Archive for March, 2008

Sophia Condo development update

Monday, March 31st, 2008

The Bowra group has started sorting through which presales buyers are willing to pay more to keep their condo units:

Their options are to agree to pay a price that is 90 per cent of current market value for their units, which in some cases is more than $100,000 higher than initial pre-sale contract prices they signed in late 2005 and 2006, or take their deposits back and walk away.

British Columbia Supreme Court Judge Grant Burnyeat, last week, issued an order of foreclosure on the project for Bancorp Growth Mortgage Fund Ltd. and a second order authorizing receiver David Bowra to get the 85-per-cent complete development back into construction. That included offering pre-sale buyers the option to still claim their units, but at higher prices.

Buyers can take their deposits back if they want, but the order authorizes Bowra to cancel contracts and sell units at current market prices if necessary.

Developer Bill Eden turned the project over to receivership at the end of February when some $4 million in cost overruns threatened to sink the 81-unit development.

Previous related stories:

-Financing difficulty cancels Vancouver condo projects
-Eden group Sophia goes into receivership
-Receivers report for Eden Sophia
-2 more local condos run into financing problems.

Friday Free for All!

Friday, March 28th, 2008

It’s Friday and that means open-topic time at VancouverCondo.info – here’s a few stories I’ve noticed this week:

- Local RE blogs in Vancouver Magazine
- Credit still easy to get in BC
- Vancouver most expensive for business
- Local business optimism high but dropping
- Little relief in sight for condo buyers
- Craigslist rental price drops
- BC retail sales rank last in Canada
- Rising Loonie hurting our competitive edge
- Foreclosure bus moves across the USA
- The 25% dissolution

What are you seeing out there? Post your news, links and anecdotes here and have a great weekend!

Which BC market will see the best percentage return between Feb 2010 and Jan 2011?

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Local blogs in Vancouver Magazine

Thursday, March 27th, 2008

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BDK posted a link to this article in Vancouver Magazine titled ‘sitting out‘ which shines some light on the hidden world of real estate bears and bulls that lurk online in the lower mainland.

Its quite a good article, outlining the basic points that go back and forth on both sides of the Vancouver boom/bust argument and profiling a local couple that recently sold:

In 2002 Felicity Stone and Jim Patton stumbled onto the real-estate mother lode, trading up from a house in rural Langley to a thoughtfully designed home on two acres in the Elgin Chantrell area of South Surrey. Patton, a communications consultant, and Stone, who works in public relations, were happy to pour work and money into the place, expecting to live there the rest of their lives. Then their outlook began to change. Much as they loved the 1962 gem, they also saw what nearby property was selling for. In August 2007 they decided to list, and by November they’d accepted $1.616 million—a 240 percent increase from the $475,000 they’d paid a half-decade earlier. Now they’re renting a house in the Bayridge area of West Van, paying $2,500 a month while they watch the market and wait for prices to drop.

They even link to several of your favorite blogs (VancouverCondo.info included) – my only complaint is they seem to have munged up the link to this site and they left out three interesting and useful sites which I’ll link to here:

Paul Boenisch and his amazing REBGV statistics

Mohicans analysis at langley-financial-planning

and the interesting new Vancouver RE anecdote archive

Which BC market will see the best percentage return between Feb 2010 and Jan 2011?

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Mortgage slaves in Toronto

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

There’s an interesting ’slice of life’ article in Toronto Life that profiles buyers who have overextended to purchase a home.  Looking at the numbers in that story you can tell Vancouver is just as bad if not worse:

Their budget inched up, first to $550,000, then 100 grand more. When they saw a detached house in Hillcrest, with its spacious bedrooms, modern kitchen and large yard, it felt like home. It was listed at $589,000, and there were two other interested buyers. Their agent encouraged them to make an aggressive offer of $647,000, a price that was just manageable because the house had a basement apartment they could rent out to help cover the higher mortgage payments. On the night of the offers, Daniel and Louise sat in their car in front of the house, with their competition parked nearby. When the owners rejected the two top bids, the couple had to decide whether to go up or let it go. “Daniel asked me if I thought the house was worth $650,000,” Louise says. “I said that I didn’t think it was worth $250,000, but that’s not what houses are going for in Toronto right now.” They bid $650,000 and the house was theirs.

When they picked up their keys last November, they had few regrets, not even about the cost of the house. “Now we’re in the game,” Daniel says.

But they hadn’t moved in yet. They haven’t had their furnace die during a February freeze, or a tenant’s rent cheque bounce, or a slow leak from the dishwasher rot the floor joists. When you’re overextended by an irrational market and barely making mortgage payments, the smallest house repair can push you over the edge.

I imagine that many first-time buyers in Toronto and Vancouver are getting by on a fairly thin margin, recent stats put the BC provincial savings rate at a negative 7.9% (yes, we owe more than we earn).

Condo supply lag woes

Tuesday, March 25th, 2008

A funny thing happens during a boom – the longer a boom lasts the more people view returns as ‘practically guaranteed’. Thats not just buyers, developers appear to do the same thing, bidding up the price of land and tripping over themselves to build more supply. Unfortunately demand can change a lot quicker than construction can be completed. Many cities in the US are bracing for a flood of new condos projects that were started during the boom, making the supply/demand imbalance even worse than it currently is:

More than 4,000 new units will be completed in both Atlanta and Phoenix by the end of the year. Developers in Miami and Fort Lauderdale, Fla., are readying nearly 10,000 total new units in a market already struggling with canyons of unsold condos. San Diego, another hard-hit region, will add 2,500 units, according to estimates provided by Reis Inc., a New York-based real-estate-research firm.

The new building comes on top of unprecedented supply. The U.S. finished 2007 with a supply of condos large enough to absorb 10 months of demand, the highest level since the National Association of Realtors began the tally in 1999.

The deluge means bad news for developers and potentially lower prices, including in cities such as Atlanta and Dallas that have avoided the worst of the housing bust. If defaults and foreclosures rise, lenders will feel the pain too.

Regulators have been sounding the alarm for weeks about the exposure of small and mid-size banks to commercial real estate, which mostly means construction loans to developers of condos and single-family housing.

It’s not all bad news, renters and investors with cash in hand are benefiting from this imbalance:

The news isn’t bad for everyone. Vulture buyers have started to circle, hoping to take advantage of foreclosed properties that banks may start dumping at fire-sale prices. Also, some condos are being converted to rental units, increasing supply for renters and putting downward pressure on prices.

It’s interesting to see how trends change dramatically over the course of just a couple years. Speculators tend to get overly optimistic about bubble markets during booms, unfortunately economic reality always corrects overpriced assets. The building supply lag makes this correction all the more dramatic:

The deteriorating economy isn’t helping. “When the world goes to hell in a handbasket, the last thing anyone wants to buy is a condo,” says Cathy Schlegel, a mortgage-loan broker in Fort Worth, Texas, whose condo in a high-rise called The Tower sat on the market for 14 months before she finally sold it at a loss in February.

The rising supply is a reflection of the picture in 2004 through 2006 — a time of huge demand for condos. Speculation was rampant as investors believed empty nesters and young professionals seeking an urban experience akin to what they watched on “Friends” would prop up the condo market for years.

Most projects take about three years from the time they are marketed to potential buyers to the time they are ready to be moved into. Deposits help developers get a construction loan that is to be paid off when the buyers close on their new condos years later.

However, cancellations are rising, meaning developers may not be able to pay back their banks. Peter Zalewski, founder of Condo Vultures Realty LLC in Miami, says condo developers he is working with are expecting 20% to 40% of buyers who put down deposits to walk away from the deal. In some areas, such as inland buildings and new projects along the river in Miami “walkaways” are expected to be even higher.

For years we’ve been adding supply in Vancouver that is snapped up in pre-sales. As in many states during the boom years there is a view that this market activity represents inelastic demand, but when the euphoria clears will we found that we’ve overbuilt the local condo market?

A hat-tip to BCbuds for the link!

Friday Free for All!

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

Easter Edition!  Here’s our weekend open-topic posting to discuss anything related to economics and the real estate market.  A few stories to get us started:

-Condo supply growing like crazy
-The disappearing first time buyer
-Oil, gold and the Canadian dollar drops
-Canada following US downturn
-More pain in store for Canadian banks
-Turner answers questions about ‘greater fools
-Condo marketer says Translink plan ‘prudent
-Vanoc opposes any Beijing boycott
-Price of gas has Americans cutting back elsewhere
-BBC: LA’s subprime shanty towns

So what are you seeing out there this fine holiday weekend?  Post your news, links, anecdotes and comments here and have a great weekend!

Translink wants more money

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

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Public transit has an impact on property values (both positively and negatively) so isn’t it only right that the good folks at Translink get some of that boom-time real estate money?

The new TransLink board is looking at real-estate partnerships to solve the problem of spiralling costs for Metro Vancouver’s burgeoning public transit system, says board chairman Dale Parker.

In an interview with The Province, Parker said there are opportunities for TransLink to cash in on the added real-estate value created by rapid-transit lines and station hubs, and TransLink should look at them.

“One of the things we’d certainly like to look at is what are the opportunities for TransLink to benefit from the real-estate development that goes on around the stations,” Parker said following a Monday night public hearing on the property-tax issue. “There’s going to be increased density — can we participate and benefit in the sense of partnerships in real estate?”

Yes. Can we please? Apparently we can!

The board was created in November by the B.C. government, which abolished the old governance structure and a TransLink board made up of elected municipal politicians.

“The new legislation gave us greater scope for participating in ownership around the lines from what we were able to do before,” said Parker.

And what a perfect time to have public transit speculate on real estate! After scrapping a very unpopular tax on owners of non-residential parking spaces the Translink board is looking to make up the 18 million dollars elsewhere:

Rather than slash the $900-million-plus budget for the fiscal year beginning April 1 by $18 million, the board is expected to levy the property tax in some way that stings homeowners and business owners equitably.

Currently, business owners are taxed at a rate five times that of a homeowner for properties of comparable value.

“One thing the board does want to do is focus on what other sources of revenue, certainly other than property tax and fare, because those two may very well be close to being maxed out,” said Parker. “The public is demanding a much larger expanded system and we’re going to have to figure out how to pay for that.”

I’ve got an idea! How about pull-tabs or scratch and win? Hey! You never know!

Vancouver sales drop for second month

Monday, March 17th, 2008

It appears the continuing erosion of affordability is taking its toll in Vancouver with fewer people buying real estate while listings grow. So far 2008 has seen the slowest start of a year since 2003, not just in Vancouver, but in BC as a whole:

Cameron Muir with the B.C. Real Estate Association says it’s a trend that’s showing up all over the province. The average residential price in B.C. climbed to $478,000 in January, up 15% from last February. Muir says prices are still rising, but not as fast as we’ve seen in the last couple of years, and that could balance things out in the months to come.

So why are we seeing this change now?

A weak U.S. economy and lower demand for B.C. lumber are just a couple factors for the drop. But Muir says fewer home sales and the increase in active listings may actually be balancing the B.C. housing market.

Thanks to Reductimat for the link.

Bad news Bear Sterns

Sunday, March 16th, 2008

What’s the fifth largest investment bank in the US worth anyways? Two dollars a share sounds like a good deal. As a stunning example of how bad housing credit bets have gone in the US, Bear Sterns has gone from a high price of $159.46 per share to being bought up by competitor JP Morgan Chase for $2 per share to avoid a total collapse.

The Fed will provide special financing for the deal to try to stop a spreading crisis of confidence in the global financial system. Bear Stern was founded in 1923 and survived the great depression, but apparently not the US housing bubble and resulting credit market fallout.

Meanwhile as far away as Britain the credit crunch has caused lenders to start removing offers for mortgages, push up prices and completely stop the practice of 100% financing. Will we start to see a tightening of credit creep into local mortgages soon?

Friday Free for All!

Thursday, March 13th, 2008

At the end of each week we do an open-topic Friday free-for-all post here at VancouverCondo.info – this is our chance to recap some recent stories and share links and anecdotes on the local market and global economy. Here are a few links to start off the discussion:

- Eden Sophia superintendent comments on project losses
- Zillow Canada? David G says maybe eventually, but not this year
- You’re getting a raise! Wages predicted to grow in BC
- Fewer sales, more listings means more options for buyers
- Canada’s big banks can reclaim the risky loans market
- US foreclosures hurting neighbors refinancing efforts
- CNN video: Arson as a way out of housing debt
- The Feds worst nightmare

So what are you seeing out there? Post your news, links and anecdotes here!