Archive for February, 2021

Metro Vancouver office space vacancy rate facing the highest vacancy rate in years due to pandemic

Wednesday, February 24th, 2021

Vancouver office space getting spookily quiet

Hayley woodin &Frank O’Brien
Western Investor

— Vancouver downtown office towers. | Chung Chow

More office space is expected to come available in what has been one of Canada’s tightest and most competitive markets for office space, but is now facing the highest vacancy rate in years.

Metro Vancouver’s office vacancy rate is expected to increase over the next 12 months, after more than doubling from 2019 to 2020.

CBRE’s latest real estate outlook forecasts the region’s downtown vacancy rate will reach 8.4 per cent in 2021, up from 5.8 per cent in 2020, and 2.2 per cent the year before.

More than 1.1 million square feet of new supply is also expected to hit the market this year.

Downtown Vancouver currently has nearly 600,000 square feet of sublease office space that has been returned to the market, part of a total of 1.5 million square feet of vacant offices, according to a recent survey by Avison Young.  

Across the entire Metro region, more than four million square feet of office space –  equal to 90 acres of carpets and concrete –  is currently empty.  Avison Young found that nearly 70 per cent of the vacant space is in Vancouver, Burnaby and Richmond towers.

“Canada’s largest cities have been disproportionately impacted [by COVID-19] as high population densities and dependency on mass transit created logistical challenges which reduced office occupancy,” the CBRE report stated.

While higher office vacancy rates is expected to persist throughout the year, CBRE forecasts that leasing activity will resume as vaccination rates climb, and business activity recovers.

The firm also projects that current allocations of square footage per employee could increase, as employers rethink space, health and safety requirements in the post-pandemic world.

In the meantime, the cost of premium downtown office space in Vancouver is expected to tick down by around 3 per cent to $43.10 per square foot this year, after holding fairly steady from 2019 to 2020.

 

© Copyright 2020 Western Investor

BMO has reported as a higher trading revenue in 2021

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2021

BMO reports strong fiscal Q1

Ephraim Vecina
Mortgage Broker News

Bank of Montreal has reported its financial results for the first quarter of 2021. BMO saw earnings of $3.06 per share, or net income of $2.04 billion significantly outstripping the $2.15 average projection of analysts in a Bloomberg survey. Higher trading revenue also drove a 36% annual growth in profit at BMO’s capital-markets division.

Overall earnings were boosted by the bank’s shrinking loan-loss reserves. BMO set aside less capital than expected to cover bad loans during the fiscal first quarter. The bank’s provisions for credit losses fell by 64% quarterly, ending up at $156 million. This was just one-third of what analysts previously estimated.

Additionally, BMO saw a $59 million recovery of provisions on performing loans, due to positive borrowing trends and “an improving economic outlook,” Bloomberg reported.

This recovery “materialized earlier than we had expected,” said Mike Rizvanovic, analyst at Credit Suisse Group AG. “Results were better pretty much across the board.”

Further forward momentum is extremely likely as the Canadian economy “is expected to rebound strongly in subsequent quarters as vaccines become more widely available and restrictions are relaxed,” BMO said in a shareholder report.

 

Copyright © 2021 Key Media

Condo insurance price in Ontario increase up to 8 percent at the end of 2020

Monday, February 22nd, 2021

More bad news for owners of condos in Ontario

Clayton Jarvis
Mortgage Broker News

 

If owning a condo property in Ontario wasn’t already hard enough – price per square foot on new builds continues to climb, making one of the last “affordable” property types in the provinces even less so; COVID-19’s throttling of tourism has killed many investors’ income streams, leading many market-watchers to speculate around a looming mass sell-off; a lack of immigrants and students has forced the owners of countless condo units to lower their rents – it’s starting to get a little tougher.

A new report by rate comparison site LowestRates.ca has found that, as in British Columbia and Alberta, where a similar trend is already leaving a hole in condo owners’ wallets, condo insurance rates in Ontario are rising at what many would consider an alarming rate.

The site reported that, on average, condo insurance prices in Ontario were 8% higher at the end of the fourth quarter of 2020 than they were a year prior, and 3% higher compared to Q3.

The worry, according to LowestRates.ca CEO Justin Thouin, is that these significant quarterly increases will soon add up to equal the more painful hikes being paid in B.C., where condo insurance is 18% more expensive than it was at the end of 2019, and in Alberta, where condo insurance prices ballooned by 20% over the same period.

“Those prices have increased gradually quarter over quarter over quarter,” Thouin told Mortgage Broker News. “The concern is that what’s happening in B.C. and Alberta is now happening in Ontario, and that owners of condos could see their insurance continue to rise dramatically over the subsequent quarters and years.”

Such a sudden jump in insurance costs will seem extreme to some Ontarians, but it’s a trend already established in B.C., where Thouin said the price of condo insurance has been increasing consistently by between 4% and 7% per quarter. If the same rate of change takes place in Ontario, he said a 20% year-over-year increase in condo insurance costs isn’t out of the question.

Why are Ontario’s condo insurance prices rising?

Due to a number of factors, the exorbitant cost of extreme weather-related insurance claims chief among them, insurance companies’ loss ratios have taken a severe hit over the past few years. To compensate, the firms still offering insurance for condo buildings have begun increasing the deductibles these clients have to pay. Those costs, for buildings that lack the reserve fees needed to cover them, get passed on to individual condo owners.

Another significant problem, Thouin feels, is that the number of companies willing to insure condo buildings is dwindling.

“When you have fewer insurance companies willing to insure something, prices are inevitably going to go up. And that’s what you’re seeing in the condo insurance market,” he said, adding that today’s historically low interest rates are preventing insurance companies from generating income through the interest paid on their cash reserves, a historically reliable source of funds.

A building’s age also plays a factor in insurance costs, and there is no shortage of older condo developments in Ontario.

“Some of the infrastructure is getting older, so it’s breaking down. And with the values of basically all real estate in Ontario having increased over the past five or 10 years, it costs more when things break, so those repair costs are higher and the insurance companies have to pay out more in claims,” Thouin said.

Homeowners have so far escaped the pain being felt by their condo-owning brethren. In Q4 2020, the average cost of home insurance had fallen by 1% year-over-year in Ontario and by 4% in Alberta. It was 3% higher in B.C.

Implications for condo owners

Under normal circumstances, an 8% increase in condo insurance costs would not likely break the back of the average condo owner. But owners attracted to the condo market because of its affordability, who have had their income disrupted by the pandemic, may not have a lot of financial wiggle room to work with.

“This insurance increase certainly doesn’t come at a good time,” Thouin said. “Condo prices are down. Many condos are owned by people for investment purposes, and a lot of these people are highly leveraged, so anything that’s going to increase costs at a time when revenue is down could be problematic and could force these individuals to have to sell these condos.”

How can mortgage brokers help? Thouin said it’s important that condo owners are reminded that they have the option to compare rates and find an insurance plan that better fits their budget. Condo insurance may not even be on their radar when it comes time to trim a little fat from their monthly obligations.

“If, overall, rates are going up 8%, that’s just an average,” he said. “With some companies, you might be able to get a better rate than last year, whereas with others, your rate might go up 20-30%. You absolutely need to compare your options, because it could give you more money to put toward your mortgage.”

 

Copyright

Canada export terminal located at Kitimat salvaged B.C construction pace in 2020

Monday, February 22nd, 2021

Major projects salvaged B.C. construction in 2020

WI Staff
Western Investor

— Metro Vancouver home building has rallied after falling nearly 19 per cent in 2020. – Adera

Major resource projects, such as the LNG Canada export terminal at Kitimat, salvaged British Columbia’s construction pace in 2020, as home building plunged 18.9 per cent and commercial construction fell nearly 8 per cent from a year earlier.

B.C.’s inventory of major projects, those valued at more than $15,000,000, increased to $369.8 billion as of Q3 2020, up 4.8 per cent compared to the same period last year.

Nearly a third of the major projects are under construction, including LNG Canada ($36 billion) the Coastal GasLink Pipeline Project ($6.2 billion) and the Trans Mountain Pipeline (12.6 billion).
“B.C.’s major projects, driven by natural resource and infrastructure projects, provide thousands of both direct and indirect jobs and are spread across every region in the province. With employment and GDP expected to remain below pre-crisis levels in 2021, these projects will meaningfully increase economic growth and help pay down the large provincial debt incurred to support businesses and citizens through the pandemic,” said Lori Mathison, president and CEO of the Chartered Professional Accountants BC (CPABC).

The data is contained in the CPABC’s annual BC Check-Up for 2020.

Investment into both residential and private non-residential projects also cooled, and despite recent price gains, housing starts steeply declined. The overall number of housing units started was down by nearly a fifth (-18.3 per cent) through 2020 compared to the number started in 2019. Attached units, such as condos and townhomes, accounted for the majority of the decline, according to the CPABC.

Private non-residential investment, such as commercial and industrial construction, declined to $5 billion in 2020, representing a 7.9 per cent drop compared to the level of investment in 2019. 

“Economic uncertainty saw investors delay or cancel both residential and non-residential investment projects in 2020,” noted Mathison. “Over 7,800 fewer residential housing units were started compared to 2019, and over $430 million less was invested in private non-residential developments. This is worrying as construction has been a large factor in the province’s robust economic growth. “

She noted that both attached and detached starts rebounded from earlier in 2020, and the pace has continued into 2021.

According to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. total Metro Vancouver housing starts in January 2021, at 1,394 units, were up 36 per cent from same month a year earlier. A total of 44,213 units are currently under construction in Metro Vancouver, including 37,135 apartments – 15 per cent of which are rentals – , 2,994 townhouses and 3,464 detached houses.

 

© Copyright 2020 Western Investor

Zillow’s innovative approach to provide a better customer experience in Real Estate market

Friday, February 19th, 2021

The REAL Takeaway From The News Of Zillow Buying ShowingTime

Tom Ferry
other

 Peter Drucker told us many years ago: All business is innovation and marketing.

We should know this. We should collectively strive for this.

Yet what do we see when someone innovates to provide a better customer experience in real estate?

Outrage. Fear. Consternation. Condemnation.

If you felt any of those emotions when you heard the news that Zillow purchased ShowingTime, it may be time for a long, hard look at yourself.

It’s time to use this news as a wake-up call and channel your misplaced energy into action.

Disruption is a Part of Life… Or Certainly Business

Disruptors have always existed. And as long as people continue seeking better ways of doing business, they will always exist.

Zillow is just being Zillow. They’re innovating. They’re marketing. They’re creating a consumer-friendly alternative to an industry that sometimes feels stuck in the dark ages.

Taking those two things into account – disruptors will always exist and Zillow is just doing their thing…

The question is not “What can be done to stop them?”

The question is this: What are YOU doing to compete?

It’s Time to Look Within

If this announcement struck fear in you, my hope for you is to use this “scare” to do more of what you know you should be doing. The question to ask yourself now is “How can this get me to innovate and actually do better?”

Here are five questions to ask yourself to break it down to the nitty gritty:

  • Who is my customer?
  • What are their problems?
  • How am I going to solve them in a unique way?
  • How am I going to do it at scale?
  • How am I going to build my team so I can bring consistent value to my customers and attract more of them?

Now is the time to put yourself in a “wartime general” mindset.

It’s not about running around with your hair on fire…

It’s about remaining calm in the face of adversity and challenges.

It’s about taking a step back, assessing the situation, and asking yourself the right questions to get into massive action.

This Won’t Be the Last Big Zillow Announcement

Whether you want to accept it or not, this won’t be Zillow’s last big announcement.

They’re a brokerage now. They’re one of your competitors. They’re going to keep doing their thing.

And more disruptors will be seeking ways to infiltrate our industry every day.

So you have two options: Keep complaining about their every move and eventually get squeezed out entirely, or get your butt in gear to compete by:

  • Building a more trusted brand. Your brand has to be everywhere in your localized market
  • Bringing the most value and being of service to your past clients and sphere to stay top of mind
  • Maybe expanding your geo farm
  • It might be time to upgrade your website
  • Or to start thinking more strategically about your video content and how to drive traffic back to your website
  • To counter their moves with the addition of localized Google ads

The point is… there’s plenty of work to be done, so why waste your energy worrying about what some industry behemoth is doing when instead you can channel it into your own improvement?

Go execute… because that’s the ultimate way to create the degree of separation.

And if you need help, we’re always here to guide your journey, help you make the right decisions, and keep you focused and in action.

 

 

© Tom Ferry – #1 Coach in Real Estate Training. All rights reserved.

2021 industrial real state vacancy rate below 1 percent for the first time – CBRE

Friday, February 19th, 2021

Metro Vancouver industrial vacancy rate flirting with zero

Wl Staff
Western Investor

 — | CBRE

The industrial real estate vacancy rate in Metro Vancouver, which is already in the sub-1 per cent level in four municipalities, will soon fall below 1 per cent across the entire region, which is unprecedented, according to a forecast from commercial real estate agent CBRE.

“We believe continued strong demand and a critical lack of supply in the current market will force the vacancy rate below 1 per cent for the first time [in 2021]” said the CBRE Industrial projection, released February 18.

The four markets where the industrial vacancy are under 1 per cent are Delta (0.4%), Surrey (0.6%), Maple Ridge/ Pitt Meadows (0.9%) and North Vancouver (0.8%).

“Surrey is the largest industrial market in the Lower Mainland and seen as a safety net for supply over the past decade,” CBRE noted, adding “But this is no longer the case as the Fraser Valley now has a lower overall vacancy rate than Vancouver, Burnaby and the Tri-Cities.”

Demand for industrial space appears driven by distribution space needed by large retailers and the e-commerce sector.

 In 2020, warehouse and distribution accounted for 34 per cent of the 4.9 million square feet taken up in the industrial market, with food and beverage accounting for 23 per cent, up from a 6 per cent share in 2019. E-commerce claimed 12 per cent of absorption, which was ahead of both manufacturing and the film industry, which each accounted for 11 per cent of the industrial demand. Third-party logistics – which involves storage and shipment from multiple sources – captured a 9 per cent of the 2020 industrial take up in 2020.

Major companies completing built-to-suit industrial asset last year include grocery giant Sobeys, building a 530,500-square-foot distribution warehouse in Surrey.

This year, Walmart is expected to complete a 296,000 square foot “fulfillment centre” in Surrey and dairy firm Saputo Inc, will open a production and distribution centre of approximately 358,000 square feet in Port Coquitlam.

There continues to be an imbalance of demand and supply, with few significant speculative industrial projects underway, according to CBRE, which suggests vacancy rates will remain the third-lowest in North America in 2021 and 2022.

The shortage of space and high demand has driven Metro Vancouver industrial rates higher. CBRE is forecasting average industrial lease rates to hit a record high of $14.00 per square foot this year, up 6 per cent from 2020.

 

© Copyright 2020 Western Investor

Latest home sales results increase 35.2% on a year-over-year basis | CREA

Thursday, February 18th, 2021

Here Are Canadian Regions With Below Average Home Prices And The Homes You Can Buy There

Jannine Rane
other

According to the latest data from the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA), housing market conditions across Canada resulted in a new record for home sales in January, with 36,897 homes changing hands; a 35.2% increase on a year-over-year (y-o-y) basis. 

By comparison, new listings dropped nationally by 2.9% y-o-y, with just 52,342 properties being added to the market last month. As such, the overall housing market was highly competitive for home buyers in January, as indicated by the sales-to-new-listings ratio (SNLR) of 70%. The SNLR is a measure of marketing competition during a defined period of time, and is calculated by dividing sales by the total number of new listings added to the market during that time. A number over 60% depicts a seller’s market: where demand outpaces supply and competition conditions favour home sellers over buyers. 

According to CREA, as the spring market approaches, the current pace of home sales growth might be inhibited by an evident lack of supply, particularly in Ontario markets, to meet growing home buyer demand. However, CREA notes that new supply “could materialize as current COVID-19 restrictions are increasingly eased and the weather starts to improve.” 

Prevalent market conditions in January also put upward pressure on home prices: the national average home price rose 23% annually in January to $621,525. To better understand where home buyers may find pockets of affordability, Zoocasa took a closer look at the average home price in each of the 25 regional housing markets covered in CREA’s monthly report, and ranked every market based on the annual rate of growth of the average home price. We also identified where the average home price fell below and above the national average home price, and curated a list of example homes in each market that sold within a $20,000 range of the average home price.    

Of the 25 regional housing markets included in CREA’s monthly report, 24 markets posted a y-o-y increase in the average home price, ranging from 5% to 41%, and just one market – Regina – saw the average home price decrease by 3% to $273,885. Further, 12 housing markets, or almost half of the areas included in the report, posted a growth in the average home price of at least 20%. 

Average Home Price Below National Average in 18 of 25 Regional Markets Across Canada 

Despite strong annual growth in the average home price in nearly every market, the average home price remained below the national average of $621,525 in 18 markets. 

Saint John took the title of Canada’s most affordable housing market in January, despite an 8% increase in the average home price y-o-y to 199,853. On the other hand, Greater Vancouver recorded the highest average home price in January at $1,089,096 – an 11% increase y-o-y. 

Despite tying for the highest increase in the annual average home price at 41%, the average home price in London and St. Thomas remained below the national average at $608,049. There was also a 41% increases y-o-y in the Niagara Region, however, the average home price clocked in at $651,138, nearly $30,000 higher than the national average. 

Check out our infographic below highlighting the average home price in 25 regional housing markets across Canada, and where the average home price is above or below the national average. Further below find a sampling of home listings available in each region where the average home price is below the national average.

 

 

Sample Listings in Canada’s 18 Most Affordable Regions  

1. London and St. Thomas 

  • Average Home Price: $608,049
  • Annual Price Growth: +41%
  • What you could buy: 362 Ridout Street South
    • List Price: $599,900
    • Property Details:
      • Detached 
      • 3 bedroom, 3 bathroom, 5 parking

2. Sudbury 

  • Average Home Price: $356,633
  • Annual Price Growth: +38%
  • What you could buy: 4436 Hector
    • List Price: $349,700
    • Property Details: 
      • Detached
      • 5 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 1 parking

3. Windsor-Essex 

  • Average Home Price: $492,480
  • Annual Price Growth: 31%
  • What you could buy: 686 Dynasty
    • List Price: $488,888
    • Property Details:
      • Detached
      • 3+1 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 1 parking 

4. Halifax-Dartmouth 

  • Average Home Price: $433,000
  • Annual Price Growth: +31%
  • What you could buy: 3145 Veith Street
    • List Price: $424,900
    • Property Details:
      • Semi-detached
      • 4 bedroom, 3 bathroom, 0 parking

5. Ottawa 

  • Average Home Price: $591,413
  • Annual Price Growth: +26%
  • What you could buy: 83 Armagh Way
    • List Price: $598,800
    • Property Details:
      • Detached
      • 4 bedroom, 3 bathroom, 3 parking 

6. Trois Rivières, CMA

  • Average Home Price: $225,694
  • Annual Price Growth: +24%
  • What you could buy:450-452 Rue Lacerte
    • List Price: $219,900
    • Property Details:
      • Duplex
      • 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom, 0 parking

7. Gatineau CMA

  • Average Home Price: $338,679
  • Annual Price Growth: +21%
  • What you could buy: 26 Rue Beauséjour
    • List Price: $325,000
    • Property Details:
      • Single Family House
      • 5 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking 

8. Montreal

  • Average Home Price: $516,350
  • Annual Price Growth: +20%
  • What you could buy: 85 Rue De Castelnau O. #413
    • List Price: $519,000
    • Property Details:
      • Condo Apartment
      • 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom, 0 parking 

9. Sherbrooke CMA

  • Average Home Price: $317,545
  • Annual Price Growth: +19%
  • What you could buy: 1786 Rue des Pois-de-Senteur
    • List Price:$320,000
    • Property Details:
      • Single-Family House
      • 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking 

10. Thunder Bay

  • Average Home Price: $258,738
  • Annual Price Growth: +16%
  • What you could buy: 1405 Arthur St. West
    • List Price: $269,900
    • Property Details:
      • Detached
      • 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom, 0 parking 

11. Calgary 

  • Average Home Price: $518,237
  • Annual Price Growth: +15%
  • What you could buy: 201 560 6 Ave
    • List Price: $525,000
    • Property Details:
      • Apartment
      • 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 1 parking 

12. Quebec CMA

  • Average Home Price: $313,811
  • Annual Price Growth: +14%
  • What you could buy: 1571 Rue Camus
    • List Price: $309,000
    • Property Details:
      • Single-Family House
      • 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking 

13. Winnipeg 

  • Average Home Price: $320,814
  • Annual Price Growth: +10%
  • What you could buy: 250 Queen Street
    • LIst Price: $309,900
    • Property Details:
      • Single-Family House
      • 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking 

14. Saguenay CMA 

  • Average Home Price: $206,242
  • Annual Price Growth: +10%
  • What you could buy: 4685 Ch St. Paul
    • LIst Price: $209,000
    • Property Details:
      • Single-Family House
      • 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking 

15. Saint John 

  • Average Home Price: $199,853
  • Annual Price Growth: +8%
  • What you could buy: 251 City Line
    • List Price: $195,000
    • Property Details:
      • Single-Family House
      • 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking 

16. Saskatoon

  • Average Home Price: $331,555
  • Annual Price Growth: +7%
  • What you could buy: 213 X Ave N
    • List Price: $329,900
    • Property Details:
      • Single-Family Home – Bungalow
      • 4 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking 

17. Edmonton 

  • Average Home Price: $375,874
  • Annual Price Growth: +5%
  • What you could buy: 605 – 9741 110 St Nw
    • List Price: $365,000
    • Property Details:
      • Apartment 
      • 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking  

18. Regina

  • Average Home Price: $273,885
  • Annual Price Growth: -3%
  • What you could buy: 853 Connaught Street
    • List Price: $279,900
    • Property Details:
      • Row/Townhouse 
      • 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking  

Listings information was last updated at 4 PM ET on February 17, 2021. For more information about this report or to set up a media interview, please contact [email protected]

© 2015 – 2021 Zoocasa Realty Inc.,

Metro Vancouver’s sales increase of rental properties up to 2.7 percent in 2020 compared 2019

Thursday, February 18th, 2021

Sales of Vancouver rental apartments soar as vacancies rise

WI Staff
Western Investor

— Kerrisdale 18-suite rental building sold in January 2021 for $7 million. | Cushman & Wakefield

Despite rental vacancies rising to the highest level in 20 years and a province wide ban on rent increases due to the pandemic, sales of Vancouver multi-family rental buildings surged in the second half of 2020 after collapsing 38 per cent in the first six months compared to the same period a year earlier.

“The Metro Vancouver market saw a total of 78 properties trade in 2020, just one less than the 77 transacted in 2019,” reported Mark Goodman, a partner and managing broker of Goodman Commercial, Vancouver, which specializes in the multi-family market.

Metro Vancouver’s 2020 total dollar volume increased to $1.13 billion, up 2.7 per cent in compared to 2019, and the average price per suite rose 8 per cent to $403,088, Goodman noted.

After being outsold by suburban markets in 2019, the city of Vancouver rebounded last year, posting $674 million in sales with 36 buildings sold, an increase of 53 per cent and 28 per cent, respectively, from a year earlier. Vancouver’s action continued in 2021, with the $292.5 million purchase of a 15-building portfolio in January by InterRent Real Estate Investment Trust and Crestpoint Real Estate Investments Ltd., both of Toronto. That one deal, brokered by CBRE in Vancouver, represents 43 per cent of Vancouver’s total dollar volume in 2020.

In 2020, the average per-suite price of a rental apartment building sale in the city of Vancouver was $499,500, but that spiked to $782,000 in Kerrisdale, due to the sale of two properties that were sold for development potential, Goodman noted.

Overall, suburban markets witnessed a 22 per cent decrease in buildings sold over the year, compared to 2019. Maple Ridge was the only area that saw an increase, Goodman said.

This could be linked to Metro Vancouver’s rising rental vacancy rate, which increased to 2.6 per cent as of October 2020, from 1.1 per cent a year earlier, the highest increase in 20 years, according to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. (CMHC).

As well, while a ban on evictions ended in the fourth quarter of last year, rental increases in B.C. remain frozen until July 2021, due to pandemic regulations from the provincial government.

This has recently translated into some price reductions on apartment buildings listed for sale.

Goodman said that low mortgage rates – it is possible to secure CMHC-insured mortgage for multi-unit residential buildings of five units or more at 1.3 per cent or less – and a “search for safety and security” has kept Metro Vancouver’s rental apartment market relatively stable.

 

© Copyright 2020 Western Investor

Less supply high demand in 18 Canadian Cities

Thursday, February 18th, 2021

18 Canadian Cities With Below Average Home Prices And Sample Listings

Janine Rane
The Vancouver Sun

According to the latest data from the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA), housing market conditions across Canada resulted in a new record for home sales in January, with 36,897 homes changing hands; a 35.2% increase on a year-over-year (y-o-y) basis. 

By comparison, new listings dropped nationally by 2.9% y-o-y, with just 52,342 properties being added to the market last month. As such, the overall housing market was highly competitive for home buyers in January, as indicated by the sales-to-new-listings ratio (SNLR) of 70%. The SNLR is a measure of marketing competition during a defined period of time, and is calculated by dividing sales by the total number of new listings added to the market during that time. A number over 60% depicts a seller’s market: where demand outpaces supply and competition conditions favour home sellers over buyers. 

According to CREA, as the spring market approaches, the current pace of home sales growth might be inhibited by an evident lack of supply, particularly in Ontario markets, to meet growing home buyer demand. However, CREA notes that new supply “could materialize as current COVID-19 restrictions are increasingly eased and the weather starts to improve.” 

Prevalent market conditions in January also put upward pressure on home prices: the national average home price rose 23% annually in January to $621,525. To better understand where home buyers may find pockets of affordability, Zoocasa took a closer look at the average home price in each of the 25 regional housing markets covered in CREA’s monthly report, and ranked every market based on the annual rate of growth of the average home price. We also identified where the average home price fell below and above the national average home price, and curated a list of example homes in each market that sold within a $20,000 range of the average home price.    

Of the 25 regional housing markets included in CREA’s monthly report, 24 markets posted a y-o-y increase in the average home price, ranging from 5% to 41%, and just one market – Regina – saw the average home price decrease by 3% to $273,885. Further, 12 housing markets, or almost half of the areas included in the report, posted a growth in the average home price of at least 20%. 

Average Home Price Below National Average in 18 of 25 Regional Markets Across Canada 

Despite strong annual growth in the average home price in nearly every market, the average home price remained below the national average of $621,525 in 18 markets. 

Saint John took the title of Canada’s most affordable housing market in January, despite an 8% increase in the average home price y-o-y to 199,853. On the other hand, Greater Vancouver recorded the highest average home price in January at $1,089,096 – an 11% increase y-o-y. 

Despite tying for the highest increase in the annual average home price at 41%, the average home price in London and St. Thomas remained below the national average at $608,049. There was also a 41% increases y-o-y in the Niagara Region, however, the average home price clocked in at $651,138, nearly $30,000 higher than the national average. 

$30,000 higher than the national average. 

 

Sample Listings in Canada’s 18 Most Affordable Regions 

1. London and St. Thomas 

  • Average Home Price: $608,049
  • Annual Price Growth: +41%
  • What you could buy: 362 Ridout Street South
    • List Price: $599,900
    • Property Details:
      • Detached 
      • 3 bedroom, 3 bathroom, 5 parking

2. Sudbury 

  • Average Home Price: $356,633
  • Annual Price Growth: +38%
  • What you could buy: 4436 Hector
    • List Price: $349,700
    • Property Details: 
      • Detached
      • 5 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 1 parking

3. Windsor-Essex 

  • Average Home Price: $492,480
  • Annual Price Growth: 31%
  • What you could buy: 686 Dynasty
    • List Price: $488,888
    • Property Details:
      • Detached
      • 3+1 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 1 parking 

4. Halifax-Dartmouth 

  • Average Home Price: $433,000
  • Annual Price Growth: +31%
  • What you could buy: 3145 Veith Street
    • List Price: $424,900
    • Property Details:
      • Semi-detached
      • 4 bedroom, 3 bathroom, 0 parking

5. Ottawa 

  • Average Home Price: $591,413
  • Annual Price Growth: +26%
  • What you could buy: 83 Armagh Way
    • List Price: $598,800
    • Property Details:
      • Detached
      • 4 bedroom, 3 bathroom, 3 parking 

6. Trois Rivières, CMA

  • Average Home Price: $225,694
  • Annual Price Growth: +24%
  • What you could buy:450-452 Rue Lacerte
    • List Price: $219,900
    • Property Details:
      • Duplex
      • 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom, 0 parking

7. Gatineau CMA

  • Average Home Price: $338,679
  • Annual Price Growth: +21%
  • What you could buy: 26 Rue Beauséjour
    • List Price: $325,000
    • Property Details:
      • Single Family House
      • 5 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking 

8. Montreal

  • Average Home Price: $516,350
  • Annual Price Growth: +20%
  • What you could buy: 85 Rue De Castelnau O. #413
    • List Price: $519,000
    • Property Details:
      • Condo Apartment
      • 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom, 0 parking 

9. Sherbrooke CMA

  • Average Home Price: $317,545
  • Annual Price Growth: +19%
  • What you could buy: 1786 Rue des Pois-de-Senteur
    • List Price:$320,000
    • Property Details:
      • Single-Family House
      • 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking 

10. Thunder Bay

  • Average Home Price: $258,738
  • Annual Price Growth: +16%
  • What you could buy: 1405 Arthur St. West
    • List Price: $269,900
    • Property Details:
      • Detached
      • 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom, 0 parking 

11. Calgary 

  • Average Home Price: $518,237
  • Annual Price Growth: +15%
  • What you could buy: 201 560 6 Ave
    • List Price: $525,000
    • Property Details:
      • Apartment
      • 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 1 parking 

12. Quebec CMA

  • Average Home Price: $313,811
  • Annual Price Growth: +14%
  • What you could buy: 1571 Rue Camus
    • List Price: $309,000
    • Property Details:
      • Single-Family House
      • 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking 

13. Winnipeg 

  • Average Home Price: $320,814
  • Annual Price Growth: +10%
  • What you could buy: 250 Queen Street
    • LIst Price: $309,900
    • Property Details:
      • Single-Family House
      • 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking 

14. Saguenay CMA 

  • Average Home Price: $206,242
  • Annual Price Growth: +10%
  • What you could buy: 4685 Ch St. Paul
    • LIst Price: $209,000
    • Property Details:
      • Single-Family House
      • 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking 

15. Saint John 

  • Average Home Price: $199,853
  • Annual Price Growth: +8%
  • What you could buy: 251 City Line
    • List Price: $195,000
    • Property Details:
      • Single-Family House
      • 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking 

16. Saskatoon

  • Average Home Price: $331,555
  • Annual Price Growth: +7%
  • What you could buy: 213 X Ave N
    • List Price: $329,900
    • Property Details:
      • Single-Family Home – Bungalow
      • 4 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking 

17. Edmonton 

  • Average Home Price: $375,874
  • Annual Price Growth: +5%
  • What you could buy: 605 – 9741 110 St Nw
    • List Price: $365,000
    • Property Details:
      • Apartment 
      • 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking  

18. Regina

  • Average Home Price: $273,885
  • Annual Price Growth: -3%
  • What you could buy: 853 Connaught Street
    • List Price: $279,900
    • Property Details:
      • Row/Townhouse 
      • 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 0 parking  

 

 

© 2015 – 2020 Zoocasa Realty Inc.

Community engagement will define future real estate development

Wednesday, February 17th, 2021

Community engagement key to real estate development

Franck O’Brien
Western Investor

— Moderator Kirk LaPointe with legends Ryan Beedie, Beau Jarvis and Deana Grinnell. | Western Investor

Getting the community onside was a central theme when three legendary real estate developers gathered February 10 for the 19th annual HAVAN Legends of Real Estate event, moderated by Kirk LaPointe, publisher and editor in chief, Business in Vancouver and vice-president, editorial, Glacier Media, and the first ever held online.

The tenet of gaining the trust of residents, First Nations and local governments underscored discussions about the past, the present and, most notably, the future of real estate development in Metro Vancouver.

When asked to share defining moments in their careers, two of the speakers at the virtual event pointed to times when gaining the confidence of the community was the key to moving a project forward. The third, Ryan Beedie, president of Beedie Development, recalled the successful opening of his first industrial project and the satisfaction he felt delivering jobs and investment into a supportive Delta neighbourhood.

Beau Jarvis, president of Wesgroup and chair of the Urban Development Institute, Vancouver, told the online audience that development can be stalled, even stopped, by community opposition. Kitchen-table talks with concerned neighbours, he said, can be as important as any boardroom meeting when it comes to moving a development from concept to construction.

Deana Grinnell, vice-president, real estate in B.C. and Ontario with Canada Lands Company, has been steeped in community engagement for years. She is involved now in perhaps her most challenging and complex mediations, regarding the master planned development of both the Jericho Lands and the Heather Street Lands in Vancouver. These high-profile projects involve not only deeply- engaged communities, but also three levels of government and the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh Nations.

Working with First Nations, Grinnell said, is a template for reaching conciliation with the wider community.

Being humble is good first step, she suggested.

“It is about educating yourself,” Grinnell said, “You can’t expect First Nations to educate you. You can’t arrive in room and say ‘we are going to business as long as you do it my way.’ That won’t work at all.”

Jarvis and Beedie believe the real estate industry has made giant improvements in community engagement over the past few years, but agreed more can be done.

Jarvis noted, however, that the sheer complexity and prolific growth in Metro region real estate has resulted in a “mass” of often overlapping and competing policies from all levels of government related to social issues, density, the environment and climate change, especially in the new residential sector.

“There is no prioritization of policies,” Jarvis said. This leads to development delays, ballooning costs – and directly to the current housing shortage and affordability crisis, he said.

“Every government platform is housing, housing, housing but we are not seeing an outcome,” Jarvis said. “And I don’t see that changing.”

Beedie, citing an example where it took two years to receive permits for a simple industrial building, agreed unnecessary delays can drive prices higher.

“Instead of competing projects coming to the market [at the same time] only one is approved and so the demand pushes prices up,” he explained.

Beedie also cautioned that, in the commercial real estate field, long delays can be a drag on the economy, because national companies who need new space, and employees, will look outside of Metro Vancouver.

Looking to the future, the panel called for cooperative and innovative thinking to match a restrictive land base with the explosive Metro population growth over the next decades.

“We have no greenfield sites left, it is all infill from now on,” Jarvis said, adding the only answer is “intensification.”

Grinnell urged political leadership to create regional hubs that provide a “15-minute community” with homes, jobs, shopping and services all within reach, rather than a continual expansion of land-gobbling transit lines and freeways across the region.

Beedie pointed to specific examples of how infill development could take place, providing there was a political and community buy-in. He cited Vancouver’s Pacific National Exhibition site, where acres of parking lots sit vacant, he estimated, for 95 per cent of the year. “That land could be purposed for housing or to create employment,” he said.

“There is going to have to be leadership, and some people will be upset, but, if we don’t address issues around density, affordability will just get worse,” Beedie said.

Sponsors

The Legends of Real Estate was presented by the Homebuilders Association Vancouver (HAVAN), and sponsored by FortisBC , National Home Warranty -AVIVA and Federated Insurance. The media sponsor is Glacier Media Group and Business in Vancouver.

 

© Copyright 2020 Western Investor