Toronto Real Estate News
Toronto Real Estate News
In 2006 the Canada’s federal government extended the maximum allowable amortization for a mortgage from 25 years to 40 years. This dramatically changed what Canadians could afford to spend on their home. A typical couple went from having a maximum budget of $450,000 with a 25 year mortgage to over $575,000 with a 40 year mortgage. This resulted in a record 97,000 home sales in the GTA in 2007.
1 - If I sign a buyer representation agreement, I’m locked in with this realtor. Why tie myself down? I hardly know this realtor. What if his/her service is not up to my expectations?
Buyer representation agreements are very flexible, and do not have to be written in a way that locks you in with the realtor. For example, if you only want to go out once and see four homes, the representation agreement can be for a time period of one day, and only for the four homes you view. If you are pleased with their services, you can change the agreement to something mutually agreeable.
Canadian real estate market to resemble 2010: report
Thu Jan. 06 2011
The Canadian Press
TORONTO — The Canadian real estate market will follow a similar pattern this year as that seen in 2010 as buyers pull sales forward into the early months in anticipation of higher interest rates, according to a report from one of Canada's largest real estate firms.
The aftershocks of the recession, including a lingering low interest rate environment, will continue to influence the Canadian real estate market in 2011 -- a year that will be stronger than expected, said the report released Thursday by Royal LePage.
Royal LePage predicts that average home prices will rise three per cent to $348,600 in 2011, driven largely by a rush to buy in the first half of the year in advance of anticipated interest and mortgage rate hikes in the second half.
"Canadians realize that interest rates are unsustainably low and that homes will become effectively more expensive when mortgage rates return to normal levels," said Phil Soper, president of Royal LePage.
"2011 is expected to unfold much like 2010, when close to 60 per cent of sales volume occurred in the first half of the year in anticipation of interest rate increases that never materialized."
However, the number of transactions will be slightly lower than last year and activity will be modestly closer to the norm because the pull forward phenomenon last year was exacerbated by a tightening of mortgage qualification rules and the introduction of the HST in Ontario and British Columbia in the middle of the year.
Soper said the extension of low mortgage rates will be an unexpected boon to the market this year.
"Like many Canadians, we anticipated an end to the ultra-low interest rate era before year-end 2010," he said.
"Paradoxically, global economic weakness, particularly in the United States, allowed policy-makers and financial institutions to keep borrowing costs low, resulting in a stronger Canadian housing market and a better than forecast fourth quarter."
Average house prices rose between 3.9 per cent and 4.6 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2010, while price appreciation is expected to continue a moderate and steady climb throughout the current year.
The report contrasts with some recent predictions by economists that prices should remain flat or decline over the next year.
The Canadian Real Estate Association has predicted prices will fall by 1.3 per cent to a national average of $326,000, this year, tied to weakness in British Columbia and Ontario -- the hottest real estate markets of 2010. It has also forecasted a nine per cent decline in sales.
CREA has yet to release year-end data for 2010, but preliminary reports from two of the biggest markets, Toronto and Vancouver, released this week indicate 2010 declined as expected.
Sales were down by one per cent compared with 2009 in Toronto, while the average home selling price was $431,463, up nine per cent from 2009.
In Vancouver, sales declined 14.2 per cent from 2009, and were 10.3 per cent below the 10-year average for sales in the region. The average selling price in B.C.'s largest city was up 2.7 per cent at $577,808.
Canada's real estate market has been on a rebound over much of the past year after sales dried up in late 2008 and hit a multi-year low in January 2009.
The housing market's sudden plunge was sparked by a credit crunch that developed in the U.S. housing and lending industries, and gradually spread across the globe, causing a worldwide recession in the late summer and early fall of 2009.
The commercial real estate market experienced a similar plunge as investors lost confidence in the sector.
Canadian real estate market to resemble 2010: report
Thu Jan. 06 2011
Posted
Allen Mayer, Broker www.allenmayer.com
| Greater Toronto REALTORS® Report December Resale Housing Sales |
| Thursday, 06 January 2011, 04:11:35 PM |
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TORONTO, January 6, 2011 — Greater Toronto REALTORS® reported 4,395 existing home sales for the month of December, bringing the 2010 total to 86,170 – down by one per cent compared to 2009. “Market conditions were anything but uniform in 2010. We went from super-charged sales activity during the first four months of the year, to a marked drop-off in transactions in the summer and then in the fall saw sales climb back to levels that are sustainable over the longer term,” said TREB President Bill Johnston. “New Federal Government-mandated mortgage lending guidelines, higher borrowing costs and misconceptions about the HST caused a pause in home buying in the summer. As it became clear that the HST was not applicable to the sale price of an existing home and buyers realized that home ownership remained affordable, market conditions improved,” continued Johnston. The average home selling price in 2010 was $431,463 – up nine per cent in comparison to the 2009 average selling price of $395,460. In December, the average annual rate of price growth was five per cent. “At the outset of 2010, we were experiencing annual rates of price growth at or near 20 per cent. This was the result of extremely tight market conditions coupled with the fact that we were comparing prices to the trough of the recession at the beginning of 2009,” said Jason Mercer, TREB’s Senior Manager of Market Analysis. “Balanced mark.cet conditions in the second half of 2010 resulted in more moderate home price appreciation,” continued Mercer. “Expect the average selling price to grow at or below five per cent in 2011. With this type of growth, mortgage carrying costs for the average priced home in the GTA will remain affordable for a household earning an average income.” Allen Mayer
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ANSWER:
To sell your home fast you need consider three things:
Consult with a Realtor who can give you the honest truth of your market. Price, condition and your local market may dictate how fast you can sell it is you choose to list it on MLS and "market" the property to a cross section of buyers.
Selling your home without a Toronto Real Estate may not be great idea.
Housing demand has slumped since the start of the year as the government tax credit expired and unemployment hovers near 10 percent. Photographer: Derick E. Hingle/Bloomberg
U.S. home values are poised to drop by more than $1.7 trillion this year amid rising foreclosures and the expiration of homebuyer tax credits, said Zillow Inc., a closely held provider of home price data.
The average home has become more affordable according to an RBC survey.
Housing affordability is improving in the Greater Toronto Area, thanks to lower mortgage rates and softening price appreciation.
According to a Royal Bank of Canada report to be released Monday after four consecutive quarters of steep decline, housing affordability gained traction in the third quarter of 2010, thanks to bottoming mortgage rates and a slowing demand
Many long-time denizens of Ledbury Park are accustomed to fending off unsolicited offers to buy their houses. This is an area where builders have razed nearly entire streets of post-war bungalows and replaced them with small mansions.
The actual Ledbury Park is a three-acre gathering spot that offers swimming pools and waterfalls in the summer heat, outdoor skating in winter and award-winning architecture by the firm of Shim-Sutcliffe.
Canada’s housing market rebounds.
Canada’s housing market is showing increasing signs of stabilizing, as seasonally adjusted national home sales rose 4.6% in October 2010.
Toronto Area REALTORS® Report October Resale Figures
Here is the latest market update from the Toronto Real Estate Board . Of note is the percentage of Condominiums in resale housing figures within the Toronto Area.
Interesting information for a New Condo Buyer in Toronto.
Sellers all share the same notion as to the value of their house.
When I ask what they would like to net from the sale of their property, they always answer: “as much as I can get.”
With the Market slump is it time to buy? It always best to buy into weakness.
It is now a Buyers Market.
Toronto housing slump deepens
The slump in housing sales accelerated in August, the Greater Toronto Real Estate Board said.
The Toronto Real Estate Market is a vibrant and changing market.
Toronto Homes come to market on a daily basis. This page provides current news on the Toronto Housing Market. If there any thing you are looking in relationship to purchasing your next home or considering selling your existing home. Please call or email.
Allen Mayer | Broker
Below are links to the lastest news direct from the Toronto Real Estate Board

