Category Archives: Overseas Property

Property boom in Canada amid price bubble concerns

Marie-Yvonne Paint, a real estate agent in Montreal, has the kind of problem most of her counterparts in the United States can only dream about.

‘We have a shortage of inventory right now,’ said Ms Paint, who focuses on the exclusive and expensive municipality of Westmount. ‘It’s very annoying. We have buyers ready to buy and not much to show.’

Her experience is not an isolated example. Like most of the world, Canada’s real estate market slumped during the recession. But now, instead of worrying about the recovery of the real estate market, some Canadians are concerned about the prospect of a price bubble.

The Canadian Real Estate Association reported that the average price of existing homes rose 19.6 per cent in January compared with January 2009, the latest in a string of substantial gains dating back through last autumn. By contrast, the average price of existing homes rose 2.6 per cent in the US in the same period, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Such drastic percentage gains are not just a reflection of the market’s earlier depths. In some Canadian cities, particularly Toronto and Vancouver, prices appear to be heading towards record levels.

‘It’s no surprise the housing market responded to low interest rates,’ said Craig Alexander, the deputy chief economist of the Toronto-Dominion Bank. ‘The real question is what’s going to happen in the next year. It can’t continue at the current pace, otherwise a bubble will form.’

Canadian homebuyers, of course, are not unique in having access to low-interest mortgages. But Mr Alexander and others attribute the Canadian market’s revival to a series of measures that ensured that the recession in Canada did not turn into a real estate disaster.

Perhaps chief among them is the country’s retail banking system, which is effectively an oligopoly dominated by five national banks, including Toronto-Dominion.

Most of the time, that arrangement is less than popular among Canadians, who think that a lack of competition leads to, among various things, low interest rates on savings and high service fees.

Public resentment has repeatedly caused politicians to block mergers between the banks. But in the lead-up to the credit crisis, the closed-shop nature of banking in Canada proved to be the government’s, and the economy’s, best friend.

Mindful of government oversight, Canadian banks by and large avoided the structured-debt products that imperilled many of their American counterparts. They also maintained comparatively tight controls on mortgage lending to consumers. When zero per cent downpayments on mortgages were widely available in the US, Canadians were typically required to put down at least 10 per cent. American-style amortisation periods stretching beyond 25 years were also relatively unknown in Canada.

‘In Canada, standards got nowhere near as low,’ said Timothy D Hockey, chief executive of TD Canada Trust, Toronto-Dominion’s Canadian retail banking operation. ‘When the crisis came upon us, the standards didn’t have to change.’

One result of that, said Phil Soper, president and CEO of Brookfield Real Estate Services of Toronto, is that the slump in housing starts and existing home prices was delayed by about a year in Canada until late 2008. Then, when interest among buyers began to return last year, Canada’s still-healthy banks were able to provide mortgages, and housing prices were not depressed by a glut of defaulted properties in forced sales.

Source : Business Times – 23 Mar 2010

Aussie offices recovery in 2011: JLL

Vacancy rates for Australian offices are likely to rise further on new supply and should peak by the fourth quarter this year, setting the stage for recovery in 2011, research firm Jones Lang LaSalle said yesterday.

Yields on office properties peaked at 7.78 per cent in Q3 2009 with values falling 25 per cent from their peak in December 2007, but completion of new buildings will continue to push up vacancy rates, the research firm said.

‘There was a fairly large supply pipeline that was under construction before the financial crisis hit,’ said David Rees, regional director and head of research for Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL).

‘Although we are saying this is sort of the bottom of the cycle, we are not saying it’s going to be a big bounce back in 2010. It’s more of a ‘U’ rather than a ‘V’.’

An average office vacancy rate for central business districts (CBD) of major Australian cities is expected to peak at around 9.6 per cent in the October-December quarter this year, up from 8 per cent in the fourth quarter last year. The Sydney and Melbourne CBDs, both concentrated with finance and insurance companies, will likely be the first markets to recover, Mr Rees said.

‘Banks and brokers are back in hiring again, so demand for space is rising. And secondly, both of those markets have quite limited supply construction pipeline. So they don’t have a big overhanging space.’

Office rental growth will likely start to pick up in 2011, and Mr Rees expects a high single-digit to low double-digit growth over the next 2-3 years.

Meanwhile, the retail sector is on the mend with yields on regional malls peaking at 6.6 per cent in Q4 last year. But Mr Rees said rising interest rates and the withdrawal of the government’s fiscal stimulus measures will likely put a damper on consumer spending and limit rental growth for retail properties.

Source : Business Times – 23 Mar 2010