there, which he now has up for sale – at $3-million each.

“I’m sorry when I see what’s happened there. We were told [by the city] there was no way that property could be subdivided,” Mr. Sunderland said. (A city clerk told The Globe the lot was split into odd shapes, but still passed the requirements.)

The broker remained compliant with disclosure rules because – as in the Rappaport deal – he jumped in after the initial offer was accepted. The rules require brokers disclose to homeowners if they stand to personally profit if they are making an offer, not if they acquire the property later through assignment.

“As the sellers, we are in the dark,” Mr. Sunderland said. “It’s a non-functional regulation.”

The rules are enforced by the self-governing Real Estate Council of B.C., which investigates complaints against licensed brokers. However, The Globe found several instances where sellers didn’t know about a broker’s interest or didn’t understand how it played out – let alone where to complain. Some deals were made on the spot – in one day – where sellers felt real estate agents took advantage of them.

Gloria Amirault sold her Vancouver house to a numbered company, where a broker is named as director. Her house also wasn’t for sale, but a friend called saying another broker had a buyer who wanted to meet that day. By dinnertime, Ms. Amirault had sold for $2.1-million. The numbered company flipped the property three months later, for $300,000 more.

“I was told I couldn’t get any more,” Ms. Amirault said. “I was not told they were going to flip it. I think it’s dishonest.”

The broker whose name is on the corporate records told The Globe he had nothing to do with the deal or the company; he simply put his name on the numbered company “a long time ago.”

There is an exception to the rules governing brokers, saying they don’t have to disclose their vested interest if it’s in a company where they don’t own more than 5 per cent of the shares. There is no way to check that, however, because in B.C. shareholder information is not public.

‘Poor Canadians’

Many brokers use assignment clauses to make money as middlemen, but one fast-growing Vancouver-area firm has gone a step further: actively encouraging its agents to invest in real estate. New Coast Realty opened in 2012 in Richmond and now has 400-plus brokers and several locations. In a recent blog aimed at real estate professionals, then-vice-president Benson Wang told them insider information gives them an edge.

“Purchasing properties with your real estate license is a great way to earn money for yourself,” Mr. Wang wrote. “Listing agents looking to get a property sold will come directly to you with offers that you can choose to undertake. This means you get a clear advantage over other investors.”

The Globe found several properties registered under the names of brokers working for New Coast.

Lynn Yang worked as an assistant for one of New Coast’s top brokers in 2014. She said one of her jobs was to knock on doors and persuade homeowners to sell quickly in private deals arranged by her boss.

“We would circle an area and try to buy them all – and then flip. [Homeowners] would be told: ‘I don’t know English, my English isn’t very good. I just want to buy your house,’” Ms. Yang said.

Brokers’ assistants are not bound by the rules governing agents.

“Maybe you say you are working for a Realtor, maybe you don’t. You tell them, ‘I really like your house. Can you sell it to me? We will make a deal,’” said Ms. Yang, who is in a dispute with her former employer over $20,000 in wages she claims she is owed. “I am disappointed in the Canadian government. They don’t have the sense to look at what’s happening out there. Poor Canadians – they just don’t understand.”

Bilingual ads by New Coast suggest it’s interested in “purchasing land, old houses and commercial real estate.” However, its managing broker, Josh Rosenberg, insisted New Coast itself has never purchased property from clients – and its ads are aimed at attracting other buyers.

“I can see how they might be read to suggest that New Coast might be interested in buying real estate, but that is just the result of perhaps not the clearest translation of marketing materials,” Mr. Rosenberg said.

Three other staffers who recently left New Coast spoke to The Globe on the condition they would not be named. They described curious tactics to get homeowners to list their houses for sale with its brokers – including paying clients $2,000 up front.

Brokers are encouraged to maximize commissions, the former staffers said, by then selling to buyers also represented by New Coast. One former broker said foreign buyers often pay too much, believing there are multiple offers.

Mr. Rosenberg told The Globe he had no knowledge of these tactics and would not permit them. “I have never seen evidence of any of these things at New Coast and they would not be condoned,” he said.

Another high-level insider said some brokers also help buyers assign contracts – up to three or four times – until a final buyer pays top dollar. Helen Yin, a former New Coast broker, said she was encouraged to make more money that way, but didn’t.

“I don’t want to do that. Because when I do the deal, I want to go home and sleep,” said Ms. Yin, who is also in a wages dispute with New Coast and has filed suit in small-claims court.

New Coast takes half of each broker’s commissions, in exchange for providing listings and other supports – which is unusual in the industry. At most firms, experienced brokers receive their commissions, then pay various fees to the brokerage.

Mr. Rosenberg said New Coast complies with all rules governing real estate brokerages. He acknowledged contracts are assigned, calling it “common practice across the industry.” He said any suggestion that foreign buyers are paying a premium is “an unsubstantiated insult.”

William Messer was the managing broker for New Coast when the business started. He said the owner, Ze Yu Wu, hired him to interpret Canadian real estate rules for Mr. Wu and the company’s board of directors.

“They get Chinese [clients] who are ignorant of the market to buy their high-end investments. They tell them it’s going to appreciate and they will have a tax-free gain,” said Mr. Messer, who believes foreign buyers are treated unfairly in the current system.

Mr. Messer said he wrote to the Real Estate Council of B.C. in 2013, expressing concerns that both sellers and buyers weren’t being properly informed on what properties were really worth, which is against the rules. He left the company soon afterward.

‘It’s a travesty’

The Globe attended a New Coast seminar for aspiring brokers last November. Mr. Wang, lead instructor at the time, told them to stay as close as possible to Chinese buyers when they visit Vancouver, to “be their translator” and encourage them to offer top dollar for a property.

“Pick up the client at the airport. Drive them to a hotel. Pick them up first thing in the morning and then drive them around until they make an offer – that day,” Mr. Wang said.

He also encouraged the would-be brokers to charge foreign clients for as many services as possible.

“I have multiple properties and an annual income 10 times higher than the average Canadian. I am making more money than multiple doctors,” he said.

Mr. Wang said he left New Coast in January.

Before he started New Coast, owner Mr. Wu bought several properties in Richmond, which resulted in complaints and lawsuits from homeowners who alleged they’d been duped into selling for less than their homes were worth.

In documents filed in court, Leo Boucher said Mr. Wu approached him at his house, offering him $840,000 in a private deal. Mr. Boucher is a senior and said his wife had cancer at the time. He sold to Mr. Wu for $950,000 in 2011, and soon found through an appraisal that his house was worth $1.25-million. Mr. Boucher claimed 57 people on his street had been approached with similar offers. Mr. Wu responded to the suit by claiming he spoke no English and then countersuing. The case was settled confidentially.

Jim Davis agreed to sell his deceased mother’s home in 2011 for $870,000 – the same day he was approached by Mr. Wu.

“He said he was looking for a house for his family, he liked the area and he wanted to raise his family in the area,” Mr. Davis said in an interview. Records indicate Mr. Wu then quickly assigned the contract to another buyer for $100,000 more. Mr. Davis filed a complaint with the Real Estate Council against Alban Wang of Amex Sunrich Realty, the broker who facilitated the deal. The regulator said it received 12 similar complaints. It gave Mr. Wang a 14-day suspension for his role.

“What the hell is wrong with our government that will allow these guys to operate like this? It’s an absolute joke. It’s a travesty. He got an unpaid vacation,” Mr. Davis said.

In recent years, the council has disciplined 13 brokers in B.C.’s Lower Mainland for failing to disclose their interest in deals, some involving assignment of contracts.

“We are seeing an uptick in the number of complaints about assignments,” said the regulator’s professional standards adviser, Maureen Coleman. “We treat it very seriously because it speaks to fundamental duties to clients – disclosure and conflicts of interest and remuneration.”

It’s considered professional misconduct when brokers do not follow the disclosure obligations of their codes of conduct. The maximum penalty is losing their licence. However, in the 13 cases reviewed by The Globe, 10 of the agents were suspended for three months or less. The council advises people to read their sales contract and hire a lawyer before signing.

Mr. Love, the Realtor, said that, while much of what’s going on is indicative of a hot market, he thinks it’s tainting his profession.

“It’s a dangerous type of business – you are opening yourself up to all kinds of issues and problems,” Mr. Love said. “They are committing a sin in our business in that we put our clients first.”

Copyright 2016 The Globe and Mail Inc.

Canadian and US Employment – February 5, 2016

Friday, February 5th, 2016

Other

Employment in Canada was essentially unchanged in January with the total number of employed Canadians dipping by 5,700 people. The national unemployment rate edged slightly higher from 7.1 to 7.2 per cent while the total number of hours worked, which is closely correlated with GDP growth, was up 1.2 per cent over the past 12 months.

In BC, employment grew by a modest 1,200 job to break a string of two consecutive months of monthly job losses. Full-time employment was up an impressive 10,700 jobs while part-time work declined by 9,500. The provincial unemployment rate fell 0.1 points to 6.6 per cent. 

In the US, payrolls growth in January came in below expectations, rising by 151,000 jobs, well below the nearly 300,000 jobs per month pace of the past three months. The US unemployment rate edged down 0.1 points to 4.9 per cent.

300,000 Chinese Citizens were issued temporary resident Visas to Canada in 2014 which allows them to stay in Canada for up to 6 months a year for 10 years

Thursday, February 4th, 2016

Vancouver house-buying frenzy leaves half-empty neighbourhoods

Kathy Tomlinson
Other

When Clare Cullen looks out her windows or takes her dog for a walk, she said it often makes her sad. In every direction, she sees old houses sitting empty or lots where houses have been demolished – to be replaced by opulent new ones that she expects no one will live in.

Ms. Cullen shares an older character house with her husband and teenage children in a westside Vancouver neighbourhood. It has become a prime area for real estate investment by wealthy foreign buyers – some of whom are nowhere to be seen, she said.

“Lots of people are not home. Lots of houses are empty. Sold to the highest bidder,” said Ms. Cullen, an administrator at the University of British Columbia.

She is among several long-time residents speaking out in growing numbers about their fear that their community is disappearing.

“I see a house sold now – and you just know it’s going to get demolished. If families were then moving in and engaging, that would be different,” Ms. Cullen said. “The houses they build are empty – or people are only here for a month.”

Ms. Cullen and others said their once-ordinary street has an eerie feel. Large new homes loom darkly over their smaller, lived-in ones. Gardens and big trees have been mowed down. There are fewer parked cars, she said, and it is too quiet.

“There is a slight feeling that it’s almost unsafe, too – like if I suddenly run into trouble in the street, whose house would I knock on?” Ms. Cullen said.

She said the emptiness is particularly noticeable at Halloween, because children out trick or treating often find no one home.

Uncarved pumpkins sit on unlit steps, left there, she believes, by maintenance people hired to keep the houses looking lived-in. The companies advertise services such as “garden staging” and “vacant property maintenance.” That cottage industry is one beneficiary of the city’s soaring real estate market – which industry insiders debate endlessly.

The city does not know how many homes are vacant, but it was concerned enough to ask BC Hydro to do an unprecedented search of its data on household consumption to come up with an estimate. That work has not yet been completed.

Until recently, most residents talked about the overheated real estate market quietly as it literally came to their door in the form of flyers from realtors urging them to sell.

Their modest houses are now worth upwards of $2-million as tear-downs. Ms. Cullen and others, including Jan Kidnie, said their families would trade some of that equity to get their neighbourhood back.

“The land has become a commodity – for people to manipulate and make it impossible for my sons to ever own a house here,” said Ms. Kidnie, 72. She and her husband have owned their house for 43 years.

The Globe and Mail looked at land titles records on properties within a three-block radius in the Point Grey neighbourhood, where 13 houses are unoccupied, under construction, vacant or have been demolished. All were bought in the past five years.

Across the Cullens’ back alley sits a brand new house, built for an owner whose family, Ms. Cullen said, arrives from China every few months, but does not stay long.

Next door is just building scraps. The older house was knocked down this month. Ms. Cullen said the businessman who owns it is in Canada only during the summer.

A large new house across the street is registered to a homemaker. Ms. Cullen said it stays shuttered, with no signs of life. An old newspaper sits on the steps.

Real estate agents and accountants told The Globe and Mail some foreign clients keep new homes to use only periodically, if at all. The point, they say, is to invest as much money as possible in Canada, which is considered a financial haven.

Many come and go using Canada’s new “temporary resident” visa, which allows them to be in the country up to six months each year for 10 years with no strings attached. More than 300,000 Chinese citizens were issued those visas last year.

Residents of Ms. Cullen’s street choose their words carefully – stressing the money and absentee ownership, not ethnicity.

“It’s about wealth – extreme wealth – that could come from any area of the globe,” Ms. Cullen said. “Our community is just a place to park money – and that’s really hard for people to wrap their head around.”

Ms. Kidnie was worried enough to type up and deliver a questionnaire to 100 neighbours asking what they think of the “accelerating change,” particularly the loss of heritage homes. She received dozens of responses.

“Change is bound to happen – but this change is out of control,” Ms. Kidnie said. “I don’t want to give up on the neighbourhood. I like it.”

Residents said they are also upset by how local realtors, builders and speculators are cashing in while destroying heritage homes.

One local buyer bought an older house then put it up for sale three months later, priced $300,000 higher. The listing promoted it as a great place to “hold or build your dream home!” The property just sold for $61,000 over that list price.

Between 2012 and 2014, Vancouver issued 928 permits annually, on average, to demolish single-family homes. That jumped this year to 1,141 – issued or pending – before the end of September.

Last year, inspectors looked into 203 complaints about 85 vacant properties – twice as many as the year before – after hearing reports of untidy yards, graffiti, pests, fire risk or squatters.

The city issued 165 stop-work orders to builders in the first half of 2015. Planning director Brian Jackson said most were constructing new homes without permits because they were tired of waiting for approvals.

“Small builders are frustrated by delays,” Mr. Jackson said.

Prosecutions are pending in 66 other new cases, where large trees were allegedly cut down without permits.

Manfred Trummer said he has seen firsthand how much of a hurry the real estate industry is in. Mr. Trummer owns a 100-year-old heritage home framed by old-growth timber a block away from Ms. Cullen.

A realtor recently showed up at his door with two offers – full of typos – from buyers willing to pay more than $2-million for the house, sight unseen. He and his wife ignored them.

“It sounds great. You can get how many millions for your house,” said Mr. Trummer, a math professor. “But where do we go then, right? We like to live here. We’ve raised our kids here.

“Real estate was always a bit crazy and an unusual game in Vancouver – but it’s just become a frenzy.”

One of the offers was from a numbered company, owned by Bob Nijjar – a local real estate investor who wanted to knock the old house down.

“We made a lot of offers – on a lot of houses. We are developers, building on spec,” Mr. Nijjar told The Globe.

He said the market is becoming too hot even for him. He cannot compete with realtors who partner with developers, he said, to build for foreign clients who finance the purchase.

“When you think someone will sell you land – and then someone else comes along and pays more, it’s too competitive. Not worth our time and money,” Mr. Nijjar said.

Vancouver’s mayor is speaking about the issue more critically than he has before – particularly about how some speculators may be avoiding federal taxes.

“They are taking advantage of a lax system that has not kept up with the times,” Gregor Robertson said in an interview with The Globe. “Government is not covering the bases and that means this activity gallops along.”

Specifically, there are questions about whether goods and services and capital gains taxes are paid when properties with newly built homes are resold.

According to the Canada Revenue Agency, builders must charge the GST on the full sale price of a brand new home. However, if the registered owner or relative uses that new house as a principal residence – even briefly – before selling it, they do not have to charge the tax.

They can then list it at a higher price because, for example, a $3-million purchase in Vancouver would not have $150,000 in GST on top of it. The seller also does not pay capital gains tax on their profits, as a non-resident investor would.

The CRA has penalized people in the past who have done this repeatedly, referring to it as “house hopping.” The mayor said he wants federal auditors to “accelerate” that in his city.

“There’s an opportunity to harvest some of that profit … to close the loopholes where they might exist with GST and capital gains tax to make sure the system is fair,” Mr. Robertson said.

Four of the 13 properties The Globe looked at had been resold at least once since 2011. In each case, the older home bought by an individual was knocked down, then a new one was built and sold for twice what the investor paid initially.

One of the new homes under construction is registered in the names of individuals – real estate agent Sam Mehrbod and builder Morteza Mehrbod – not in the name of the developer they work for, Excellentia Homes. They did not reply to The Globe’s requests for an interview.

Vancouver’s mayor also wants the B.C. government to bring in a tax on speculators who “flip” those homes within a year or two. So far, he said, B.C. Premier Christy Clark has been “slow to react.”

“It’s irresponsible government when the system is not fair and wealthy people can capitalize on that without contributing their fair share – and housing affordability is impacting everybody else,” Mr. Robertson said.

Copyright 2016 The Globe and Mail Inc.

History shows that home prices will eventually fall

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2016

Mike Klassen
Van. Courier

With car sales breaking records in B.C., and long lineups happening in Vancouver’s trendiest restaurants, not many of us can imagine a sudden shift in our economy that could drive house prices down.

However, the stagnation happening today in neighbouring Alberta could also occur here too.

To understand how, let’s look at the recent history of Vancouver home prices.

Over the past 35 years there have been several global economic downturns, and Greater Vancouver has hardly been immune to them all.

In the early 1980s, our region saw a precipitous house price crash — with the value of many homes dropping around 40 percent within 18 months. Adjusting for inflation, the real value of some of these properties took nearly two decades to climb back.

Going forward — as the rest of the world faced economic collapses — real estate prices in Vancouver remained amazingly resilient.

It is said that Expo 86 buffeted B.C. against the stock market crash of 1987 because of its infrastructure spending on projects such as the Coquihalla Highway and B.C. Place Stadium, and its boost to our tourism sector.

Home values dropped slightly that year, but surged back before the next recession that arrived in the early 1990s.

During that time what should have been a hard landing for B.C. was cushioned by the concerns over the impending 1997 handover of Hong Kong to Mainland China.

Increasing numbers of wealthy migrants — many of whom purchased properties on Vancouver’s tony west side — helped to “recession-proof” our province, albeit temporarily.

During the subsequent Asian financial crisis of the late nineties, B.C. saw an immediate decline in home prices. The value of local real estate dropped by about 20 percent, and would not stabilize for nearly five years.

It portends what may happen here again if the flow of offshore capital dries up.

When Vancouver won the bid for the Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2003, it became another catalyst for economic growth.

Billions were spent on Games preparations, including investments in the Canada Line subway, Vancouver Convention Centre, and Sea to Sky highway improvements.

It helped drive up the price of labour and land, and had buyers clamoring for condos right up to the next recession at the end of 2008.

Next, as home prices crashed elsewhere, Greater Vancouver experienced a comparatively minor price correction. The cost of detached homes recovered quickly and has not looked back since.

Our politicians are loath to speak freely about it, but there can be little doubt that the some of the recent capital flight from China — estimated $100 billion each month — has been a catalyst for our skyrocketing home prices.

And while B.C.’s economy has benefited from offshore investment, it has also contributed to house prices here that are not sustainable.

Consider that a professional making $400,000 a year could not possibly make mortgage payments on a typical $4 million west side home with his or her after-tax income.

You know it is tough when the “one per cent” can no longer afford Vancouver home prices.

So what can be done to make Vancouver housing more affordable? For our elected officials, the options are limited.

Driving down home prices through new regulations or taxation would either result in homeowners losing their equity, or in many cases their ability to make mortgage payments. Our personal debt levels have never been so high.

A sudden collapse in housing prices would have a ripple effect. Dropping car sales and restaurant attendance would be only the tip of the iceberg. Our whole economy would be impacted.

It would be a case of the cure being worse than the cold.

Most likely it will be forces outside our control that slams the brakes on runaway house prices here, such as increasing interest rates or the predicted clampdown on capital flight from China.

If housing continues to be out of reach for so many, it may force us to ask, do we have enough of the right kind of housing here? Are we willing to change more of our single-detached housing into multi-family units?

It is a shift that we all will have to come to terms with, and not just leave it to our politicians.

© 2016 Vancouver Courier

 

Fraser Valley Home Sales Smash January Records: FVREB

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2016

Strongest-ever January for residential real estate transactions in the Valley, with sales up 62 per cent year over year, reports board

Joannah Connolly
Other

Fraser Valley real estate saw its busiest-ever January, according to Fraser Valley Real Estate Board (FVREB) statistics published February 2.

Total residential real estate sales increased by an impressive 62 per cent compared with January 2015, although this was a typical January decline of 10.8 per cent compared with December.

Jorda Maisey, president of the FVREB, said “Typically, we see January numbers slow down post-holiday season, but so far demand for Fraser Valley homes hasn’t let up. Homebuyers are reluctant to wait when the market is moving this fast.

“Homeowners may be reluctant to sell because they love their home and where they live. However, for those looking to enter the market and perhaps are waiting for spring … start planning now. There are a lot of people out there who will want your home.”

As with Greater Vancouver, the region is firmly a sellers’ market, with new and total active listings once more falling year over year.

However, unlike last month, the number of new and active listings in the Fraser Valley increased dramatically compared with the previous month, as sellers started to move following the slow holiday season.

Sales and Listings

The Fraser Valley board’s Multiple Listing Service® (MLS®) recorded 1,185 residential sales on its Multiple Listing Service® (MLS®) in January, an increase of 62.1 per cent compared with January 2015 and 10.8 per cent less than in December 2015.

Maisey said, “There are a number of factors we can attribute this [annual] jump to, but most importantly, we’re seeing that the demand for owning a home continues to rise and inventory is struggling to keep up. Job creation and a strong BC economy are drawing more people to our region; and despite rising prices in some areas, many communities within the Fraser Valley remain affordable.”

Single-family home sales in the Fraser Valley increased the most, at 69.3 per cent, compared with last January, to 716 units – only the second fastest growth of the three property types. This was a seasonal drop of 6.3 per cent compared with the previous month.

Townhouse and other attached property sales in the region increased 57.1 per cent year over year to 275 sales, and fell 7.1 per cent compared with December.

Sales of condo-apartment units in the Fraser Valley lost their rank as the highest annual growth rate, increasing in January by 45.9 per cent year over year to 194 sales, a considerable drop of 27.9 per cent compared with the previous month.

The number of new residential listings in December fell a relatively mild 2.6 per cent year over year to 2,058, which was an increase of 98.2 per cent month over month, nearly double December’s 1,038 new listings. The surge in this month’s new listings was led by a 113 per cent month-over-month increase in condos going on the market in January; however, the other two property types also nearly doubled.

In total, there were 3,148 active home listings at the end of January, a drop of 37.5 per cent from the 5,039 listings available in January last year, but a welcome rise of 18.5 per cent compared with December.

Benchmark Prices

Detached home benchmark prices in the Fraser Valley in December rose to $691,100, a jump of 20.6 per cent compared with the same month a year previously, and a rise of 2.5 per cent in a single month since December.

January’s townhome prices rose at a more modest, but still high, annual rate in the Valley, increasing 11.1 per cent year over year to $334,400. This was a rise of 1.5 cent month over month.

Condo-apartments in the region continued their annual increase in price, with the benchmark price growing by 8.5 per cent compared with last January, to $204,300, up just 0.3 per cent over the previous month.

© 2016 Real Estate Weekly

Unseasonably Warm January for Vancouver Real Estate: REBGV

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2016

Last month?s sales 46 per cent above 10-year average in second busiest January on record, as condo prices continue surge, reports board

Joannah Connolly REW
Other

As has been the trend over the past few years, in which January has been the slowest month for sales (see infographic below), January 2016 saw a near-11 per cent drop in transactions compared with December 2015.

Nevertheless, January’s 2,519 sales were 46 per cent above the 10-year sales average for the month and rank as the second highest January on record for Greater Vancouver real estate transactions.

“Fundamental economics are driving today’s market. Home buyer demand is at near record heights and home seller supply is as low as we’ve seen in many years,” said Darcy McLeod, REBGV president.

The benchmark price of a home (composite property types) in the area hit another record in January, with the $790,200, a rise of 22.9 per cent over the price set in January last year.

The number of homes newly listed on the Greater Vancouver market fell 6.2 per cent compared with the 4,737 units listed in January 2015. However, this was a much-needed jump of 119.8 per cent compared with December 2015, as sellers took the plunge to list their homes after the New Year.

Sales and Listings                                             

Greater Vancouver home sales in January totalled 2,519, a 31.7 per cent increase from the 1,913 sales recorded in January 2015 and a 10.9 per cent drop compared with December 2015, when 2,827 homes were sold.

When analyzed by housing type, there were 1,047 detached home sales in the region in January, a rise of 34.1 per cent compared with the 781 detached sales recorded in January 2015. This was a decline of 7.8 per cent month over month.

Townhomes and other attached properties further slowed their rate of annual sales growth in January. The total of 376 units sold was a rise of 16.4 per cent over the 323 sales in January 2015, and a 19.3 per cent drop from December.

Sales of condominium-apartments totalled 1,096 in January 2016 (1,225), an increase of 35.5 per cent compared with January. This made this property type regain its position as the fastest annual sales growth of the three types, and once more the property type with the highest total sales. However this was a drop of 10.6 per cent compared with the previous month.

What’s Up, What’s Down – At a Glance

 

Jan 2016/Dec 2015

Jan 2016/Jan 2015

Overall Sales

-10.9%

+31.7%

– Detached

-7.8%

+34.1%

– Attached

-19.3%

+16.4%

– Apartment

-10.6%

+35.5%

New Listings

+119.8%

-6.2%

Current Listings

+10.1%

-38.6

 

The number of property listings remained low in January, although it began to see a recovery compared with recent months. New listings for all property types in Greater Vancouver totalled 4,442 in January. Although this is a 6.2 per cent decline compared with the 4,737 units listed in January 2015, this is a lesser annual decline than in previous months and it is a 119.8 per cent increase compared with December 2015 when only 2,021 properties were listed.

The total number of properties listed for sale as of January in Greater Vancouver stands at 6,635, a 38.6 per cent decline compared to January 2015 (10,811) and a 10.1 per cent increase compared with the previous month (6,024).

Greater Vancouver’s sales-to-active listings ratio for January 2016 is 38 per cent, making it the 11th consecutive month that the sales-to-active-listings ratio has been above 30 per cent in Metro Vancouver, as the strong sellers’ market firmly persists.

Benchmark Prices

Metro Vancouver’s combined residential property type benchmark price once more set a new bar in January, at $790,200, a rise of 22.9 per cent compared with January 2015 and a 3.7 per cent rise over the price recorded in December 2015.

The area’s typical detached home is now priced at $1,293,700, a rise of 27.9 per cent compared with the same month last year, and once more the sharpest rise in prices of all the property types.

The benchmark price of a townhome or other attached unit in Greater Vancouver increased 16.4 per cent compared with January 2015 to $563,700.

The big story in prices is that of condo-apartment benchmark prices, which continued their recent trend of surging as quickly as houses. The benchmark price for a condo in Greater Vancouver rose 19.4 per cent year over year in January 2015 to $456,600, and 4.7 per cent in the single month since December 2015, the kind of figure traditionally reserved for annual condo price rises. This further reflects the increase in demand from buyers pushed out of the detached home and townhouse market, along with the dramatically rising cost of land for new condominium development.

Greater Vancouver MLS® Benchmark Prices % Change

 

Jan 2016

Dec 2015

Jan 2015

Detached

$1,293,700

+3.6%

+27.9%

Townhome

$563,500

+3.7%

+16.4%

Apartment

$456,600

+4.7%

+19.4%

 

Home prices vary widely throughout the REBGV region. To get a good idea of home prices in a specific location, check the detailed MLS® Home Price Index in the REBGV full statistics package.

© 2016 Real Estate Weekly

The federal government considers this transaction a transfer of unoccupied inventory from one developer to another

Monday, February 1st, 2016

Ask The Expert: Do I Pay GST on a Never-Occupied Unit?

Barry Magee
REW

 Q: I’m looking for a newer condo, and I know that if I buy a new presale unit, I would have to pay GST on the purchase price. So if I were to purchase a resale property that is a couple of years old and has never been occupied, am I excluded from having to pay GST on it?

A: With the amount of development happening in Vancouver and the political talk around affordability that is ongoing, this is definitely an intriguing question. The perhaps-surprising answer to your question is no, you are not excluded from paying GST in this scenario. There are a number of situations where paying GST will still be applicable.

Most people don’t know this, but if the unit has been left unoccupied, it is still considered new upon resale of the unit. The federal government considers this transaction a transfer of unoccupied inventory from one developer to another, so GST would be payable upon the resale transaction.

So this brings a whole new issue into play. With vacancy being a target of the recent taxation scheme proposed by UBC professors to address housing affordability, this could be a loophole that can be exploited by an astute real estate investor.

An example I heard recently was one where an investor purchased a property for $500,000 and paid $25,000 GST on the unit. They decided not to occupy or rent the unit, and were able to sell it a year and a half later for $600,000, because of Vancouver’s increasing prices.

The new buyer wasn’t aware of this, but because the unit had been left unoccupied, the purchase was subject to paying five per cent tax, even though the building had been completed a year and a half ago. In addition to this, the seller was able to get their original $25,000 GST refunded to them from the province. So the investor made a clear $100,000 profit. A perfect example of real estate speculation at its best.

Another exemption is when someone uses a property for a business purpose for more than 50 per cent of their ownership. So if you are buying from someone who used the residence to generate income, you need to check whether or not GST is payable on the unit.

Yet another situation where you may be forced to pay GST on a resale unit is when it has claimed input tax credits or has undergone a substantial renovation.

You can find out more about the how the government views these situations on the CMHC website here. 

While it’s unlikely an investor would buy a unit specifically to exploit this loophole, as a buyer it is something you should very much be aware of. Getting a bill for $30,000 when you aren’t expecting it isn’t on anyone’s priority list. And with the amount of new developments we see being constructed around the city, I think more people will come across this as they purchase units that are a few years old.

If we see any new tax system implemented like the one being discussed at the Sauder School of Business these days, I think it’s very likely we will see an increase in the amount of inventory available, especially in the newer developments we see everywhere around the city, as investors offload their units to avoid the vacancy tax.

As a buyer of one of these resale/new units, you should definitely make sure you are fully informed what the status surrounding GST on the unit is before becoming invested in the property.

 

© 2023 REW.

Do I Pay GST on a Never-Occupied Unit?

Monday, February 1st, 2016

A little-known tax loophole means that if you buy a resale unit that has never been occupied, you?re on the hook for the GST, explains local agent Barry Magee

Barry Magee
Other

Q: I’m looking for a newer condo, and I know that if I buy a new presale unit, I would have to pay GST on the purchase price. So if I were to purchase a resale property that is a couple of years old and has never been occupied, am I excluded from having to pay GST on it?

A: With the amount of development happening in Vancouver and the political talk around affordability that is ongoing, this is definitely an intriguing question. The perhaps-surprising answer to your question is no, you are not excluded from paying GST in this scenario. There are a number of situations where paying GST will still be applicable.

Most people don’t know this, but if the unit has been left unoccupied, it is still considered new upon resale of the unit. The federal government considers this transaction a transfer of unoccupied inventory from one developer to another, so GST would be payable upon the resale transaction.

So this brings a whole new issue into play. With vacancy being a target of the recent taxation scheme proposed by UBC professors to address housing affordability, this could be a loophole that can be exploited by an astute real estate investor.

An example I heard recently was one where an investor purchased a property for $500,000 and paid $25,000 GST on the unit. They decided not to occupy or rent the unit, and were able to sell it a year and a half later for $600,000, because of Vancouver’s increasing prices.

The new buyer wasn’t aware of this, but because the unit had been left unoccupied, the purchase was subject to paying five per cent tax, even though the building had been completed a year and a half ago. In addition to this, the seller was able to get their original $25,000 GST refunded to them from the province. So the investor made a clear $100,000 profit. A perfect example of real estate speculation at its best.

Another exemption is when someone uses a property for a business purpose for more than 50 per cent of their ownership. So if you are buying from someone who used the residence to generate income, you need to check whether or not GST is payable on the unit.

Yet another situation where you may be forced to pay GST on a resale unit is when it has claimed input tax credits or has undergone a substantial renovation.

You can find out more about the how the government views these situations on the CMHC website here

While it’s unlikely an investor would buy a unit specifically to exploit this loophole, as a buyer it is something you should very much be aware of. Getting a bill for $30,000 when you aren’t expecting it isn’t on anyone’s priority list. And with the amount of new developments we see being constructed around the city, I think more people will come across this as they purchase units that are a few years old.

If we see any new tax system implemented like the one being discussed at the Sauder School of Business these days, I think it’s very likely we will see an increase in the amount of inventory available, especially in the newer developments we see everywhere around the city, as investors offload their units to avoid the vacancy tax.

As a buyer of one of these resale/new units, you should definitely make sure you are fully informed what the status surrounding GST on the unit is before becoming invested in the property.

© 2016 Real Estate Weekly