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Westopher explained it much better than I did - that it's an affordability problem. It's not the price of the house itself but how much it costs in total - I was wrong to simplify it to just price. Example: One year ago I could buy a $1m place at 1.2% interest - at 20% down ($200k) my payments would have been $2600/mo. Today that $1m place with a 20% downpayment goes for $3500/mo at 3.45% (today's rate) so the cost of the house has actually increased ~25%. For that house (haha, no, just a 2 bed condo folks) to have a $2600/mo payment would require it to drop in price to $800k (with the same downpayment, a $600k mortgage) - a 20% decrease in price. At current interest rates the market would need to drop 20% in price just to stay level with what it was a year ago in terms of affordability. If the market does drop 20% it's a case of "nothing has changed" because people are still stuck spending as much as they can on housing (until they forced to spend even more). Look at it another way: It's basically took a 25% increase in housing costs in the last 6 months to cause the market to almost grind to a halt. A house is the biggest purchase in someone's life so it should be fairly price sensitive yet it takes a huge increase to get people to bail - that says a lot about how desperate people are for a house. People aren't paying a lot for houses b/c money is cheap, they're paying a lot of money b/c they're desperate. |
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In Jan 2022, sales volume were +25.3% above 10 year averages for Januarys. The previous month, Dec 2021, it was +33% of 10year average for Decembers. November was also +33% above, etc. Those are the unsustainable demand numbers I was talking about. We will see what those # of transactions rates will become 2/3 years from now. If there is healthy demand supported by fundamentals, then the sales volume will not decrease right? |
Sales drop = more and more pent up demand, less ppl rezoning or spending $ to increase supply = probably another run once this settles, as pretty much everyone knows this level of % also isn't sustainable in the long run. Also rents will go up then renters bitch to CBC they are homeless + stress test too high then gov makes up some program to help them = more demand. |
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For what it's worth, I apologise for my tone in prior comments - I get really riled up about housing having watched year after years of city planners, politicians, NIMBYs etc ignore the problem - I was livid just following the debate on the Broadway Plan, the FUCK are these people doing!!! They've created villains out of innocents and hide their racism and classism behind language like "community character" or "liveability". Those people (I'm looking at you Colleen Hardwick) need to burn in hell for what they've done to people. |
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That situation would remove people from the renter pool as they could become homeowners, potentially decreasing the competition/demand for rental units. Again I have no numbers or idea to back this up, so have no idea how much it will help, but it could be a little or a lot, and goes back to the fact that no one should own these properties to sit empty or be short term rentals where there is a housing crisis. Short term rentals should only be allowed as a suite on a property that is occupied by renters or owners of the main unit, or in situations for what Airbnb’s original plan was, which was to allow homeowners who were somewhere else for say a 2 week vacation and to allow their home to be rented while they are gone. The government should create rules that would decimate their current business model. |
Sounds pretty Communist doesn't it, that's like saying you can't buy 5 m3s and hoard them in your garage so others can have their m3s too :pokerface::lawl: |
People don’t live in M3s. It’s not a basic human necessity. Food, water, shelter, healthcare are all necessities. It’s not that hard to understand man. It’s such a stupid comparison. |
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Goddamn she is part of the current City Council. She is part of the reason why we are in this shxt show now. FailFish |
Went to an open house today. Listed just under $4m. $15k property tax. Was told the house has been vacant since the start of the pandemic. Realtor shows us garage and an orange 4x4 g wagon parked inside. Says owner just uses the house to store one of his extra cars. :alone: |
At least you can look at $4M listings! If you can afford a $4M house, you can probably afford a 4x4 G wagon. I got an extra parking spot if you need somewhere to store an extra car. |
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:seriously: |
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Do we though? |
How do you define "nice" car? Age of the car? Car brand? Performance? MSRP? etc. |
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This was a house around the corner from me, have been watching it pretty closely, basically sold as ask minus realtor fees https://i.imgur.com/7DRk0TF.jpg Nice place, move in ready without a suite, which most of the similar neighboring homes have. I think if you have a nice more desirable place you have more leverage as a seller as opposed to the dirty old house filled with hoarder garbage. |
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Btw, this article sums up how I felt about it https://betterdwelling.com/the-canad...nraveling-bmo/ Excerpt: Quote:
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Yea I don't buy the supply-shortage argument completely either. Building more housing for sure will improve affordability but I think the supply-shortage argument is exaggerated because it assumes that all demand is 'altruistic' (i.e. an ordinary family trying to buy their principal residence). Even in that CMHC report supafamous quoted, it completely omits the fact that government-backed studies have shown 25% of transactions and 30~40% of housing stock are attributed to multiple property owners (i.e. speculative investors) in recent years. Instead of focusing solely on "supply", why not make that artificial demand disappear? If you read the full CMHC report https://assets.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/sites...2-6ebbddcd79a0, even by CMHC's projections to 2030, it shows that housing stock is projected to grow faster than the number of households without any changes (Figure 3, page 20). Put another way, CMHC themselves project that the ratio of housing stock to number of households will improve over time (Figure 5 Panel B, page 22). CHMC however argues that demand will far outpace the growth of households based on historical data and thus the supply-shortage conclusion. Well, we know for a fact that a huge chunk of demand historically has been speculative. |
I don't really understand the housing shortage thing either... at least so far as it applies to condos anyway... one walk down 3 road in Richmond will leave you stymied on that one, they must have added at least 2,500+ condos in the last 3 years with more coming... Capstan Way area alone is like a miniature community to itself |
Go look at the people lining up to buy those pre-sales and you’ll find your answer. |
I don’t take any article seriously that uses a word like FOMO. Almost as bad as reading the drama novels by Garth Turner. |
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