2012 Toronto Condo Real Estate Market Forecast
Here you have it, our predictions for the Toronto Condo
Market in 2012. Overall, we expect real estate condo sales to go up and prices
to remain flat. Our rationale behind this forecast is detailed below. Have a
read and send us your thoughts!
Just remember - last year we predicted sales and prices to
go up despite most everyone else predicting the exact opposite...and we were
right!
2011 IN REVIEW:
At this time last year, we were predicting that Toronto
would experience the same sales volumes as 2010 with price increases averaging
5%. We were wrong! Sales increased by 5%
and prices were up by 7%. We also forecast that rental rates would increase
by $100 per month and we were right. Everyone else, from the Bank of Canada to
The Economist Magazine, was forecasting lower sales and lower prices. Those who
heeded the experts, in an attempt to ‘time the market’ were the big losers once
again. Timing the market is the absolute worst strategy! If you sit on the
sidelines and the market keeps rising, you lose significantly. If you are in
the market and prices go flat or fall, then all real estate declines (more
expensive properties tend to fall further in absolute terms), and it becomes
even cheaper for those people in the market who want to upgrade to a more
expensive property over time. Too many experts – read economists – try to make
residential real estate far more complicated than it needs to be. Residential
real estate is all about having a roof over one’s head. You either own the roof
or someone else owns the roof and you are a renter. The challenge with this
year’s Forecast is to look at both the Pre-construction and Resale Condo
Markets and to understand their interdependency.
2012 FACTORS TO
CONSIDER:
Interest rates are
not going anywhere. Fear mongers keep talking about a rise in interest
rates which could lead to problems. What you need to know is that if rates
rise, it means the economy is stronger and we have higher inflation. That
translates into higher personal income too, which will act as an offset. For
those old enough to remember, inflation has always been a friend to real
estate.
While the so-called experts worry about the supply of new
condos coming to market, they seem unwilling to forecast future demand. For condos, the impact of ‘baby boomers’ moving to condos is still just a trickle. In five
years, it will be significant. The next biggest demographic group is the ‘echo’ generation – the children of
baby boomers. They are just now entering the real estate market and this
segment is focused on condos. Finally
immigration to Toronto is not going to slow (80,000 per year) and many of
these people will be living down town too.
For the Pre-Construction Market, almost 100% of sales are to
investors. No one buys a property to live in that won’t be ready for four or
five years. Investors buy condo units either to rent them out (about 40% of the
units) or to sell them as ‘Assignments’ (during the occupancy phase and before
the units are registered) to end users to live in. So investors look at rental
rates and try to anticipate future price appreciation. Currently our market is
dominated by investors from Asia, the Middle East, and East Asia looking for
capital preservation. American and European investors who are rate of return
driven show less interest in our market. Canada will remain a safe haven for
the foreseeable future.
There are no new apartment buildings in Toronto. The rental
market is being served through new condo construction. The `echo’ generation or
Gen X and Y are also the primary renters in this market, and again, they only
will rent new – read hardwood floors, granite counters, stainless steel
appliances found in condos.
2012 FORECAST BY
THE NUMBERS:
For the Toronto
resale market we expect sales to remain at the 90,000 level (unlike most
other forecasters). Remember that the all-time sales record was achieved in
2007 and Toronto is a much bigger market, in terms of people and incomes than
five years ago. So why would sales drop? With a lack of new detached housing,
prices in this sector – particularly in Central Toronto will continue to
appreciate.
For the Resale Condo
Market, sales will be 10% higher than for 2011. We have 18,000 condo units
that were completed in 2011 and half of them will be added to the resale
market. This extra supply will mean that prices
will be flat in 2012, staying in the $500-550 per sf range.
For the
Pre-Construction Market, we expect a number of projects that were announced
will not be built. By the end of 2011, pre-construction sales downtown were
averaging $800 per sf which we believe is unsustainable. The price gap between
the resale and pre-construction markets is too big and fewer investors believe
that resale prices will rise that fast over the next four years to overcome
this difference. Look for prices to fall by $50-75 per sf over the year.
Projects selling at over $1,000 per sf (with the exception of Yorkville) will
run into severe price problems in 2012.
Bigger sized condo units in the pre-construction market now
sell for more per sf than smaller units. This trend will spill over into the
resale market. We previously predicted that this would happen. This price
differential will only increase as our market matures – just like New York.
Rental rates will
increase by another $75 per month. That means the basic one bedroom without
parking will increase to $1600 per month. Vacancy rates will remain below 1%.