Homes for Sale In Brampton

Homes for Sale In Brampton Harpreet Bhinder Sales Representative at Spectrum Realty Services Inc., Brokerage

Canadian real estate market outlook 2015Buy a house. Don’t buy a house. Soft landing. Crash landing. As we start the new...
01/17/2015

Canadian real estate market outlook 2015

Buy a house. Don’t buy a house. Soft landing. Crash landing. As we start the new year, the question on everyone’s mind is: What can we expect from Canada’s housing market?

Once again, experts agree that housing affordability is stretched, historically low interest rates will rise, and housing prices will drop. Rewind 365 days and you could be reading a forecast for 2014. But this time the experts agree: prices really will fall and it’s got everything to do with the recovery of the global economy.

Now, if the global economy were a ballgame we wouldn’t be in the World Series. Oil prices are depressed and Europe is still struggling with its credit crunch. But things are slowly improving in the U.S. and within Canada, and the important teams are still in the game: our employment rate is stable, oil prices are not (yet) low enough to cause real concern, and exports have picked up as the value of our dollar has dropped. All this leads most economists to believe we’ll see slightly higher bond and mortgage rates and a nation-wide cooling of the housing market over the next couple of years.

Robert Hogue, senior economist with RBC Bank, says he believes the coming year will be “a moderating phase for the market with a soft landing in 2016.” Hogue predicts national home prices will actually rise 1% or maybe 1.5% in 2015, as buyers race to get in the market before mortgage rates increase, after which prices will fall later in the year. “It’s one of the reasons why 2014 was such a strong year.”

But he cautions home owners: “Canada’s real estate market really is a multi-headed beast. It’s essentially very strong in Toronto, Vancouver and Calgary, but it’s balanced or soft in the majority of other markets.” As such, he predicts we’ll see a cooling of the three biggest markets by the end of the year in response to small mortgage rate hikes starting mid-year.

READ: Protect yourself in an uncertain real estate market »

Now, if the prime rate were to climb from its current 3% level to 5% or 6% over the next year or two, many Canadians could find themselves in deep trouble, says Hogue. But he isn’t sure we’ll see rates shooting up that fast any time soon. Until recently, analysts and policy makers considered 5% to be the neutral or natural interest rate. It was the rate that allowed full employment, a stable inflation rate, and a sustainable growing economy. But Hogue, along with economists from Morgan Stanley and analysts from the C.D. Howe Institute, believe that the “new neutral rate” has actually dropped.

The primary reason is the impact baby boomers continue to have on the national economy. As boomers continue to age and leave the workforce, Canada can expect a slowing of the labour market, which will depress productivity growth, limit the economy, and suppress potential inflation, explains Hogue. “If the new normal is markedly below what we’re used to, then we won’t see as much downward pressure on housing prices,” he says.

The impact of demographics doesn’t stop there. According to a new report by Benjamin Tal, deputy chief economist with CIBC, analysts have been seriously underestimating the number of new immigrants in Canada. New immigrants account for 70% of the country’s population growth and about half are between the ages of 25 and 44—the key demographic that leads to household formations. According to Tal the under-estimated increase in the number of home-buying immigrants in Canada will help to offset a slowing economy, created by the boomer generation. “Immigration, itself, won’t be able to change this trajectory, but it will help to offset it,” explains Tal.

But David Madani from Capital Economics isn’t convinced. “Every good economist knows that immigration always fluctuates and it’s never prevented a housing cycle in the past.” He’s also not convinced that builders are out of the weeds when it comes to supply and demand. While he agrees that absorption rates are close to historical long-term averages, he’s confident that the market will suffer. “There are too many one-bedroom condo units being built when demand shows a need for family accommodation.”

So what’s a regular home buyer to do? The best advice is prepare for the worst, but if you’re ready to jump in and you can afford it, waiting for prices to fall might not be the best idea. Ted Rechtshaffen, president and CEO at TriDelta Financial, advises against trying to time the market in general. “It’s not about prices or the mortgage rate, it’s whether you can truly afford to own the home.” This means calculating whether or not you could still afford your monthly payments even if mortgage rates increased to 4% or 5% a few years from now. It also means deciding whether or not you can stomach a housing price drop. While many economists are predicting a 10% drop, the correction could be as great as 30% in some Canadian markets.

let's watch the Market

03/26/2013

More people cautious about homebuying: poll

TORONTO - Fewer Canadians are planning to purchase a home in the next two years, but more than a third of those will be first-time homebuyers, according to a study released Tuesday.

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More people cautious about homebuying: poll

TORONTO - Fewer Canadians are planning to purchase a home in the next two years, but more than a third of those will be first-time homebuyers, according to a study released Tuesday.

The annual poll by Royal Bank (TSX:RY) found that 15 per cent of those surveyed say they're likely to buy in the next two years, a drop from 27 per cent from the previous year.

Among those with buying intentions, 40 per cent say they'll be signing a mortgage for the first time.

Sean Amato-Gauci, senior vice-president of Home Equity Financing with RBC, says current economic and industry trends are consistent with this bleaker homebuying forecast.

But an overwhelming majority of those polled (84 per cent) still see real estate as a sound investment. While 52 per cent say now is a good time to get into the market.

Nearly half of those surveyed (49 per cent) say they expect mortgage rates to be same this time next year, while 43 per cent admit they believe home prices will continue to climb.

"Our findings suggest confidence in the housing market is still high and young Canadians are the bright spot as they look to buy their first home and seek the advice to do it right," said Amato-Gauci in a release.

The 20th Annual RBC Home Ownership Poll was conducted online by Ipsos Reid from Jan. 31 to Feb. 8.

The survey polled a randomly selected sample of 3,005 Canadian adults, and is considered accurate within +/-3.0 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

11/27/2012

SaBB Nu Shri Guru NaanaK Dev ji De Aagamn Purab Dia Lakh Lakh Vadhaian.,

SatGur NaNaK ParGtia
Mitti Dhund Jag Chaanan Hoa

11/12/2012

Happy Diwali

11/03/2012

There were 6,896 home sales in the Toronto area in October over the MLS system, according to the Toronto Real Estate Board. That’s 7.1 per cent lower than a year ago, but above the 5,879 sales reported for September.

11/02/2012

There are 17,182 new, empty unsold condos in Toronto tonight. Another 56,300 are under construction

10/31/2012

Canada House Market Questions cooling or crashing.......

10/25/2012

Home prices cool across Canada in September

As condo sales slide, 3 projects test marketTridel officially launches sales of a remade Ten York project -- down from 7...
10/22/2012

As condo sales slide, 3 projects test market





Tridel officially launches sales of a remade Ten York project -- down from 75 storeys to 65 storeys -- at a time when the condo market is showing serious signs of softening.
Three major new condo developments will launch over the next two weeks — including the tallest buildings to hit Toronto’s waterfront — as developers brace for the ultimate test of the state of the condo market.

The projects will be far more than just glass-and-steel towers. They will be giant thermometers providing a quick reading of how much heat is left in a condo market that’s cooled considerably since last year’s feverish pace of sales.

Tridel will launch sales Saturday of its much-anticipated Ten York project. Originally slated to be 75 storeys, and the highest building on Toronto’s waterfront, it’s now down to 65 storeys and 695 suites because of issues with the small site and protests the project was too tall for such a prime location.

It will be overtaken in two weeks when Empire Communities launches Eau du Soleil on the Etobicoke waterfront with two towers, 66 and 44 storeys, and a staggering 1,250 suites.

In the next few days, the 44- and 48-storey King Blue project will also launch sales of some 800 units planned for King and Peter Sts. in the downtown entertainment district.

The flurry of big condo launches is highly unusual for this late in the year, but reflects the fact that developers have been holding their breath, and holding off on launches, trying to get a better sense of where the new condo market is headed after last year’s record 28,000 sales.

The fact that condo sales have been dropping dramatically and inventory rising has prompted housing analyst Ben Rabidoux to describe Toronto’s condo market as “a fly in search of a windshield.”

Developers, however, remain cautiously optimistic.

“We’ve spent a tremendous amount of time reviewing this project, looking at the numbers and making sure we have it right,” says Tridel vice president Jim Ritchie.

“There is obviously a segment of the marketplace that thinks this is not a good time to buy, but we believe we’ve found enough (buyers) who have a longer-term vision. Even if there are ups and downs in the market in the short term, these units won’t be up for five years. This is building for the future.”

Empire toyed with delaying its sales launch until the busier spring season, said executive vice-president Paul Golini, but decided it might actually have a market advantage going head to head against just two other projects.

“We’re not going to get confused with a myriad of developments and we’re all distinct and in very different areas of the city.”

Tridel believes its key advantage with Ten York is location — just steps from the burgeoning railway lands and downtown core — and has already had 5,000 buyers express interest.

While investor interest has definitely cooled, it remains strong, Ritchie and Golini believe. And these projects will definitely test that belief.

The numbers from condo research firm Urbanation paint a sobering picture of the condo market now compared to last year’s record year for sales and launches.

As of the third quarter of 2011, there were 87 condo projects with 19,028 units announced across the GTA. This year launches are down about 20 per cent, to 68 projects and 15,221 units, Urbanation reports.

While a record 28,190 new condos sold in 2011, shattering all previous records, they’re expected to come in closer to 17,000 this year, better reflecting long-term trends insists Ritchie.

Rabidoux is highly critical of the “eye-popping pace” of new condo launches with tens of thousands of condos already under construction and the economics making less and less sense for investors.

With new condos now averaging $600 to $700 per square foot in the downtown core — Tridel’s one bedrooms will be about $626 per square foot — it’s becoming increasingly difficult for investors to cover their costs with rents, says Rabidoux.

But Ritchie remains realistic. None of these new projects will go ahead unless some 70 per cent of the units are pre-sold, and that’s unlikely to happen, as it did routinely last year, in just a few weeks.

In fact, Tridel has given Ten York 18 months — six months longer than historic sales norms.

“What happened in 2011 was once in a lifetime. We’re just returning to a normal market, and that’s good.”

10/13/2012

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10/13/2012

Tomorrow open House at 45 Narrow Valley Cres, Brampton
Please Visit 2-5 pm

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8400 Jane Street Unit 9
Vaughan, ON
L4K4L8

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