High house prices making home ownership an unaffordable dream in Toronto and Vancouver

CBC News, June 9, 2016 - Lyndall Schumann and her husband have been living frugally and saving since finishing their undergraduate degrees.

But even with a hefty downpayment, buying their three-bedroom semi-detached house in Toronto earlier this year required a bit of good fortune.

"We got lucky because it was an estate sale and it was a family that had been here for 50 years, and they kind of wanted it to go to another family," Schumann said in an interview.

Unlike many house sales in Toronto, she added, her house "didn't go for a crazy amount over the asking price." The home was listed for $800,000, but Schumann declined to say how much more they paid.

Until the graduate student completes her training to become a psychologist in two years, Schumann acknowledges the family budget will be strained.

"Especially with daycare, it is a stretch," Schumann said, noting that her one-year-old son will start in the fall when she begins a residency program.

RBC HOUSING AFFORDABILITY Q4 2015

Soaring home prices in Toronto and Vancouver are testing levels of affordability not seen since the early 1990s, when the country was in a recession and mortgage rates were north of 10 per cent.

"In Toronto, we're not as bad as 1990, but we're not that far from it either," said Robert Hogue, senior economist at the Royal Bank.

In Toronto, home ownership costs — including mortgage payments, utilities and property taxes — for a single detached home were 71.4 per cent of the median household income. The average for the city since 1985 is 55.5 per cent, according to Royal Bank.​

Hogue notes that home ownership in Vancouver has always been an expensive proposition, but prices in recent months go "well beyond" what can be explained by a relatively robust local economy.

"Vancouver, I think I would say, is in a different league," he said. "It is probably among a select group of global cities where home prices are not connected to the local economic fundamentals."

RBC's measure of affordability put the cost of a single detached house in Vancouver at 109 per cent of the median income in the fourth quarter of last year, meaning the costs are more than a typical household's pre-tax income. Essentially, that means owning a detached home in the city is all but impossible for most people.

Lyndall Schumann and her husband have been living frugally and saving since finishing their undergraduate degrees. (Eduardo Lima/Canadian Press)

In markets outside Vancouver and Toronto, home ownership remains within reach for the average household. Low interest rates have helped offset the rise in home prices in smaller cities across the country and kept monthly mortgage payments in check.

Outside of the two hottest markets, RBC's affordability measure is generally close to the historical average, and recent trends have been either stable or improving slightly.

In Ottawa, home ownership costs for a single-family detached home in the fourth quarter took up 36.5 per cent of a typical household's pre-tax income. In Calgary, it was 38.3 per cent; in Montreal, it was 42.8 per cent.

But Hogue notes that climbing house prices, even in markets outside Vancouver and Toronto, have outpaced gains in income in recent decades, making it more difficult for first-time buyers to come up with a downpayment.

Schumann knows she and her husband got lucky in Toronto. Similar houses just down the street have sold for more than $1 million.

"Even though it was in a good area, there were just certain things about it that made it ... not as tempting for other buyers," she said of her house. "We're living with things we can live with, and anything that absolutely needs to be fixed, we're doing as it needs to be done."

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Canadians Risk Becoming House-Rich, Cash-Poor: Survey

Huffington Post Canada, May 25, 2015 - More than one-third of Canadian households were unable to pay their bills at some point in the past year, a sign that rising housing costs are biting into Canadians’ finances, Manulife Bank says.

Ever-larger mortgages mean many Canadians are at risk of retiring house-rich but cash-poor, Manulife said in a homeowner debt survey released Tuesday. That means many will face difficult choices like retiring later than planned or selling their home and moving into a smaller one.

Fully 37 per cent of respondents said they were unable to pay a bill at least once in the past year, little changed from the survey carried out last fall. But the amount of mortgage debt the average Canadian mortgage holder carries grew 3.4 per cent in half a year — to $181,000 this spring, from $175,000 in last fall’s survey.

Vancouverites are, not surprisingly, the most heavily mortgaged homeowners in the country, carrying an average debt of $259,000. Homeowners in Calgary and Edmonton were the next most heavily indebted, with $217,000 of debt on average. Torontonians were third, with $194,000 in debt, on average.

You may not get to retire in your dream home

Perhaps most tellingly, only four in 10 respondents said they felt comfortable they had enough savings to retire.

Canadians have set paying off their debts as a top priority, but “they must also find a balance between debt repayment and saving for retirement so they don't end up house-rich and asset poor," Manulife Bank President and CEO Rick Lunny said in a statement.

Those who do find themselves lacking cash in retirement may have to make some tough choices, Manulife says, among them:

  • Retire later than originally planned
  • Accept a lower standard of living in retirement
  • Move to a less expensive home and use extra equity to fund retirement
  • Borrow against their home equity

"If you reach retirement with significant home equity but limited savings you may need to adjust your thinking if you wish to stay in your current home," Lunny said. "Your home is your castle, as they say, but it's also a significant financial asset that you should take into account when planning your retirement income.”

The Manulife survey polled 2,373 Canadian homeowners between the age of 20 and 59, and with a minimum household income of $50,000. It was carried out by Environics Research from Feb. 3 to Feb. 20, 2016.

Homeowner debt survey

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Saskatoon could be headed for 'apartment renaissance': Colliers

Star Phoenix, march 23, 2016 - A confluence of factors affecting Saskatoon’s rental market suggest the city could be on the verge of an “apartment renaissance,” according to a new report from Colliers International.

“I think renters are the beneficiaries,” said Colliers Saskatchewan president and managing director Tom McClocklin. “They’ve got more selection, they’ve got new buildings to look to, they’ve got re-lifed older buildings (and) higher vacancy means owners need to take care of renters.”

Between 1990 and 2008, the condominium conversion boom caused the number of rental units in the city to fall below 14,000 from a peak of about 19,000. However, an influx of about 1,000 new units plus an additional 1,000 student housing apartments over the last five years “increased the standard” for apartments in the city, according to Colliers’ first quarter 2016 multi-family market report.

At the same time, rising vacancy — economic uncertainty and reduced migration caused it to double, to 6.3 per cent, last year — and flatlining rental rates have led some property owners to re-invest in aging properties, the report states.

That’s all good news for renters, McClocklin said.

“Really, all of a sudden we’re going from people’s choices being pretty limited, pretty old to very modern, new, (high) quality,” he said, noting that while rental rates, which are flat for the first time in 26 years, may slow investment in older buildings, they represent an additional benefit to tenants.

One company that has poured money into aging Saskatoon apartment buildings is Block 1 Management Ltd. The property management company currently administers about 800 units spread across 11 buildings in the city, including the newly-overhauled Nutana Tower near Broadway Avenue and the Crossing complex on Idylwyld Drive North.

“I definitely think that there is an incentive to renovate in a market where there are vacancies,” said Rashida Bencherif, a project coordinator with the Saskatoon-based management firm. Saskatoon’s rental market has “experienced a shift” and there is a demand for high-end, modern apartments, she added.

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Real Estate Roundup: Basement suites booming in Evergreen

Saskatoon Star Phoenix, May 12, 2016 - When Wendy Wawryk and her husband Eugene decided to build their dream retirement home in Saskatoon’s Evergreen neighbourhood, they started by coming up with a list of requirements.

One of them was a basement suite.

“We like to travel, and it’d be nice to have somebody in the house … By the time we went to draw up the plans, we knew we wanted to do that,” Wendy Wawryk said, adding that unnecessary basement space was another factor in the decision.

Wawryk and her husband, who moved to Saskatoon from Prince Albert in 2014, found a lot on Boykowich Crescent and started work on the $750,000, 1,830-square-foot bi-level last spring. Now, the couple is preparing to move into the house — above the $1,050-per-month one-bedroom suite they installed in the basement.

Living above a tenant always involves a trade-off between privacy and income, but Wawryk said splurging on extra insulation alleviated her concerns about noise and disruption. She said the “above code” construction, private courtyard and nearby amenities should make the suite attractive, despite the city’s high vacancy rate.

“Another thing about the basement suite is, if we got somebody that we really trusted (to live in it), maybe we could give them a deal on rent if they want to do things like shovel our driveway,” she said with a laugh.

The Wawryks are not the only people in Saskatoon’s newest developments with suites in their basements.

Norm Fisher, a veteran real estate agent and owner-broker at Royal LePage Vidorra, said the trend likely began a decade ago in the Hampton Village development on the city’s west side and has been growing ever since.

“I think affordability is definitely a factor: With a good-quality secondary suite, you have the opportunity to supplement your mortgage payment,” Fisher said, adding that a nice two-bedroom suite in a new neighbourhood can easily command $1,200 per month or more, even in a period of turbulence in the rental market.

“That can be a big help when it comes to bringing the mortgage payment down, and no doubt some people are looking at it as a longer-term investment, maybe a way to retire their mortgage a little bit earlier.”

About 19 per cent of Evergreen homes sold in the last year have basement suites, compared to five per cent in Stonebridge, 17 per cent in Hampton Village and 17 per cent in Rosewood, Fisher said. Because most are custom-built rather than shoehorned into existing spaces, they tend to be popular among renters and homeowners alike, he added.

Philip Zhao is one of those homeowners. After moving from an apartment in Wildwood to a new home in Evergreen last year, Zhao and his wife Yang decided to install a one-bedroom suite. It brought the total price up to $570,000, but the decision should make the house more affordable in the long run, Zhao said.

“It’s going to get us some extra money,” he said of the $1,050-per-month one-bedroom suite in the basement of his family’s Arscott Street home.

Fisher said while it’s not clear if the trend will continue in developments like Brighton and future projects, it’s obvious that people buying houses in Saskatoon’s newest neighbourhoods are prepared to trade space and privacy for some extra cash.

“Anytime you’ve got someone else living in your house, it’s going to come with some inconveniences … But I think that these are sacrifices that people appear to be willing to make to experience the benefits.”

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