Archive for June, 2009

Housing starts jump 17% in May; wholesale inflation tame

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

USA Today

WASHINGTON — Construction of new homes jumped in May by the largest amount in three months, providing an encouraging sign that the nation’s deep housing recession may be bottoming.

The Commerce Department says construction of new homes and apartments jumped 17.2% last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 532,000 units. That was better than the 500,000-unit pace economists expected and comes after construction had fallen in April to a record low rate of 454,000 units.

In addition, applications for building permits, seen as a good indicator of future activity, rose 4% in May to an annual rate of 518,000 units.

In a second report Tuesday, the Labor Department said its producer price index, which tracks wholesale prices, increased a seasonally adjusted 0.2% from April. That’s below analysts’ expectations of a 0.6% rise.

The department says wholesale prices fell 5% the past 12 months, largest annual drop in almost 50 years.

But a report from the Federal Reserve said industrial production fell more than expected last month as the recession crimped demand for a wide range of manufactured goods.

The Fed report says production at the nation’s factories, mines and utilities fell 1.1% in May and has declined for seven months. Output also turned out to be a bit weaker in April, a 0.7% decline, than the Fed initially reported.

The 1.1% drop in May was the deepest since a 1.8% plunge in March.

Details from the reports:

• Even with the encouraging news on housing starts, analysts are not looking for a quick rebound in housing, given that the economy is still shedding jobs and home prices are still falling in many areas, making people hesitant to commit to buying a home.

Many economists say home construction likely will stop falling in the current quarter but any sustained rebound isn’t expected to take hold until next spring in part because of the huge overhang of unsold homes and a record wave of mortgage foreclosures, which is dumping more homes on the market.

The 17.2% rise in housing construction for May still left activity 45.2% below a year ago.

The May increase reflected a 7.5% rise in construction of single-family homes, third consecutive increase in this critical segment.

Construction was up in May in all parts of the country, led by a 28.6% surge in the West. Construction rose 16.8% in the South and 11.1% in the Midwest. The Northeast had the smallest gain, 2%.

• In the price report, a 2.9% rise in energy prices, including a 13.9% jump in the cost of gasoline, drove the May increase. Pump prices reached about $2.50 a gallon by the end of last month.

Food prices, meanwhile, fell 1.6%, reversing a similar rise in April. Egg prices plummeted 27%, after jumping 43.7% in April.

The government is scheduled to release consumer price data Wednesday. The consumer price index is expected to increase 0.3% in May after a flat reading in April. The core CPI, which excludes energy and food, is forecast to rise 0.1%.

Both wholesale and consumer prices have fallen from a year ago, which has led some economists to worry about deflation — a sustained and destructive drop in prices. The U.S. has not seen deflation since the Great Depression.

But the Fed has cut a key interest rate to a record low near zero and the administration has taken a number of other extraordinary measures to flood the banking system and the economy with cash.

There are concerns about deflation in other parts of the world, especially Japan. That country underwent a difficult bout of deflation during the 1990s, a period when the world’s second-largest economy struggled to emerge from a real estate and banking crisis.

Price declines also have been registered in other major Asian economies, including China and India.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved

Metro Vancouver home sales jump

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Home supply still needs to be drawn down for widespread price increases

Sun

Home sales in Metro Vancouver jumped 16.4 per cent in May from a year earlier, according to figures compiled by the Canadian Real Estate Association.

That comes at a time when new listings in the region dropped by 35 per cent from a year ago, suggesting inventories are on the way down to pre-recession levels.

It’s a scenario that’s being reported in major markets across Canada, according to Gregory Klump, chief economist with CREA.

“Inventory levels are still high in many markets, but fewer new listings and rising sales activity suggests that the selection of homes available for sale may shrink as the year progresses,” Klump said.

“The supply of homes up for sale needs to be drawn down further before average price increases become more widespread among local markets.”

The housing market continued to rebound in May with a fourth consecutive increase in monthly sales, according to the CREA.

The Ottawa-based group, which represents about 100 boards across the country, also said the average sale price of a home sold through the multiple listing service reached a new record of $319,757. That was up 0.4 per cent from May 2008, when the previous record was set.

In B.C., however, the average sale price of a home sold through the multiple listing service dropped 2.6 per cent from May of 2008. From January to May, the average sale price in B.C. is down 6.8 per cent. The national average was down 4.5 per cent.

“Sales activity is now closer to the pre-recession peak than it is to the recent low point reached last January,” said Dale Ripplinger, the Regina-based president of the association.

“Strengthening consumer confidence, low interest rates, and improved affordability are drawing buyers to the housing market across Canada.”

CREA said activity in the country’s most expensive markets is leading to an overall rebound, which is helping to skew the average price upward. In the past, the reverse has happened.

There were 49,521 units sold last month, a 0.8-per-cent decline from May 2008. CREA said sales per month have been increasing, on a seasonally adjusted basis, since January. Transactions were up eight per cent on this basis between April and May, and the association said sales were up 43 per cent last month from the January bottom.

Actual sales were up in 14 of the 25 major markets CREA surveys. Toronto sales were up 1.9 per cent, Montreal 8.2 per cent, Calgary 11.3 per cent and Edmonton 18.7 per cent.

Meanwhile, the pace of new home construction is down close to 50 per cent from last year while new listings in the existing-homes market are also sharply declining.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Facebook – you can now register your own URL

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Nearly six million users sign up for new naming convention on social media site

Gillian Shaw
Sun

Dustin Moskovitz (above) co-founded Facebook in 2004 with Mark Zuckerberg while the two were students at Harvard University. On Monday, the URL address for facebook.com/DustinMoskovitz was showing ‘not found’, while facebook.com/MarkZuckerberg directed users to his personal Facebook page.

Gordon Campbell has one. Carole James doesn’t. Both Stephen Harper and Michael Ignatieff have them. And so does Britney Spears.

Vanoc has the Olympics, but Terry Johnson in Japan has laid claim to VancouverOlympics.

At least that was the case in a check Monday on the status of the latest digital rights rush as Facebook users flocked to grab their Facebook’s version of vanity plates — website addresses that stake out a Facebook identity.

The vanity URLs (the web address you type into your browser to reach a website) replace Facebook’s randomly assigned numbers. Under the new naming system, you could be www.facebook.com/yournamehere.

(Actually, forget that example. You can’t be www.facebook.com/yournamehere because that was already snapped up by one James Kaminski.)

Previously, addresses had strings of letters and numbers. The change is intended to make it easier to find Facebook members through search engines such as Google.

With social media climbing on the corporate and individual agenda, the latest digital rights rush saw members grabbing names at a rate of more than 550 per second starting at midnight eastern time on Friday, when it was opened to all Facebook users.

Within 15 minutes, 500,000 users had claimed names. By Monday afternoon, about 5.75 million users worldwide had claimed their personalized addresses.

Digital dawdlers may find their names are already taken. While Facebook did take measures to prevent cyber-squatters from snapping up names — such as preventing people from creating new Facebook accounts just to claim web addresses for corporate and celebrity names — for the general Facebook population, it was a first-come, first-served scramble.

While domain name registration created a boon for copyright and trademark lawyers (and some are predicting the Facebook free-for-all could result in similar disputes), Michael Geist, Canada research chair of Internet and e-commerce law at the University of Ottawa, said the Facebook situation is different.

“I am not convinced this is going to be a big issue,” he said. “There was a lot of uproar and a lot of dire warnings from lawyers, but Facebook controls the environment and that is somewhat different from domain disputes.

“It puts Facebook in control.”

The company has protected many names, including those of well-known celebrities, teams, politicians and brands. You won’t find anything at www.facebook.com/angelinajolie for example, but if you check availability for that name, you’ll get a message saying it’s not available.

Not so for B.C. NDP leader Carole James. That name was still available as of this writing, as was BC NDP. Gordon Campbell and the B.C. Liberals were firmly ensconced on their particular piece of Facebook cyberturf at www.facebook.com/GordonCampbell and www.facebook.com/BCLiberals.

There also appeared to be two local men who had signed up for names associated with The Vancouver Sun and The Province newspapers, and users are being redirected to their personal Facebook pages.

Facebook has provisions for individuals and corporations who feel their intellectual property rights have been infringed.

And the company says users can’t transfer their names to other accounts. The company will also allow users to claim a name only if they had an account before the feature was announced June 9. This will prevent people from creating new accounts just to grab their addresses, Facebook said. That restriction lifts on June 28.

However, Geist points out that name conflicts may not necessarily have a clearcut answer, and Facebook is operating in a global environment while most rights are limited to a particular class and country.

“In some ways, Facebook has to be careful before it steps into some of these disputes,” he said. “One person’s trademark infringement is another person’s free speech.”

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Tailor the Internet toward smartphones, Rogers urges

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Public appetite for the wireless devices insatiable, firm’s CEO says

Jamie Sturgeon
Sun

Rogers Communications Inc. plans to recast the definition of the Internet and how it is used as more Canadians transition toward smart-phones.

“The notion of Internet at home [or] Internet at the office is changing to: your Internet, wherever you are,” said Rogers chief executive Nadir Mohamed during the keynote address at the Canadian Telecom Summit on Monday in Toronto. “It’s very powerful.”

Canadians’ appetite to communicate, access information and entertainment, and even make transactions through their wireless device is becoming “insatiable,” the CEO said.

He added that Toronto-based Rogers, the largest wireless carrier in the country, is moving quickly to bring mobile Internet to the masses.

Mohamed estimated, by 2014, more than three million Canadians will be users of smart-phones, such as Apple Inc.’s iPhone and Research In Motion Ltd.’s BlackBerry, which surf the Web and provide e-mail.

The 53-year-old telecom veteran, who became Rogers‘ chief executive in March, said the adoption rate of such devices was accelerating.

The address comes days before Rogers will introduce the iPhone 3G S, Apple’s latest device, which is at least twice as fast as its predecessor.

The new model also boasts a powerful new operating system and access to a growing array of applications, an area which is rapidly growing in importance, Mohamed said.

He noted the 50,000 applications, which range from video games to communication programs, that can be downloaded to a user’s phones found on Apple’s virtual App Store, and the thousands more developers are designing for other handsets.

“It’s huge. We tend to take these things for granted,” he told a crowd of several hundred.

“We think of these things as consumer applications, but the same thing is happening on the business side.”

He said Rogers was looking at becoming a seller of apps, for not at least the next 12 months.

The chief executive also said Rogers was working on a new wireless pricing strategy.

“You need a network, you need devices, you need applications, and you need pricing to be right to actually foster customers embracing it,” he said.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Plan for affordable rental units ‘cavalier’

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

INCENTIVES PROPOSED: Anton objects to Louie

Vancouver area house prices up 16 per cent and not prices

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Province

With the housing market continuing to rebound nationally, Greater Vancouver was second only to Edmonton in rising prices. — GETTY

Greater Vancouver posted Canada‘s second-highest increase in house sales last month.

Sales in the area jumped 16.4 per cent between May and the same month last year, just behind Edmonton‘s 18.7-per-cent increase, the Canadian Real Estate Association said yesterday.

The average house price for the city and surrounding area was $583,674, down 6.6 per cent from a year earlier.

Nationally, the housing market continued to rebound in May with a fourth consecutive increase in monthly sales, the association said. The Ottawa-based group said the average sale price of a home sold through the multiple listing service reached a record of $319,757.

That’s up 0.4 per cent from May 2008, when the previous record was set. The association said the market is now returning to what it called “pre-recession levels” of activity. Nationally, prices are up 16.4 per cent from their January low.

“Sales activity is now closer to the pre-recession peak than it is to the recent low point reached last January,” association president Dale Ripplinger said. “Strengthening consumer confidence, low interest rates, and improved affordability are drawing buyers to the housing market.”

CREA said transaction activity in the country’s most expensive markets is leading to an overall rebound, which is helping to skew the average price upward. In the past, the reverse has happened.

There were 49,521 units sold last month, a 0.8-per-cent decline from May 2008.

Actual sales were up in 14 of 25 major markets. Toronto was up 1.9 per cent, Montreal 8.2 per cent and Calgary 11.3 per cent.

The jump in sales activity comes as supply is declining. The pace of new-home building is down close to 50 per cent from last year while new listings in the existing-homes market are also sharply declining.

The association said new listings are at at their lowest level since December 2005. There were 49,438 actual new listings in Canada‘s top markets, down 22.7 per cent from a year earlier. Greater Vancouver saw new listings fall 35 per cent from a year ago.

“Inventory levels are still high in many markets, but fewer new listings and rising sales activity suggests that the selection of homes available for sale may shrink as the year progresses,” association chief economist Gregory Klump said. “The supply of homes up for sale needs to be drawn down further before average price increases become more widespread among local markets.”

© Copyright (c) The Province

Tax rules of owning U.S. home – A complex formula for exemptions

Monday, June 15th, 2009

Paul Delean
Province

Q: Now appears to be a good time to buy real estate in the U.S. My wife and I are interested in areas of Florida and California. If I become a property owner in the U.S., is there a tax impact on my Canadian assets? Does U.S. estate tax apply to Canadian assets?

A: Tax partner Sydney Berger of accounting firm Bessner Gallay Kreisman says it is indeed true that Canadian assets can have an impact on U.S. estate taxes. As a non-resident of the U.S. from Canada, you’d be entitled to an exemption on U.S. estate taxes, but the amount hinges on a complex formula dividing the value of your U.S. assets by your worldwide assets.

In other words, if your U.S. real estate amounted to 15 per cent of your overall assets, you’d get only 15 per cent of the maximum credit available on U.S. estate taxes (currently $1.4 million, but dropping to $345,800 in 2011). So the size of your U.S. investment and global holdings will have a bearing on whether anything is owed in the U.S. upon death. (That payment could, in certain circumstances, be credited against income taxes in Canada on the final tax return).

If you have a query you’d like addressed in this column, please send it to Paul Delean, Montreal Gazette Business Section, Suite 200, 1010 Ste. Catherine St. W., Montreal, Que., H3B 5L1, or email pdelean@thegazette. canwest.com.

© Copyright (c) The Province

Retrofit program means big savings for renos

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

GOVERNMENT GRANTS: Now you can get higher rebates for making home more energy-efficient

MIKE HOLMES
Province

A specialist performs a blower door test for air tightness as part of a post-retrfit audit on a house. – CANWEST NEWS SERVICE

If you could do a renovation on your home that cost you a fraction of what it’s worth, and that continued to save you money as long as you owned your home, wouldn’t you do it? That’s what you can get with the eco-ENERGY Retrofit program.

This program is offered through the federal government, which has increased the amount of grant money for energy efficient renovation retrofits. There’s an extra $300 million being invested over the next two years. Most provinces are stepping up as well to match the available money, dollar for dollar. For example, you can get up to 5K in federal and up to 5K in provincial rebates on work you’ve had done to improve the energy efficiency of your home.

The point of the eco-ENERGY retrofit grant is to get homeowners to do renovations that effectively reduce greenhouse gases and air pollution. So you save money and reduce your carbon footprint.

The money is non-taxable and is available for upgrades on heating systems, ventilation, air conditioning, windows doors and even toilet upgrades. You can: replace old inefficient furnace/AC or water heaters; improve insulation so your house isn’t leaking heat; replace drafty windows and doors.

To take advantage of it, you need to first have an energy audit or evaluation of your home, by a certified auditor. The energy audit will show you where your home is losing energy through air leakage, drafts and areas of heat loss and where you can improve its performance. (If you don’t have an energy audit BEFORE you do the upgrade, you will not qualify for the rebate.)

The energy auditor uses the blower door test to measure the rate of air leakage in your home. An energy-efficient home will have very little air leakage.

Auditors are able to locate draughts and they’ll note the locations of leaks and give that information to the homeowner in the energy audit. Now the homeowner knows what they need to fix, and where the leaks are so they can do the repairs and upgrades.

After your initial audit, you’ll get an evaluation report, and a rating. Then, you can think about what kind of energy upgrades you want to do, and what you can afford.

Then, after you’ve had the work done, you have to make sure you get another evaluation to verify you’ve made the necessary improvements. This will prove you have a higher rating and the improvements you made have increased the energy efficiency of your home.

After your first audit, you have 18 months of complete some or all of the work, then book your post-retrofit audit. Then, you can apply to your provincial and federal — and in some cases, municipal — governments for the rebate.

You must make sure the work and the post-retrofit evaluation is done before the program ends (March 31, 2011). And, of course, keep all proof of work done (work orders, receipts). You need documentation. The work will need to be verified during the final energy audit.

You can do simple jobs to take advantage of the rebate, it doesn’t need to be very complicated. Replace a toilet or your furnace. Obviously, upgrading your insulation is a bigger job as it involves tearing out drywall and plaster and replacing it. Some fixes are cheap, like caulking your windows. Some will cost a lot more, like buying new EnergyStar appliances or replacing your windows with EnergyStar rated ones. But everything you do to improve the energy efficiency of your home will help.

For more information on home renovations, go to makeitright.ca

Google goes off road

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

Trike takes images of hiking, biking trails

Jefferson Graham
Province

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. — Meet the Google trike.

It’s the sequel, of sorts, to the Google Maps-mobile, a specially rigged car with an antenna, GPS and camera that snaps 360-degree images of neighbourhoods for display in the Street View section of Google Maps.

Now Google Maps is expanding to biking and hiking trails. A Google employee on a tricycle rides around to snap the same wide-area views.

“Much of the world is inaccessible to the car,” says Daniel Ratner, a Google senior engineer who designed the trike. “We want to get access to places people find important.” Starting out with one trail in Monterey The project just got under way. So far, only a bike trail in Monterey, Calif., is up and running. Google has cyclists out now in California, Italy and the United Kingdom. The company says to look for hiking and biking images from those locations over the summer — along with shots from U.S. theme parks. Google won’t say which ones.

Google Maps is the top online map program, with 149 million visitors worldwide in April, up 49 per cent from the prior April, according to web tracker ComScore Media Metrix.

To access Google’s Street View, you click on the icon of the little yellow man at the top of the Maps screen, and drag it to the location you want to see.

The U.S. audience has mostly embraced Street View, currently offered in nine countries. But Google hopes to find a better reaction to the trike project than it met with Street View’s recent expansion into Europe and Asia. Officials and citizens in Greece, the United Kingdom and Japan complained loudly about invasion of privacy over the project.

Stephen Chau, a product manager for Google Maps, says that what the Google cars picked up photographically was no different from what any tourist would see on vacation. Chau says the complaints about the product are minimal considering its usage, and many people just have an initial misunderstanding. “We have tools to automatically blur faces, if they show up, and license plates.” Additionally, homeowners who object to their homes being shown can contact Google and request removal.

Lowering the camera in Japan In Japan, Google received so many complaints that it was forced to scrap its initial crop of pictures, because the camera ended up seeing over fences into private areas.

In rural England, residents near the small village of Milton Keynes blockaded entry to prevent the Google-mobile from entering and getting pictures.

“What I care about is usage,” Chau says. “Since we’ve launched Street View, it’s gotten tremendous positive feedback. We’re spreading to more countries, because the feedback is so strong.”

© Copyright (c) The Province

Older stratas facing credit crunch

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

Strata corps hold off on repairs as owners struggle with levies

Tony Gioventu
Province

Dear Condo Smarts:

We purchased our home last July for $385,000 and put five per cent down plus paid for our mortgage insurance and property purchase tax. The term of our mortgage is a five-year open.

Our strata council has just passed a special levy for deck repairs that is going to cost each strata lot between $17,000 and $31,000. Our share of the levy is $23,575.

Our mortgage balance is $363,000 and we need to raise the additional money for our share of the levy.

Here’s the problem: Our recent appraised value is $335,000. We have no equity left to borrow against and, in fact, our property value is below the debt load. We know no one who can lend us the additional funds. Is the only option that we wait till the strata corporation seeks an order for sale against our strata lot? All we can see in our future is financial doom unless there is another option.

— JR

Dear JR: Unfortunately the turn of the economy has created a serious credit crunch for homeowners, especially those living in older strata communities that are in need of major repairs.

If you do not meet your payments by the due dates, the strata corporation will issue a demand notice to you for payment and advise a lien may be filed if you do not pay the amount.

Once 14 days have expired from the notice period, they may then file a lien against the unit. That lien will take a priority charge over things like mortgages, so the strata has a reasonable assurance it will recover the assessment.

The next step is that the strata will instruct their legal counsel in a short period of time to commence an order for sale proceeding if the amount warrants further collection. Eventually, the strata corporation could achieve a court-ordered sale for your strata lot. From the proceeds, the strata would receive the special levy and a portion of the legal and court costs.

The balance of your debt would be paid from the remaining proceeds. If there are not enough funds to cover the remaining mortgage(s), you may have a partial debt to be repaid.

The outcome is horrid for both the strata and the owners involved. The strata council does not want to seek the sale of owners’ homes, but they have a legal obligation to maintain and repair buildings and operate the strata corporation. They do not have the authority to waive or defer the assessment and eventually it has to be collected.

Before any owner contemplates being delinquent in their strata fees or special assessments, they should speak to their financial adviser, bank officer or lawyer to consider their options.

Sadly, strata corporations are now voting down much-needed repairs because many owners cannot afford the levies. Strata corporations may borrow funds for the repairs rather than a special levy.

There are banks, credit unions and private institutions that will lend funds to strata corporations, and the owners pay back the funds either through a special levy or strata fees over a five- to 10-year period. The cost of interest might be higher, but it might also ensure access to funds for the owners, making it easier for owners to repay and approve the resolutions. Legal advice should always be sought in writing resolutions for the purpose of the strata corporation borrowing money.

Tony Gioventu is executive director of the Condominium Home Owners’ Association. E-mail [email protected]

© Copyright (c) The Province