Friday, November 29, 2013

Urbanation Response Part 2: Do Condo Rents Look Poised to Fall?


This is the second part of a Blogpost that responds to research findings reported through a recent Globe and Mail article that states condo rents are declining.
 
This post will address the validity of the claim made that “the Toronto rental market may no longer absorb supply as it comes on-stream, resulting in lower rents and increasing cash outflows for landlords…”
 
The first part to this blog post addressed the more glaring issues related to the quality of the research conducted that found condo rents are declining.

Condo rents are not falling
As mentioned in Part 1 of the blog post on this topic, Urbanation tracks condo rental activity through the MLS system, which we estimate covers at least two-thirds of the market.  We marry transaction data with our own proprietary database of square footage measurements for condo units, first taken from developer plans and then verified post-registration from surveys submitted to the land registry.


Our data shows that on a per square foot basis, average rents in the third quarter grew by 4.2% from last year. While a rising inflow of newly completed units with above average rents per sq ft are helping to push this level higher, our same-sample analysis (using only buildings common to Q3-2012) still shows rents are growing, albeit at a slightly slower pace of 3.5% year-over-year. This reflects a market that is starting to balance out following three years of exceptional growth in rents. But note that the rentals-to-listings ratio remains elevated at above 70%, which still supports further growth in rents.


Demand will be able to absorb new supply


We expect that the emerging trend towards more balance in the rental market will gradually continue over the next couple years. As more units come to completion, more investor-held units will be listed for rent. But it’s important to recognize that rental demand is currently running at a 20-year high, driven by such factors as reduced ownership affordability for first-time buyers, strong growth in the population aged 25 to 34 and migration into the core. This, combined with the lack of growth in conventional rental supply, is why vacancy rates remain near historic lows despite the growing supply of condos — which made up 85% of the growth in rentals over the past 10 years.




Assuming a flat profile for household formation and ownership rates, the number of net new renter households will average around 10,000 per year out to 2016. Over the same period, condo completions are expected to average 20,000 units per year. Assuming 60% of these units are owned by investors and 3/4 will list their units for rent, we will see an average of roughly 9,000 condo listings per year from new completions. While supply can also be added from older condos (as owners hold onto their units after moving out) and some new purpose-built units, the point is that demand and supply should remain at similar levels.  
                                       

This isn’t to suggest that the market won’t change — we firmly believe that more balance is on its way. Realistically, there are likely to be short-term periods of weakness experienced in selected areas of the market over the next few years. But on the whole, the market should not experience a pervasive decline in rents. However, this may not be enough to keep some investors from looking to sell their units. It’s no secret that cash flow margins on rental units have become squeezed, and they will remain that way as higher priced units enter the market and rent growth slows. But with vacancy rates expected to remain low, the equity accumulation inherent in having a steady stream of rental income go towards mortgage costs and principal repayment will continue to encourage most investors to hold.


Condo investors recognize the advantages that leveraging a low-cost mortgage brings, as well as the sense of security in owning a piece of property, which is particularly shared among new immigrants who tend to be big purchasers in the market. So it’s difficult to assume that because unlevered cap rates are below financial market dividends that investors will begin to suddenly change course.

History has taught us that supply tends to direct itself towards where demand is strongest. The exceptions being when owners are forced to sell because they can’t close on their homes or can no longer afford their mortgages — neither scenario should have enough prevalence to impact the market. Should the economy remain stable and interest rates remain low, mortgage arrears will remain near historic lows (0.31% in Ontario as of August 2013). As a greater volume of units come to completion, there will naturally be more reports of buyers struggling to close on their units, but they will continue to represent a very small minority. The vast majority of units set to complete have deposits paid of at least 15% (equal to around $60,000 on a $400,000 unit) — buyers will do whatever they can not to lose their investment. They have also been pre-qualified to close – something banks require before advancing construction loans (despite reports of the contrary).  

The market will be challenged by resisting forces for price and rent growth over the next few years, but should remain stable in the absence of any strong deterioration in confidence. The media can help to prevent this by, at minimum, offering readers a more balanced selection of informed opinions on the market. 


Part 1 - Do Condo Rents Look Poised to Fall?:  http://urbanationinc.blogspot.ca/2013/11/urbanation-response-part-1-do-condo.html

Urbanation Response Part 1: Do Condo Rents Look Poised to Fall?


This is the first part of a Blogpost that responds to research findings reported through a recent Globe and Mail article that states condo rents are declining.

A recent report by an equity research firm came to the conclusion that condo rents are on the decline, which, in turn, could trigger a sell-off of investor units that would cause condo prices to “drop dramatically.” They found that on a per square foot basis, rents declined by 1.6% from last year. The basis of their analysis came from researching ‘for rent’ postings on Craigslist in 47 projects, and comparing them to the results from last year’s exercise. They added that mortgage pre-approvals are not needed to buy new condos and buyers may have trouble closing, which could lead to “significant losses” for developers and lenders.

Urbanation does not have access to the actual report, so we are basing our response on the information published in the Globe and Mail.

The first part to this Blogpost will address the more glaring issues related to the quality of this research. The second to follow will address claims of impending rent and price declines and closing risk.

Using Craigslist as the basis for determining changes in market rents poses at least a few major problems.
 
Craigslist doesn’t report transacted rents
It’s important to recognize that Craigslist is a listings website – it shows how much owners are asking for their rentals, not what they are getting. While it may be true that listing values can generally be used as a close approximation for transaction values, it is less likely to be the case on Craigslist. These listings can often be posted by individuals with very little knowledge of the market, and are more likely to under- or over-price their units, relative to units on the MLS system, which are posted by realtors who work in the market every day. If there is a difference in the degree of over- or under-pricing units between two periods, the change in average rents calculated becomes unreliable.

The sample size is too small
The listings vs. transaction value issue may not be that problematic if one were using a large enough sample that could mask differences in the degree of over or under pricing units between two periods. But 47 buildings isn’t enough. It represents only 3% of the total number of condo buildings in the Toronto CMA.  It’s also unclear if the same buildings were monitored at both points in time. Given that they report, 553 postings in October of this year versus 148 last year – this isn’t likely the case. Rents can be very project-specific, and even slight changes in the sample can impact results.

Inconsistent reporting of unit sizes
It was stated in the article that the research ‘controlled for unit sizes where possible’ to measure changes in rents per square foot. When measuring changes on a per square foot basis in a small sample, precision is paramount – you can’t look at rents per square foot for some units and not for others. And the unit sizes must be accurate, or at least consistently reported across sample periods. Is it a stretch to think that some people posting on Craigslist may exaggerate? Again, this may not be that big of a problem if everyone exaggerated by the same degree. But if one person posts a 650 square foot unit for $1,600 in 2012 and the same unit gets posted in 2013 for the same rent but it’s now advertised as 675 feet  – it reduces the rent per square foot by almost 4%. Similar issues may arise using unit size information taking from MLS listings, which is why Urbanation goes through the arduous process of maintaining a complete database on unit sizes taken from survey measurements on record at the land registry.

Who's research should be taken with a “grain of salt”?
We recognize that transactions through the MLS system don’t represent all activity in the condo rental market, but we do believe it represents the strong majority.  Rentals through MLS will reach 20,000 units this year, which equals an annual turnover rate of roughly 8% of the entire stock. Adding in units sold yields a total annual turnover rate of about 15%. The ‘true’ annual turnover rate of all condos is likely closer to 20%, which means total rental transactions through other means such as Craigslist probably add about 1/3 to the total.

This means Urbanation captures about 2/3 of the entire condo rental market. The activity within the 47 buildings monitored through Craigslist would capture no more than 5%. Nonetheless, the authors of this research cautioned that claims such as Urbanation’s that rents per square foot are rising by 4% year over year should be taken “with a grain of salt”. We wonder, what would be appropriate to take with their claims?

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Urbanation Comments on the Bank of Canada Financial System Review




In its recently released Financial System Review, the Bank of Canada once again flagged the Toronto condominium market as a key risk.
 
Given the high level of attention this has received in the media, Urbanation felt it necessary to provide responses to their messages:
 
 “Construction activity remains strong in [the Toronto condominium market] despite the slowdown in overall housing demand over the past year and the total number of housing units under construction remains significantly above its historical average relative to the population.”
 
Of course it does. Construction in the Toronto condo market adjusts to changes in demand with a 12-18 month lag because the majority of units that start construction are sold well in advance during pre-construction sales campaigns. That means the slowdown in sales activity over the past year will work down construction volumes in the year ahead. But don’t expect a dramatic slowdown as roughly 30,000 units were in pre-construction at the end of Q1-2013 and were collectively 60% sold.
 
The total number of units under construction will continue to remain above its long-term average because there has been a dramatic shift towards high-rise at the expense of low-rise development in recent years. Since high-rise projects stay under construction for a lot longer than low-rise homes, the total housing supply under construction is ultimately boosted relative to historical averages or the population.
 
“The number of unsold high-rise units in the pre-construction and under-construction stages has remained near the high levels observed since early 2012. If the upcoming supply of units is not absorbed by demand as they are completed over the next 12 to 30 months, … [it increases] the risk of an abrupt correction in prices…”
 
Unsold condo inventory numbers are the most misunderstood statistics about the market. It’s very important to understand that the majority of unsold units are in projects that are still in the pre-construction stage. If these projects haven’t sold enough units to meet their conditions for construction financing (typically 70% or more), they won’t begin construction until they do, or will perhaps be cancelled. So, most of the unsold inventory reported today will either never materialize or have several years to be absorbed prior to completion.
 
The projects that are under construction remain 89% sold —a figure that hasn’t changed over the past year. While the number of unsold units has risen with more projects under construction, this represents little risk to the market. The construction process is lengthy and by the time the average project arrives at the completion stage, it is 95% sold. Even if sales stall at the 85-90% mark, the developer will generally turn a profit by this point and can be more aggressive with its incentives or opt to hold onto the units after completion and rent them out. As of Q1-2013, there were about 600 unsold units at recently completed projects – a level that is virtually zero in comparison to the size of the market and one that can withstand increases without threatening prices.
 
“If the investor component of demand has boosted construction in the condominium market beyond demographic requirements, this market may be more susceptible to shifts in buyer sentiment.”
 
Tough to argue with that.  Investors have likely purchased about 60% of units that are under construction today. If they all came to completion in a short span, the majority decided to sell and demographic requirements declined, prices would no doubt fall. It’s possible, but not likely.
 
In the absence of an economic shock, household formation in the Toronto CMA is likely to continue averaging approximately 35,000 households per year (as it has over the past three census periods). With low-rise housing seemingly capped at 15,000 units per year going forward, a 20,000 unit gap is left for high-rise to fill. Based on historical trends, capacity constraints and construction progress to-date, it appears unlikely that many more than 20,000 condos per year will be completed over the next few years.
 
Furthermore, most investor-held units are likely to continue flowing into the rental market, where demand is currently running at a 20-year high, vacancy rates remain close to 1% and very few purpose-built rental apartments are being constructed. There is little reason to believe there will be a major shift towards investor flipping – if short-term speculators were the majority of buyers, there would have been a much stronger run-up in prices than 7% per year over the past five years (In the previous cycle, condo prices increased by 170% from 1985 to 1989).
 
It’s true higher investor involvement in the market raises risks to prices because they are more prone to shifts in sentiment, and there is no way of being certain that the economy and demographic demand will remain stable. While it’s important to continue closely monitoring the market, these risks appear to be well contained at this point. Actually, without higher investor involvement, the market today may have been facing a different – and perhaps more difficult – set of problems. Supply would be much more restrictive, causing prices (and perceived overvaluation) to be even higher and a severe shortage of rental properties.

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Toronto Condo Market Strengthens per Urbanation's Q1-2013 UrbanRental Report



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

 TORONTO CONDO RENTAL MARKET STRENGTHENS

growth in leases and rents pick up speed in
the first quarter

 
TORONTO – May 14, 2013:  Urbanation Inc., the leading source of information and analysis on the Toronto condominium market since 1981, released its Q1-2013 rental market results today.

A total of 3,919 condominium apartments were leased in Q1-2013 on the MLS system, up by 31% from a year ago. Growth in rental transactions continued to outpace growth in rental listings, pushing average index rents higher by 4.4% from last year to a record $1,856 per month or $2.33 per square foot.

Over the past two years, rents have risen by more than 10%, equal to an additional $170 per month or 23 cents per square foot on average.

 “Demand for renting condos has heated up with less first-time buyers. Rental transactions have exceeded resale volumes in the condo market since mid-2012, when the latest round of mortgage rule changes came into effect” said Shaun Hildebrand, Urbanation’s Senior Vice President.”

Units listed for rent on the MLS system in the first quarter grew by 19% from last year. Out of the 4,859 units that registered in Q1-2013 (the second highest quarterly total of the past four years), 13% were rented out in the quarter, compared to less than 2% that were resold.
 
“Investors are increasingly choosing to hold their units rather than flip them for sale. For the first time in a while, rents are rising faster than prices,” added Hildebrand.

 ABOUT URBANATION

Urbanation is Canada’s leading condominium market research company. Since 1981, Urbanation has analyzed the Toronto condominium market, publishing the “industry bible” – Urbanation’s Condominium Market Survey. This quarterly report tracks new, resale and future condominium projects. The newest report from Urbanation is UrbanRental, which tracks activity in the condominium rental market. Urbanation also provides the development community with essential consulting services, which include site and topic specific market studies and surveys.

 




 
Media Contact:           Pauline Lierman
416 922 2200

Monday, May 6, 2013

Q1-2013 Press Release - Toronto Condo Market Continues to Rebalance



 

 
 
TORONTO CONDO MARKET CONTINUES TO REBALANCE

Sales slow from record-setting pace in early 2012

 
TORONTO – May 6, 2013:  Urbanation Inc., the leading source of information and analysis on the Toronto condominium market since 1981, released its Q1-2013 market results today.

 A total of 2,728 new condominium apartments were sold in Q1-2013, down by 29% from Q4-2012 and 55% from Q1-2012—which was a record for first quarter sales activity. Sales in Q1-2013 were weighed down by the lowest number of new project openings since Q3-2009.

“The lower volumes seen in the first quarter were not unexpected given how strong the market was throughout 2011 and the first part of 2012. The industry has been cautious in bringing new units to market as sales centre traffic has slowed,” said Shaun Hildebrand, Urbanation’s Senior Vice President.

The number of unsold units in active projects increased during the first quarter to 18,845 units, 21% higher than a year ago. However, the share of active units that are sold held steady at 79%, slightly lower than the five-year average of 80%. The majority of unsold units (64%) are in projects still in the pre-construction sales phase.

The average index price grew by 2.5% annually in the first quarter to $533 psf, a slower pace than the 6.4% average recorded over the past 10 years.

“The market appears well positioned for an improvement through the rest of 2013. More competitive pricing and the upcoming release of some highly anticipated projects in the second quarter should attract a good amount of attention. Activity will remain below recent peaks, but should rise up to a level more consistent with the historical trend this year. An early indicator may be found in the resale numbers, which typically lead the new market during periods of recovery,” added Hildebrand.

Resale condominium apartment sales increased by 9% from the fourth quarter to 3,204 units in Q1-2013 —ranking fourth for a first quarter behind the past three years. Average index prices slipped by 0.5% from a year earlier to $394 psf. Resale prices were weighed down by a jump in listings during the quarter (+25%), partly as a result of an increased number of new registrations at 4,859 units in Q1-2013, 7% of which were listed for resale.

ABOUT URBANATION

Urbanation is Canada’s leading condominium market research company. Since 1981, Urbanation has analyzed the Toronto condominium market, publishing the “industry bible” – Urbanation’s Condominium Market Survey. This quarterly report tracks new, resale and future condominium projects. The newest report from Urbanation is UrbanRental, which tracks activity in the condominium rental market. Urbanation also provides the development community with essential consulting services, which include site and topic specific market studies and surveys.




 Media Contact:        Pauline Lierman
416 922 2200
 

 

 

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Urbanation Announcement - Shaun Hildebrand, Pauline Lierman, Josh Macleod


 

 
Eve Lewis, CEO and Founder of Urbanation is pleased to announce the appointment of Shaun Hildebrand as Senior Vice President.  Shaun has joined the Urbanation team with a tremendous track record and fountain of industry knowledge in residential real estate.  Shaun comes to us from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC), where he managed the analysis of the GTA housing market.

We are also happy to announce the promotion of Pauline Lierman to the key role of Director of Market Research at Urbanation.  Pauline has built a solid and strong foundation at Urbanation and Pauline will be working very closely with Shaun to continue to deliver our premier products, services and consulting.

Josh Macleod has been promoted to Research Analyst after joining the Urbanation team from the IBI Group. Josh brings fresh knowledge to the role with degrees in Urban and Regional Planning and Geography from Ryerson University and Queen’s University.

Both Shaun and Pauline bring a wealth of experience to their positions. I am confident in, and excited for the ever expanding role Urbanation has in the Toronto condominium market. Please join me in welcoming Shaun and congratulating Pauline and Josh.


Best Regards,

 Eve Lewis CEO

Contacts

Eve Lewis


Shaun Hildebrand


Pauline Lierman


 Josh Macleod


 
Tel: 416-922-2200 

Monday, February 11, 2013

Results of Urbanation's Condominium Industry Survey

For the past three years we have done a survey of our clients, plus selected other lenders, brokers, and developers that are active in the new condominium apartment market in the Toronto CMA.

Here are some quick highlights from the December 2012 questionnaire:

1) 53% of respondents expect 17,500 to 20,000 new condominium apartment sales for the Toronto CMA in 2013. In 2011, 41% of respondents answered the same way - there were 17,997 new condominium sales in 2012.

2) Just over 1/3 of respondents think investors make up 45% to 60% of buyers of new condominiums, which was the top response. 60% to 80% was the top response in our December 2011 survey.

3) 34% of respondents think the biggest concern in 2013 will be a flattening or decrease in condo prices in 2013. A further 18% think construction lending will be more difficult to obtain this year.

4) There is also concern among 37% of respondents that incomes are not keeping up with growth of condominium pricing. 23% of those that took the survey think there will be less investors in the market this year.

5) 36% of respondents think the new mortgage rules had the greatest negative impact on their bottom line in 2012.

6) 91% of respondents of our survey think media reporting on the condominium market in Toronto is skewed negative and stories are sensationalized.

7) 1/4 of respondents think the best new condominium launch strategy in 2013 is to wait until market conditions approve and keep the project the same, while 24% think prices should be lower and the project scale and scope kept the same.

8) 53% of respondents think 6-8 storey condominium projects on the avenue is the next big market opportunity in the Toronto market.


For full results of the 2012 survey, click here.

For full results of the 2011 survey, click here.

For more information on Urbanation, go to: www.urbanation.ca, or follow us on twitter: www.twitter.com/urbanation


Friday, February 8, 2013

Q4-2012 Press Release Supplement - Toronto CMA Rental Condominium Market


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

ATTENTION: News; Financial; Real Estate Media


RENTAL CONDOMINIUM MARKET HOTTER IN 2012 THAN 2011

More Rental Activity and Higher LLR in each 2012 Quarter in Comparison to the Equivalent Quarter in 2011

TORONTO – February 8, 2013:  Urbanation Inc., the leading source of information and analysis on the Toronto condominium market since 1981, today released summary results of its Q4-2012 UrbanRental report.

There were more registered unfurnished condominium apartment units leased through the Toronto Real Estate Board (TREB) in 2012 than resold (15,355 vs 15,292), as demand for investor-held private rental suites remains very strong.

In Q4-2012, there were 3,292 rental transactions in the Toronto CMA, an increase of 13% year-over-year from 2,902 in Q4-2011. Index rents increased 3.2% annually in the CMA to $2.29 psf (Average: $1,836 per month for 803 sf).

While listings in the resale condominium market declined annually in Q4-2012 (-4%), rental condominium listings increased 11%. Despite the jump in supply, the Lease-to-Listings Ratio (LLR) increased year-over-year from 64.8% in Q4-2011 to 66.5% in Q4-2012.

"An LLR above 50% would likely be considered a landlord's market, anything below 40% a renter's market, and anything in between being a balanced market" says Ben Myers, Urbanation Executive Vice President. "So to put the 66.5% LLR in perspective, a further 3,500 listings would be required to drop the market into renter's market territory!"

Approximately 15% to 20% of units in completed buildings come up for lease in the quarter the project registers, therefore for the market to see 3,500 more listings, approximately 18,000 more units would have needed to register in Q4-2012 (more than the past five quarters combined)!

Myers adds, "the rental condominium market remains under supplied, and even if record condominium completions are realized in 2013, Urbanation expects the rental market to remains strong for at least the next 15 to 18 months".

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ABOUT URBANATION

Urbanation is Canada’s leading condominium market research company. Since 1981, Urbanation has analyzed the Toronto condominium market, publishing the “industry bible” – Urbanation’s Condominium Market Survey. This quarterly report tracks new, resale and future condominium projects. The newest report from Urbanation is UrbanRental, which tracks activity in the condominium rental market. Urbanation also provides the development community with essential consulting services, which include site and topic specific market studies and surveys.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Rent to Resale Update


At Urbanation we do not believe "magic bullet" forecasting models like the rent-to-resale ratio really tell you if a market is overvalued, headed for a decline, or is getting more or less affordable. To think a market as complicated and dynamic as the Canadian Real Estate market could be boiled down to two variables is absurd. Comparisons of these types ignore location, product type, unit age, unit size, unit upkeep, maintenance, taxes, interest rates, mortgage insurance rates, the political environment, etc, etc, etc. Read more about it here: March 2012

Now that we have a better time series from collecting data from our UrbanRental Report we wanted to compare resale index pricing and index rents to see if the Toronto Condominium Market is becoming more un-affordable or not. We took the average resale index price in 46 submarkets across the Toronto CMA and divided that figure by the average index rent in that submarket in each of the last eight quarters to get a price multiplier by submarket. We took an average and a median of the 46 submarkets for each quarter since 2011 to derive the two lines in the figure below. Our model controls for product type, location and size. 



If you look at the green median trendline, there has essentially been no change in "affordability", if you look at the blue average trendline, the Toronto CMA condominium apartment market has got more affordable since 2011!

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Urbanation's Q4-2012 Press Release - Toronto Condominium Market


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

ATTENTION: News; Financial; Real Estate Media


RecORD HIGH LEVEL OF CONDOMINUM APARTMENT CONSTRUCTION STARTS IN 2012
Toronto developers commence building 24,388 units in 104 projects

TORONTO – January 31, 2013:  Urbanation Inc., the leading source of information and analysis on the Toronto condominium market since 1981, today released its Q4-2012 market overview.

In the Toronto Census Metropolitan Area (CMA) there were 3,841 new condominium apartment sales in Q4-2012, an increase of 16% over the third quarter. Overall, 17,997 new units sold in 2012, between the five-year CMA average of 20,119 annual sales (2007 to 2011) and the ten-year average of 17,139 annual sales (2002 to 2011), but down from the record breaking pace set in 2011.

The Toronto CMA condominium market set several records in 2012 including: construction starts (24,388), active developments (355), total active units (89,251), and total units under construction (56,866).

The average sold index price in the Toronto CMA was $536 psf in Q4-2012 (up 5.2% annually), while unsold suites were being offered at $568 psf on average in the fourth quarter.

Overall the active Toronto CMA new condominium market is 79% sold overall, down from 80% sold in Q3-2012 and 82% sold in Q4-2011, but above the ten-year average of 78%.

“Despite concerns over the level of unsold supply in the new condominium market, the ratio of sold to unsold units has consistently been above the long-run average in recent years” says Ben Myers, Urbanation Executive Vice President. “There remains confusion over unsold supply and standing inventory, to clarify, at the end of Q4-2012 there were just 613 completed and unsold new condominium apartment suites in the Toronto CMA - some would be rented out by the developer, some used for construction offices, and others used as model suites for subsequent phases, effectively lowering this standing inventory figure even farther”.

Overbuilding was a term cited quite often in relation to the Toronto condominium market in the second half of 2012, however, a survey of developers, lenders and brokers conducted by Urbanation in December indicated that just 11% of respondents indicated that over supply in the new condominium market was their top concern going into 2013.

The resale condominium market suffered from a lack of supply in Q4-2012, as just 3.2% of the 227,700 units (1,285 buildings) tracked by Urbanation were listed for sale in the fourth quarter, the lowest quarterly level in over 10 years. Resale activity declined 14% quarterly in the Toronto CMA to 2,941 transactions. Despite the decline in resale units traded, the Sales-to-Listings ratio increased quarterly to 40.2%, indicative of relatively balanced market conditions.

“Many investors chose to hold and rent their units in 2012 rather than sell them into uncertain market conditions” adds Myers. “This is contrary to the theory that condominium unit holders will panic and sell their suites at significant discounts during a softening market”.

Of the 2,941 resale condominium apartment transactions in Q4-2012, just 0.9% of these suites were sold for less than 90% of the list price. These 27 units sold at an average price of $641,000 ($282,000 over the average Q4-2012 resale price of $359,000), indicating that most of these luxury suites were owned by individuals with unrealistic value expectations, not investors looking to ‘cut their losses’.

Myers adds “We do not subscribe to the theory that a major correction in resale condominium pricing is forthcoming, the lack of recessionary conditions, the nearly non-existent foreclosure market, and the unwillingness of condominium sellers to accept low-ball offers will keep prices from falling to any significant extent in 2013.”

Overall, 15,292 resale condominium apartments traded in 2012, down from the five-year average of 15,609, but above the ten-year average of 13,486.   

Urbanation is forecasting 14,500 resale condominium transactions in 2013 and 17,000 new condominium sales in the Toronto CMA. 53% of respondents to Urbanation’s industry questionnaire expected between 17,500 to 20,000 new condominium sales in 2013, while 42% expected sales between 14,000 and 17,500.

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ABOUT URBANATION

Urbanation is Canada’s leading condominium market research company. Since 1981, Urbanation has analyzed the Toronto condominium market, publishing the “industry bible” – Urbanation’s Condominium Market Survey. This quarterly report tracks new, resale and future condominium projects. The newest report from Urbanation is UrbanRental, which tracks activity in the condominium rental market. Urbanation also provides the development community with essential consulting services, which include site and topic specific market studies and surveys.

Media Contact:          Pauline Lierman
416 922 2200