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Monday, May 13, 2013

Condos, condos everywhere! Sales reach record in April!


TORONTO, Ont. - It appears that new condominium developments are springing up faster than the flowers these days, and those living in the GTA are snapping them up just as fast. Sales of new condo units set a record in April after rising by 89 per cent compared to the same time last year, making it the best April on record.
"It's in the top three of any month of any year, and it's about double the average since 2000," said Stephen Dupuis with the Building Industry and Land Development Association.
"There's a new condo being sold every 13 minutes in this city, and frankly if you look at the time that the sales offices are actually open, it's probably one being sold every five minutes in terms of when you actually go in and put your money down."
However, the surge in purchases is not just in Toronto proper, as the suburbs are also experiencing a boom.
"Particularly in Halton and Oakville has got some new condominium development, and York Region, Richmond Hill, Markham are strong for new highrise condo developments. Quite a new trend," Dupuis told 680News.
Condos make up six out of every 10 new homes sold in the GTA so far this year.
Dupuis said several factors have led to the increase, including affordability and new projects going on sale. The trend is expected to continue throughout the year.
The exception to the trend is sales of low rise condos, which was down in April.
Taken from 680News.
For more information on Toronto condos click here.

Buying or Selling a Condo


Customer service is important in every industry, but it’s especially important when buying a new home. Listening to purchasers concerns, finding ways to resolve issues and a commitment to take care of their product from the sale to the move-in date and beyond, should be the goals of a good homebuilder. A number of builders utilize third party companies as a resource to gauge their performance, improve their product and processes, and provide direction to their customer service team. Survey companies work with homebuilders to identify gaps and opportunities for improvement throughout the different stages of building.
Homeowners are typically surveyed twice yearly, at the 30-day mark after they move in and again around the one-year anniversary. Use of surveys, along with computerized tracking systems, will help ensure builders provide exceptional service throughout relationship with their purchasers. The surveys are used as a benchmark to meet and exceed customer’s expectations, but can only happen if homeowners take the time to complete them.
When visiting a prospective builder, homeowners should inquire about their customer support. Specifically, ask the builder if there is a designated contact person to field questions about the building process for your particular unit or any concerns that may arise from point of sale to prior to move-in.
Find out if the amenity spaces will be finished before you occupy your condo. Ask builders what condition the lobbies will be in at time of occupancy. And don’t forget to ask about their customer service policy for after you move in.
A direct contact person should be available to homeowners during all phases of construction and will help them feel connected. It is a long relationship from the start of a purchase to when homeowners are handed the keys, particularly in the case of high-rise condominiums. A positive customer experience will lead to additional referrals for a reputable builder. Referrals are critical to building business and sustaining the builders’ brand in a very competitive market.
Tarion Warranty Corporation has established benchmarks for customer service standards and awards for the residential construction industry in Ontario.
There are specific minimum service response time-frames outlined by Tarion for builders to address any deficiencies in a new home after occupancy. Reputable builders go above and beyond these benchmarks and a company’s reputation is built on a foundation of quality in all aspects of the industry.
Sourcing only the highest quality materials, providing superior workmanship or standing by each home and condominium not only offers customers the best product available, it can also help the builder win awards for surpassing industry standards — a key for earning a high level of public trust.
Customers’ expectations have changed over the years and builders can find it a significant challenge in meeting all the expectations of their purchasers. A goodbuilder will make sure there is constant information available through various media, such as websites or newsletters, to educate and inform their purchasers



Toronto Home Resales Fall on Tighter Mortgage Restrictions.


By Ka Yan Ng TORONTO (Reuters) - Sales of existing homes in Canada fell 4.4 percent in April from March as activity dropped off after a first-quarter rush to buy before the introduction of new mortgage rules.
The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) said on Tuesday that 36,564 homes changed hands in April, down from 38,263 in March.
The national average price in April rose 8 percent from a year earlier to a nonseasonally adjusted C$372,544 ($380,147), while new listings edged up 1.3 percent in April from March, CREA said.
The decline in sales came as little surprise as tighter mortgage rules, which took aim at mortgage amortization and refinancing, came into effect early in the spring. CREA said the new regulations probably sidelined a number of first-time homebuyers.
"April's decline in existing home sales shows the impact of the March 18 changes to mortgage rules that lifted existing home sales in Q1 to their highest level in a year as buyers rushed to buy ahead of the change," said Leslie Preston, economic analyst at Toronto-Dominion Bank.
"We don't expect the first quarter's pace to be sustained and April's reading sets the stage for an expected softening."
Canada's housing market has shown resiliency compared with other countries whose markets dived during the financial crisis.
Data on Tuesday showed the U.S. housing market has still not recovered as housing starts and building permits fell in April. Residential construction was crowded out by an oversupply of used homes on the market, in particular, foreclosed properties.
TRANSITORY FACTORS
Analysts said the new mortgage regulations contributed to the month's 4.4 percent pullback, though the impact was hard to measure.
The month's decline left year-over-year sales off nearly 15 percent. Last year's spring sales may have also been pushed forward by homebuyers wanting to get ahead of the July 2010 introduction of harmonized sales taxes in Ontario and British Columbia, the provinces that are home to the country's most expensive metropolitan markets: Toronto and Vancouver, respectively.
"This makes it difficult to compare the two months in order to reliably gauge the impact of the latest round of mortgage rule changes," Gregory Klump, CREA's chief economist, said.
Overall, analysts predict the housing market -- the sector that led Canada out from recession -- will cool further in coming months because of the new mortgage rules and higher borrowing costs but that it won't drop as much as earlier forecast.
Last week, CREA lifted its 2011 national forecast for home resales to 441,100, a year-on-year decline of 1.3 percent.
The new estimate compares with the 1.6 percent year-on-year decline it forecast in February, which itself was revised up from an earlier forecast.
It also forecast the average price would rise 4 percent this year, compared with February's view of a 1.3-percent rise, largely based on stronger-than-expected sales of multimillion-dollar homes in British Columbia.
CREA's April price figures supported this view, as prices rose 2.5 percent in the Vancouver area to a seasonally adjusted C$801,719 even though sales fell 12.1 percent in the month. The average Vancouver price was up 21 percent from a year earlier.

Demand to Remain Strong


Toronto, Canada (TREB) – The first quarter of 2011 ended strongly for the existing home market in the Greater Toronto Area. Resale transactions reported through the TorontoMLS® system in March amounted to 9,262 – the second strongest March on record behind March 2010. There were 19,610 sales reported during the first quarter, representing a 12.5 per cent dip compared to the record pace experienced during the first three months of 2010. I asked Jason Mercer, the Toronto Real Estate Board’s (TREB’s) Senior Manager of Market Analysis, to provide some context for the sales figures reported so far this year. He provided both a historical back-drop and a forward looking view: “This year’s first quarter result was slightly higher than the average for the last five years and was in line with TREB’s forecast sales range for 2011. At the beginning of this year, our forecast range for sales through the TorontoMLS® was between 80,000 and 85,000. The actual first quarter result supports this forecast, so we will be making very little if any adjustment to our outlook on sales,” said Mercer.
The average price for March 2011 transactions was $456,147, representing a five per cent increase compared to the average of $434,696 reported in March of 2010. Price growth through the first three months of the year was quite uniform, ranging between four and little over five per cent. I asked Jason Mercer to provide his view on the pace of price growth so far this year.
“The annual rate of price growth in the first quarter was at the upper end of TREB’s forecast range of between three and five per cent. We have not seen as many new listings as expected so far this year. In March, for example, new listings were down by 19 per cent compared to March 2010. This means that market conditions have tightened up and there is more competition between buyers. The result has been continued price growth,” said Mercer.
When considering housing market conditions in the GTA, I think it is also important to break things down in terms of geography and home type. First off, home buyers in the GTA benefit from a great diversity of home types. In the first quarter, a substantial share of home sales was accounted for by the four major home types: single-detached and semi-detached houses, townhomes and condominium apartments. Low-rise home types accounted for approximately three-quarters of total sales, with condominium apartments accounting for the other 25 per cent. Average sale prices ranged between approximately $320,000 for condominium apartments through to approximately 570,000 for single-detached homes.
It is interesting to note, however, that when we break sales down by geography the mix of home types sold can vary quite a bit. In the City of Toronto, 45 per cent of total sales were accounted for by condominium apartments. The regions surrounding the City of Toronto have a much greater share of low-rise sales along with some denser nodes of condominium apartment sales in parts of Peel and York regions.
The existing home market remains on a healthy footing in the GTA. Sales levels remain strong from a historic perspective and the average selling price continues to grow at a strong, but sustainable pace. With the economic outlook continuing to improve, I expect this situation will continue moving forward.
Bill Johnston is President of the Toronto Real Estate Board, a professional association that represents 31,000 REALTORS® in the Greater Toronto Area.


One Bloor East reveals T.O.'s unquenchable thirst for condos


It's the sexiest vacant lot in Canada. What it lacks in amenities, it makes up for in location, location, location: the southeast corner of Yonge and Bloor Streets, Toronto’s crossroads, where the city’s most important subway lines meet underfoot. Just to the west is the snootiest row of shops in the country—Holt Renfrew, Cartier, Tiffany, Hugo Boss. A bit to the east soar the stately headquarters of corporate titans Manulife and Rogers. This acre of dirt is rich in history, too—the post-millennial kind. It was the figurative summit of the city’s frenzied condominium boom of the 2000s, and ground zero for the bust stemming from the financial crisis in 2008. But most important, One Bloor East stands—or, rather, just lies there, for the moment—as an emblem of Toronto’s unkillable condo market. For that bust was quickly reversed by a stunning resurgence, despite a punishing recession.
If you were making a movie of this saga, you’d set the first scene on Nov. 13, 2007. Hundreds of people line up on the sidewalk for the opening of the neighbouring sales office for One Bloor East. The proposed 80-storey condo and hotel tower will be the tallest in Toronto. Many of those in line are stand-ins, hired by real estate agents, and they’ve been waiting in line for days.
Just before the office is due to open, the crowd groans as sales staff hike the range of condo prices advertised on a sign outside—$300,000 to $2 million becomes $500,000 to $8 million. Agents squawk into cellphones to their head offices or clients overseas, then barge in and place orders anyway.
Now jump to the summer of 2009. Condo sales in Toronto have plummeted by more than half. At One Bloor East, exit Bazis International Inc., an upstart developer that had arrived on the scene in 2005. Exit also Bazis’s ambitious young Russian-born CEO, Michael Gold—forced to sell the Yonge-Bloor lot to relieve a cash crisis. Enter the buyer: the Great Gulf Group, wily old development pros.
The next scene is set on March 24, 2010. It’s a low-key party for select real estate agents being held by Great Gulf to open its sales office for One Bloor East. “We aren’t opening to create lineups,” declares Bruce Freeman, Great Gulf’s executive vice-president of sales and marketing. The company doesn’t have to; it has already sold almost 85% of its 693 units, most of them by reclosing Gold’s clients.
A keenly interested bystander is Gold. He may have lost One Bloor East, but he’s now a comeback kid who will soon be able to point to his three other condo projects in Toronto.
There’s only one cinematic problem here: It’s a bogus journey for the only characters a young movie audience could identify with—first-time homebuyers. Vast numbers of them were priced out of the market for houses in Toronto and many other Canadian cities in the early 2000s. Condos are their only alternative. And, after all, new condo buildings have their attractions—One Bloor’s plans include a shopping mall, two pools, and a two-floor spa with a gym, yoga studio and “foot relax basins.” But the average new condo in Toronto now costs about $500 a square foot. That translates into about $250,000 for an entry-level one-bedroom of just over 500 square feet, and maybe twice that price or more in One Bloor or even ritzier downtown developments. Before monthly fees, that is.
How did this happen? Is permanent condo mania the new reality? Or is the market headed for another crash—a real one this time?
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Typically, it takes about five years from the purchase of a condominium building site to buyers moving in and the developer collecting its money. In between, the developer and its partners and lenders are vulnerable to any upheavals in the real estate market and the economy at large because they are highly leveraged and they are stuck with a large, illiquid asset.
In the case of One Bloor, Bazis bought almost all of the lot for about $63 million in December, 2006. Gold, who’s now 48, won’t say how much of that money was Bazis’s, but, typically, the developer only puts up a fraction of even that initial outlay. Some of the rest may come from equity partners who take an ownership interest in the project, but the bulk of it is usually borrowed. Bazis had what looked like a top-drawer equity partner, Lehman Brothers, the giant New York investment bank, and a rock-solid lead lender, the French bank Société Générale, which had agreed to head a consortium of European banks that would provide the construction loans.
Even though it was near the peak of a boom, Bazis’s plan for Yonge and Bloor was startling. The southeast corner of the storied intersection had been an eyesore for decades—a ramshackle block of low-level storefronts, many of them fast-food joints. “For us, it was an opportunity to do a signature project,” says Gold. “It was going to cost $450 million to $500 million.” One Bloor would have a three-storey mall at its base, a 15-storey hotel, and 65 storeys of condos, shooting high above everything else in sight.
The lineup frenzy in November, 2007, and an average sale price of $850 a square foot were also impressive. One buyer from China reportedly signed up for a penthouse worth $24 million. Still, Toronto’s real estate industry was skeptical that Bazis could pull it off. “They had money, but they didn’t have a lot of credibility,” says veteran condo realtor and developer Brad Lamb.
Getting at the reality behind the perceptions is hard. Like most sizable Canadian residential developers, Bazis is privately owned and doesn’t disclose its financial results. Gold is also guarded about his family, which adds to the air of mystery around One Bloor East. He says his background is modest—his father is an engineer and his mother an accountant, and the family emigrated from St. Petersburg in 1977. Gold studied general arts and sciences at York University, then ran several businesses in the 1990s, including clothing stores in Toronto. His plunge into development didn’t come until after he got married in 2005. His wife is from a family of developers in Kazakhstan, a fast-developing but democratically deficient petro-state in central Asia. Initially, Bazis in Toronto was an arm of a parent company of the same name in Kazakhstan.
In late 2007, the Toronto market was so hot that there appeared to be room for plenty of upstarts and glitzy new high-rises. More than 130 condo projects launched that year in the city and surrounding suburbs, and sales of new condos soared by 32% to a record 22,399 units.
In May, 2008, Gold razed the stores occupying the One Bloor site. He’d sold more than 80% of the condo units, leased more than half the retail space and had lined up the European chain Sofitel as the tenant for the hotel. That was more than enough to satisfy SocGen and its consortium, which lent Bazis $250 million for construction.
That’s a lot of money, though, which is why condo developers and lenders typically take several steps to limit their risk. The lessons of past markets are still fresh in their minds. In the not too distant past, banks often financed projects with relatively few presales. In the late 1980s, deposit requirements for condo buyers were just 5% to 10% of the purchase price and buyers could resell units, even in proposed buildings, days after they bought them. “Everyone was an investor,” says real estate consultant Barry Lyon. “The cab driver, the barber—everyone was picking up a condo to flip it.” This layering of levers collapsed with a vengeance when Toronto and many other Canadian cities went through a spectacular real estate bubble and bust in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
Now, government regulations and bank lending practices require developers to sell 60% to 70% of their units before they can get construction financing. Canada’s big banks and other lenders limit the amount they will put into any one development, and the total dollars they will lend in individual cities and regions. They also like to see a developer ally itself with an equity partner—or several—with deep pockets and a track record.
By September, 2008, Gold had jumped through all those hoops. But on the morning of Sunday, Sept. 14, he received a fateful phone call at home. It was his contact at Lehman, who said, “Turn on CNN. We are bankrupt. We will not be in a position to finance anything.” Gold was incredulous. “This was a $639-billion investment bank,” he says, “$639 billion.”
SocGen and its consortium also headed toward the exits. Gold quickly called a meeting with representatives of all the banks, and pleaded: “Guys, we have the presales. The people are there.” But at that point, the finances of One Bloor itself were irrelevant. It looked like no bank in the world was safe, and each of Gold’s lenders, as he remembers, pointed at the others and said, “We don’t know if that bank is going to be there in six months.” Soon after, SocGen shut its North American real estate office.
What about the deposits that One Bloor buyers had put down—20% in most cases? Gold couldn’t get at them because, by law, that money is locked in trust accounts until closing.
The nightmare then got even worse for Gold. A trio of Toronto vulture investors had bought Bazis’s loans for the property from its bankers at a discount to the full amount, hoping to foreclose if the company couldn’t make its payments. “It’s like when you have a mortgage on your house,” says Gold. “The bank can sell that loan to anybody, at any given time.” In April, 2009, the investors filed a lawsuit in an attempt to seize control of the One Bloor project. Two other Bazis condo projects in Toronto were also on hold, and industry gossip had it that Gold’s company was about to go under.
As shocking as the global meltdown was, Gold says the timing could have been even worse—it could have come when he’d already started building One Bloor. “In high-rise construction, once you start, you can’t stop,” he explains. “You can’t say, ‘I’m going to stop at floor 12, or take out floors 18 to 22, and then continue on.’” And very few developers have enough cash on hand to pay construction workers and suppliers out of their own pocket. Nor can they sell off small portions of properties or buildings to pay bills as they come due. “In our business, we have big assets, but we roll the money,” says Gold. And so, as the financial crisis took hold in late 2008 and early 2009, a game of chicken between developers and lenders began.
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In retrospect, you wonder how anyone could believe that all the world’s major banks and real estate markets could crash at once, especially in Canada, with its highly centralized and tightly regulated financial sector. But things sure looked scary at the time to developers. Brad Lamb was arguably in worse shape than Gold—Lamb had four condo projects worth $300 million on the go. “I had 700 condos, sales were dead and I had no construction loans,” he says. “It became evident to me that I was screwed.”
But developers had several things going for them. One was the Bank of Canada. Like central banks in all the world’s leading economies, it slashed interest rates and injected billions of dollars into the chartered banks to encourage them to keep lending. For the most part, the banks still wouldn’t grant loans for new projects, but they were carefully doling out money for many that were already under way or ones that met the 70% presales threshold.
Developers also scrambled to adjust. To get construction loans for his four projects, Lamb managed to push presales over 80%, and injected more of his own equity into them—several million dollars.
Gold bobbed and weaved, too, with mixed results. He kept control of Exhibit, a proposed 32-storey tower across the street from the Royal Ontario Museum’s striking and controversial Michael Lee-Chin Crystal, and Emerald Park, twin green glass towers slated for a busy intersection in northern Toronto. To do that, however, he had to invite in two respected Toronto developers as equity partners in both projects: Plazacorp Urban Residential Communities and Metropia. That helped secure construction loans.
Gold wasn’t as lucky at One Bloor, a much bigger proposition. No Canadian bank was willing to lend him $250 million. Nor would the four largest banks even split the risk. And the vulture investors were circling. In September, 2009, Gold tossed in his cards at One Bloor and sold the lot to Great Gulf, although neither he nor Great Gulf will call it a distress sale. “We were interested once we knew it was available,” says Great Gulf’s Bruce Freeman. He won’t disclose the purchase price, but Gold says it was about $53 million, a painful haircut for him. Bazis also retains a small ownership interest in One Bloor (Gold won’t disclose the size). As for the One Bloor buyers’ deposits, those were released from trust accounts, and Great Gulf has since reclosed three-quarters of the sales.
If rock-bottom interest rates made that feat possible, the fact remains that for homebuyers, low interest rates are always a mixed blessing. They make it easier to borrow, but they also inflate prices. The trigger for the real estate crash of the early 1980s was mortgage rates that soared to near 20% as the Bank of Canada and other central banks tried to suffocate double-digit inflation. They relented somewhat in the mid-1980s, and the real estate market boomed again. But even in the late 1980s, many mortgage rates remained above 10%, and the Bank yanked them even higher in 1989 and 1990.
In 2009, by contrast, the Bank was doing everything it could to keep the economy alive and avoid a U.S.-style real estate meltdown. At the variable mortgage rates of 2.5% or lower that prevailed in 2009—as they continue to do—even a $1-million loan carries for just $25,000 a year in interest charges. Knowing this, Toronto developers and realtors held the line on condo prices and waited for buyers to come back.
They didn’t have to wait long. Again, the turning point was a lineup. On Nov. 25, 2009, Great Gulf opened its sales office for X2, a proposed 42-storey high-rise two blocks east of One Bloor. It was the first opening of a major condominium project in the city in a year. With overall sales in the market still slow, Great Gulf priced units $15 to $20 per square foot below what it figured were the market averages. The company needn’t have bothered being so cautious. As in 2007 for One Bloor East, some real estate agents camped out for days. And there was shouting and shoving when the doors opened.
“Did that surprise us? Yeah.” says Freeman. “We had a situation that day.”
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The “condo-monium” over X2, as one newspaper headline described it, gave the whole Toronto real estate market a shot in the arm. Total sales of new condo units for 2009 closed the year at 15,544, down about a third from the peak in 2007, but still respectable. Last year, new condo sales soared back to 20,897, second only to 2007. Resales of existing condos set a new record: 21,147.
Freeman, one of three Great Gulf executives who co-founded the company in 1975, says that the 2008-2009 real estate slump turned out to be less severe than busts at the beginning of the 1980s and the early 1990s. “Business was difficult, but manageable,” he says. For Great Gulf, that is explainable partly because it is much larger and more diversified than Bazis and many other developers. Great Gulf builds both houses and high-rises across Southern Ontario, and has averaged about 1,000 new units of each in recent years. In booms or busts, it’s easier to speed up or slow down construction of a new subdivision of single-family homes than a condo tower.
The company has also scaled back slightly at One Bloor, which is scheduled for occupancy in 2014. Gold’s proposed 15-storey hotel is gone. But Great Gulf is still promising plenty of pizzazz, including an exterior pattern of balconies by architect David Pontarini that is “sculpted with piano curves to evoke a warm modernism that is organic and timeless.” Young buyers, in particular, appreciate bells and whistles like inspired design and footbaths.
The trouble for them is the price of the basic product. The same goes for their only realistic alternative: rentals. The still-buoyant real estate market hasn’t just kept house and condo prices high; it’s held rents aloft as well. Developers in Toronto and other major Canadian cities stopped building large new rental high-rises in the 1970s. That was partly due to rent controls in Ontario and other provinces, but also because condominiums offered a faster, more certain payoff to a developer—once the building is completed and you’ve sold the units, you’re out. You don’t have to manage and maintain it for years, even decades. As for owners, they could either occupy the units or make a pretty penny renting them out. “Condos have become the de facto new rental supply,” says consultant Barry Lyon. That supply is much more expensive than old rental high-rises. Lyon and other analysts say that renters typically pay 50% more for a new condo unit than they would on rent for a comparable apartment in an aged building.
And whenever condo prices and rents rise, particularly in Toronto and Vancouver, there’s a temptation to blame speculators—foreign ones in particular. Lyon says that foreign buyers are certainly a big and steady source of demand, but the “speculator” label no longer applies. The minimum deposit for foreign purchasers is now 35%, and, like Canadian investors, foreigners typically hold units for several years, Lyon says. On the other hand, he acknowledges that some realtors’ estimates that 25% to 40% of all new condo sales in the Toronto area last year were to overseas customers are probably close to the mark.
To those international investors and others, Toronto still looks relatively cheap. Average prices per square foot for new condos climbed from $456 a square foot in January, 2010, to $510 in January, 2011. But Toronto’s prices are still only a third of those in central London, half those in Tokyo and Hong Kong, and about two-thirds of those in Manhattan. Toronto appears safe and cosmopolitan, too—no ethnic or religious strife, drug wars, dictators or earthquake fault lines. “I don’t think we appreciate ourselves what a great city we have,” says Lyon.
Nevertheless, many economists say that something will have to give soon. In a widely publicized research note published last November, David Rosenberg, chief economist at Gluskin Sheff + Associates, said he was “pleasantly surprised by the fact that the real estate market has eased, rather than busted. Be that as it may, a more pernicious turndown in real estate values cannot be ruled out, especially if the Bank of Canada follows the market and resumes its rate-hiking program early next year.”
Developers like Gold and Lamb smirk at those kinds of predictions. “I don’t think a one- or two-percentage-point increase is going to affect the market,” says Gold. “We aim at a segment that is more of a higher-end luxury product.” Lamb argues that house prices in central Toronto have soared permanently out of reach of the vast majority of buyers—$1 million for a sizable family home. That leaves condos, and he’s concentrating on the fat middle of the market, whose centre of gravity is around $500,000. He adds that if you look beyond the hype that ultrahigh-end Toronto projects such as the Residences at the Ritz-Carlton, Shangri-La Toronto and the Trump International Hotel and Tower have generated in recent years, most other developers are catering to that middle as well.
Still, even Lamb acknowledges that the city might reach a price threshold within a few years. He figures that will be when the average new condo hits $750 a square foot. At that price, and with interest rates slightly higher than they are now and downtown condo rents averaging, say, $3 per square foot per month, he says that buyers will “get to zero.” That means their rental income will no longer exceed their mortgage costs.
Lamb adds that developers won’t be able to adjust by reducing the size of their units any more, either. Even One Bloor East, a centrally located, upscale project, is approaching the minimum realistic size in many of its “suites.” And a new-condo market dominated by young single buyers over the past decade is aging. “What happens if they couple up?” asks Barry Lyon. “Is 550 square feet enough?” Add a baby carriage to that equation and you have to wonder.
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Toronto vs. the world
Just how expensive—or not—is it to buy a condo in Toronto? The city sits at No. 15 out of 94 on the Global Property Guide’s ranking of the World’s Most Expensive Cities, based on average U.S.-dollar prices per square foot of centrally located apartments (assuming a small—550 square feet—one-bedroom unit):

$385,000

Pricey compared to…
Rome $366,000 Sydney $356,000 Amsterdam $310,000 Shanghai $278,000 Berlin $203,000
Cheap compared to…
Monaco $3,056,270 London $1,194,000 Hong Kong $839,000 Tokyo $658,000 New York $615,000

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Click here for more information on Toronto Condos.

Suite Secrets: Riser above the rest


The King West neighbourhood has quickly become one of Toronto’s hottest places to live and play, attracting residents who are bright, stylish and have a bit of an edge. Naturally, they want their living spaces to reflect that, too. The folks behind Minto 775 — two ultra-modern buildings at the corner of King Street West and Tecumseth Street — are offering up that edge in the form of an exquisite glass staircase connecting the penthouses’ living space to the bedroom area.
In the six two-storey penthouses still up for sale, the staircase is positioned against the wall with a glass panel on the other side to create a strong architectural statement and the greatest possible sense of open space. In one penthouse, the staircase is off the grand foyer and right up against the window, creating a spectacular floating effect.
The 12-step staircase is comprised of a central steel spine, wood treads and an open riser, with the sides made of glass. The idea was to make the most of the floor-to-ceiling windows to maximize the views.
“We didn’t want to obstruct the view but wanted to create something sculptural from the inside and outside, so it became very transparent,” says Dan Menchions, partner at II BY IV Design Associates. “It’s pretty much the focus of the main level as soon as you come into the unit.”
Mr. Menchions says he and his team took in the area’s vibe when they began designing the glass staircase.
“This neighbourhood is very young, very vibrant,” he says. “It has lots of singles, lots of professionals. It is really the most active part of the city [and so the penthouse] needed to be a very stylish and very cool place.”
This is the first time Mr. Menchions has designed a staircase right against a window and he’s pleased with how it speaks to Minto 775’s demographic.
“It lends itself to very contemporary styling,” he explains. “And it’s very eclectic as well. The purchaser of this place would probably be someone who’s very established, who has a collection of furnishings and art items. We brought that forward for the styling of this space.”
At just 12- and 17-storeys respectively, Minto 775’s two towers aren’t that high compared to the city’s many condominium projects on the go. Still, Minto promises great views in its striking one- and two-bedroom penthouses. The units, ranging from 821 to 1,866 square feet, boast expansive terraces and what the builder calls “intelligent layouts.” The first floor comprises the living/dining rooms, kitchen and bathroom with the second floor devoted to master bedroom and ensuite, second bedroom and guest bathroom depending on the unit, and laundry room. Den and study might be upstairs or downstairs, depending on the floor plan. Contemporary finishes include Miele appliances, upgraded granite and Caesarstone selections, European cabinetry, and six-inch baseboards. Penthouse buyers also get one parking space.
Located at King St. W. and Tecumseth St., minto775 by Hariri Pontarini Architects comprises 350 units one-, two- and three-bedroom units. Suites range from 542 to 1,866 sq. ft. and cost $326,800 to more than $1.2-million. The LEED Gold Candidate project is more than 85% sold. Construction is underway and occupancy is slated for fall 2012.
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Real estate market braces for TMX-LSE merger


The potential merger of the TMX Group, operator of the Toronto Stock Exchange, and the London Stock Exchange Group has sparked hot debate throughout the Canadian business community. The move would create the world's biggest stock exchange, with more than 6,000 companies traded. The resulting company would be worth $6-billion and be jointly based in London and Toronto.
As Ottawa decides the deal’s fate (any merger or takeover of a Canadian company worth more than $299-million can be subject to government approval under the Investment Canada Act), experts in commercial real estate are weighing in. And while some see a favourable outcome, others are warning of negative side effects.
The merger should give both Canadian and British investors greater access to each others’ markets, particularly in real estate investment trusts, says Milton Lamb, senior vice-president of national investment for Colliers International in Toronto.
“There is only so much product available in Canada,” Mr. Lamb says. “The biggest complaint I receive from investors is the lack of supply in both new, quality construction and in just acquiring high quality real estate. Because the good news is we have very strong ownership in the REITs and the pension funds. But the bad news is that because it's very strong ownership, and if it’s good product, a lot of them don't sell, so it's very difficult for people to get in.”
Meanwhile, because Canadian REITs trade at a higher yield than those in the U.K., they may attract British investors, Mr. Lamb says. “In the U.K. for mature REITs they are trading in the 3- to 5-per-cent range, while we are in the 5- to 6.5-per-cent range.”
Julian Brandon, vice-president for office leasing and corporate services at DTZ Barnicke, doesn't see the merger as having a major effect on commercial real estate in Canada.
“Investors have been actively pursuing Canadian real estate across all classes for years, and since most investment money comes from established Canadian pension funds, I don't see this as a game changer,” Mr. Brandon said.
Others, however, see burgeoning investment from overseas.
“I've been studying this market for 20 years and I've never seen so much international money coming into Canada to park,” says Don Campbell, president of the Real Estate Investment Network and author of Real Estate Investing in Canada. “Canada has become a safe haven for capital, for Asia and Europe and the Middle East, and right now, in order to get into the market, they have to buy one of our assets or a portion of one of our assets.
“It's very difficult if you're outside of Canada to buy into a Canadian REIT. Because a lot of Asian and Middle Eastern money goes through the London Stock Exchange, the merger will open up access to our companies and our major corporations, but more importantly our REITs.”
Furthermore, as much of the world remains in turmoil, foreign investors are looking to Canada like never before, Mr. Campbell says. “This is Canada's decade. We have what they want: food, fertilizer, fuel and forestry. Right now China's looking around the world and saying, ‘Where are we going to get our fuel and our forestry from?’
“We are that safe, secure, boring supplier – and I don't mind that at all because that creates jobs, and jobs drive real estate markets.”
A flood of foreign capital would be good for asset holders and bad for buyers, Mr. Campbell warns. “It will overinflate the asset value of commercial and major residential property. The [capitalization] rates will definitely come down, which will make it more difficult to get financing.”
Mr. Lamb says that as more international investors try to get into Canada, the yields on some Canadian REITS may fall. “It's just supply and demand. There's only so many trust units out there, so the more people willing to pay, the price goes up. And if the price goes up, the yield goes down.”
But how will this affect our downtowns? Will we see a flurry of development as foreign money pours in?
Mr. Lamb foresees no change. “Canadian investors are conservative by nature. We don't go into development frenzy. Opening up to the U.K. may help a bit with access to equity, but no one is going to develop unless we know we can fill those towers or fill the industrial with tenants.”
The majority of money will go into buying landmark buildings, Mr. Campbell says. “New development is only going to occur if the job creation occurs. Where the new development is going to occur is in Calgary, probably in Edmonton. You will probably start to see it occur in Toronto but the land itself – where are you going to build it?”
But the TSX-LSE merger is far from a done deal. If the merger doesn't go through, Mr. Lamb doesn't think it will have any negative effect. “Without the merger, the Canadian REIT market will remain strong, as Canadians are still seeking secure income investments.”
Mr. Campbell says it wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing if the merger didn't go through, because that would allow the market to grow more organically.
“Right now, the amount of foreign money coming in is substantial, and that is a good place for us to be,” he says. “And it's going to continue for many, many years in Canada.”

The Model: Small-scale furniture and contrasting colours are a hit at Market Town Condos.


Interior designer Gordana Car takes a zen approach when tackling small spaces. Everything in a condominium unit has to be carefully selected, she says, so that it all has a place and there’s no excess. “Clutter is not allowed,” says the project manager of Gordana Car Interior Design Studio. “It’s quality over quantity, meaning that you spend your hard-earned money on the lifestyle as opposed to the big home.” That’s how she styled the model suite at Market Town Condos in Barrie, using small-scale furniture to better fit in the space and a limited colour palette that flows through the rooms. Dark laminate floors contrast beige walls and sheer window treatments. “It’s neutral and light,” Ms. Car says of the 730-square-foot Atwater suite. “In order to keep the space warm, I added a lot of contrast.” Market Town Condos — by Mady Development and Pen Equity Realty — features suites ranging from 552 to 949 square feet and priced from $159,990 to $232,990. The sales office is on Cundles Road, just south of Duckworth Road in Barrie. It’s open Monday to Thursday from noon to 6 p.m. and weekends and holidays from noon to 5 p.m. Call 705-719-1222 or visit markettowncondos.com. 1. As the target market is both young adults and empty nesters, Ms. Car says: “I didn’t want to be too contemporary.” Thus, the drum-shade fixture with wire detailing from Union Lighting is both modern and sophisticated.
2. For the dining scene, the designer didn’t want chairs with high backs that would overpower the room and interrupt the sightlines. These fit perfectly. The bonus: The stud detailing and linen upholstery add a touch of traditional to the unit.
3. Next to the clean-lined sofa, the curved chairs add eclectic appeal. The linen upholstery is all the rage, Ms. Car says. “In today’s trends there’s a lot of linens and velvets, but with very clean, contemporary lines,” she explains “It’s marrying the old traditional designs with the modern.”
4. Using two small coffee tables instead of a larger one makes the space more flexible. The tables match the floors, while the glass top doesn’t hog visual space. They can be moved around easily for entertaining. The tables are from European House Furniture Interiors, as is most of the furniture in the unit.
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Sheppard. The condo corridor.

Shane Baghai arrived in Canada in 1973 and put his engineering education to use as a designer of home heating and cooling systems. A decade later, the Iranian-born, London-bred gentleman was one of North America’s busiest custom homebuilders, with many of his projects rooted in North York.
A man of foresight, Mr. Baghai realized the potential for growth along Sheppard Avenue East between Yonge Street and Victoria Park Avenue and, as such, became a fan of then-Mayor Mel Lastman and his proposed Sheppard subway line. The 5.5-kilometre subway line officially opened in November 2002, with five stations dotted from Yonge Street to Don Mills Road.
Today, another outspoken mayor, this one named Rob Ford, is murmuring about extending the subway. With 29 high-rise buildings in the works or in planning stages along the Sheppard Avenue stretch comprising 5,865 condominium units, according to Urbanation, developers like Mr. Baghai are thrilled.
“Sheppard Avenue will become a busy corridor in the next 10 years,” says Mr. Baghai, whose series of St. Gabriel condos and townhomes is down to 33 available units at St. Gabriel Manor with occupancy this spring. “You’ll see [towers with six-storey podiums] popping up all the way from Bayview Avenue to as far as the eye can see. … This is just the tip of the iceberg.”
According to RealNet, 2010 ended with the Sheppard Corridor ranking third out of 19 active high-density development areas across the GTA based on the number of projects, units and sales. But it ranked 13th when it came to average unit pricing: $485 per square foot compared to the average GTA price of $547. RealNet president George Carras attributes the area’s popularity to low price, highway access, public transportation and convenient shopping. Well-known developers such as Menkes, Daniels, Monarch and Cityzen Fernbrook all have a presence, with signs adorning every major intersection to beckon potential buyers to take a peek.
The largest development by far is Concord Adex’s Concord Park Place, an L-shaped, 45-acre master-planned community consisting of 15 high-rise and mid-rise buildings with 5,000 condos and townhomes plus a park, school and community centre. Its price per square foot is $570. Spokesman Brian Fong says most buyers hail from the neighbourhood, with young people buying first and their parents following.
“Downtown is still the core, but [this area] is a second downtown,” Mr. Fong says. “It’s a win-win situation: The more people gather in one location, the more positive noise generated to call for the government or the city to improve that area.”
Retailers are enjoying the upswing, too. In his regular jaunts around the ’hood, Mr. Baghai has learned that fast food restaurants and convenience stores are doing brisk business, with pizzeria owners telling him their delivery orders have risen 25% in recent years. Loblaws at Bayview Village is always hopping, and Whole Foods Market’s fourth Greater Toronto Area location will take over most of the 60,000 sq. ft. of retail space at Tridel’s Hullmark Centre at the southeast corner of Yonge and Sheppard.
Melissa Evans-Lee, Bayview Village’s marketing director, recalls standing in the mall’s parking lot one day last year and “all you could see were cranes dotting the horizon.” The amount of activity is staggering, she says, with more than 20,000 new residents expected over the next few years. Many will be thirtysomething professionals who want the conveniences of downtown without living in the thick of it.
“Our new neighbours are moving into fabulous condos with luxurious finishings and hotel-like amenities,” she says. “They want the fabulous life, which we are more than happy to contribute to.”
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Article from the National Post.

More Toronto Boomers to Buy Condos.


The year 2010 ended on a high note for Toronto's condo market, according to statistics released in January by Urbanation. The fourth quarter of the year (October to December 2010) showed 6,280 new condominium sales, up from 3,805 in the quarter before. "There was a huge jump in sales and that was directly relatable to the fact that we had 29 new projects and 6,500 units that launched in the fourth quarter," says Ben Myers, executive vice-president and editor of Urbanation, which tracks the Toronto condominium market. "A lot of those were large-scale projects and a lot of them did fairly well." Investors are continuing to drive the market, he says, making "the bulk of the sales" for newly released condo projects before sites even have their grand openings to the public. But once that surge of sales is over, end users are the prime buyers; Urbanation tracks those existing new projects already on the market, too, where sales continue at the same average pace as they have for the past five to six years. "For the end users, that level hasn't changed, just the level of investor activity has improved," Mr. Myers says. With a seven per cent to nine per cent increase annually in the price per square foot of condos in the city, it's no wonder investors are continuing to buy. Price per square foot rose from $352 in the fourth quarter of 2009 to $374 per square foot in the fourth quarter of 2010. "Increases like that provide investors with returns," Mr. Myers says. While investors may be looking for returns, another buyer group — baby boomers — is considering something else: condo lifestyle.
A certain segment of boomers is starting to see condos as a viable option, according to a recent report by TD Canada Trust, which tracked housing trends among boomers throughout Canada. The TD Canada Trust Boomer Buyers Report showed that while 61% of the boomers surveyed planned to look for a detached house with their next move, the next largest segment of the population — 24% — were looking at condos, citing the lack of maintenance, better security and amenities as deciding factors. "We've seen so many condo developments, especially in Toronto, that you're at least seeing these boomers talking about condos, where in the past they haven't at all talked about them," says Farhaneh Haque, regional sales manager for the Mobile Mortgage Specialist area of TD Canada Trust. (Not that all of the boomers surveyed were convinced: 61% didn't like the idea of living in a condo because they didn't want to give up their backyard or garden, and 57 per cent didn't want to pay condo fees.)
So what does 2011 promise? According to Mr. Myers, Toronto can expect a slowdown compared to 2010 numbers — although with the 16,000 new condo sales he predicts within the city limits this year, sales certainly won't stop completely. "I still think it's going to be a pretty solid year," he says. "Based on quarter four, we may even have higher results than the 16,000—but I'll stick to my prediction for now."
© Copyright (c) Postmedia News From the Vancouver Sun
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Condo Report 'Strong'


Urbanation Inc., the leading source of information and analysis on the Toronto condominium market since 1981, today released its Q4-2010 market overview. For the second consecutive year, the Toronto CMA new-condominium market finished with a bang. A flurry of sales activity in Q4-2010 resulted in 6,280 new condominium units sold in the quarter. This represents an impressive rebound from the 3,805 new unit sales in the preceding Q3-2010.
Said Urbanation Executive Vice President and Editor Ben Myers, “The Q4-2010 new unit sales were much higher than expected, spurred by tremendous results at a number of new project openings in the City of Toronto. In the end, 2010’s total annual new and resale condominium sales of 37,041 units were just three per cent shy of the historic 2007 record of 38,306 units sold.”
Compared to 2009, 2010’s sales represent an increase of 20 per cent over 2009’s 30,939 new and resale condominium units sold. 2010 sales soared 27 per cent over 2008’s sales of 27,187 new and resale volume. Myers added, “Even more impressive than the sales results were the number of construction starts, a Toronto CMA record of 18,221 high-rise condominiums started in 2010, more than twice as many as 2009. There are now 34,548 units under construction in the CMA in 132 projects”.
The key to Q4-2010’s strength, and the overall 2010 annual sales success, seems to have been a combination of developers continuing to restrain pricing at new project launches to appeal both to the general market, and to investors looking to acquire suites as future rental properties.
A 2010 Urbanation survey of condominium industry professionals indicates that their major concern with regard to 2011 sales levels will be affordability. In the Toronto CMA overall, the unsold unit index price for new projects (the average asking price of available product per square foot), rose eight per cent annually from $493 to $530 psf in Q4-2010. The unsold index price in the former City of Toronto was $646 psf in Q4-2010 and $723 psf in the Downtown Core.
Pricing in the resale market has flattened in recent quarters, but has risen six per cent annually from $352 psf in Q4-2009 to $374 psf in the fourth quarter of 2010. Resale index pricing in the former City was $487 psf in Q4-2010 and $518 psf in the Downtown Core. There were 3,538 condominium apartment resale transactions in the fourth quarter in the CMA, with the average unit selling for $339,000.
“Urbanation expects 15,000 to 17,000 new units to launch in 2011, with approximately 16,000 sales, representing a slight drop-off following the ‘boom’ conditions in 2010” said Myers, “Moderate growth is expected in the resale condominium market, and Urbanation is forecasting 17,000 resales in 2011.”
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Repealing the Land Transfer Tax


In a deputation to the City of Toronto's Budget Committee later today at the East York Civic Centre, the Toronto Real Estate Board (TREB) will tell City Councillors that REALTORS® are encouraged with the direction of the City's proposed 2011 Budget and believe that it is a significant step towards fulfilling Mayor Ford's strong commitment to repeal the Toronto Land Transfer Tax. TREB is scheduled as the first speaker, today at 6:00 p.m., at the City Budget Committee public hearings being held at the East York Civic Centre, 850 Coxwell Avenue.
"By demonstrating restraint and prudent fiscal management, this budget sets the stage for City Council to deliver on Mayor Ford's clear commitment to repeal the Toronto Land Transfer Tax by next year," said TREB President Bill Johnston.
For years, GTA REALTORS® have been telling the City that the fair way for it to address its financial challenges is to get its finances in order, instead of burdening homeowners and homebuyers with additional taxes, like the Land Transfer Tax.
"Torontonians spoke out strongly against the idea of the Land Transfer Tax when it was first proposed in 2007. The public spoke loudly then, and they spoke even louder last October when they gave Mayor Ford an overwhelming and clear mandate to repeal this unfair tax," added Johnston.
TREB will be telling the City's Budget Committee that the proposed budget that they are reviewing is an important step to delivering on the Mayor's Land Transfer Tax mandate because it begins the process of addressing the City's financial challenges with fair options, including cost-containment measures and a forthcoming detailed program and service review.
"For years, Toronto's taxpayers have been bearing the burden of unsustainable City budgets. We believe that the proposed 2011 Budget stops the bleeding, and that by moving forward with Mayor Ford's commitments, including repealing the Land Transfer Tax, next year's budget will allow the City to flourish," said Johnston.
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City of mass construction: Toronto’s unstoppable condos show no signs of slowing down


The Toronto condominium market is out of this world. Currently there is no better place in the world where all this activity is happening. Specializing in the sale of Toronto Condos, I can tell you, we have a large immigration of people coming to Toronto every year. We have a diverse economy that can support a reasonably affluent lifestyle. And we a have a very stable Canadian economy. Everyone is recognizing how great Canada is, and Toronto is the centre of Canada. My enthusiasm is echoed by those who analyze the Toronto condo market and those who build it up. According to Urbanation, number crunchers in the development industry, 16,000 new Toronto condo units are expected to come to the Toronto area. 5,500 will be in the downtown core alone.
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