Archive for October, 2016

BoC welcomes mortgage rules, predicts slowdown in sales

Thursday, October 20th, 2016

Steve Randall
REP

The governor of the Bank of Canada spoke of the risk to the economy from the high level of household debts and the rising cost of homes when he announced a hold-steady on interest rates Wednesday.

Stephen Poloz said that the bank came close to making a further cut in interest rates but decided that additional stimulus was not required right now with other macroeconomic measures in play.

He referenced the federal government’s newly introduced rules on mortgages which he called a “welcome development” that should “mitigate financial vulnerabilities over time.”

The governor said that housing sales are expected to be reduced in the near term due to the new rules and that it may spur construction of smaller homes.

Although he did not rule out a further cut in interest rates down the line, especially as the bank’s outlook for the economy has been revised down for the coming two years; but he said that the balance of risk is still within the scope of current monetary policy.

Copyright © 2016 Key Media Pty Ltd

Biker forfeits share of property used as meth lab

Thursday, October 20th, 2016

Hells Angel forfeits interest in property where police found meth lab

Kim Bolan
The Vancouver Sun

Just a few months ago, Hells Angel Justino Pace told a reporter he was “annoyed” that the government was suing him over a rented property where police found a drug lab.

Now Pace has agreed to forfeit his share of the Mission property, according to the B.C. director of civil forfeiture.

The government agency said that under a consent order filed recently in B.C. Supreme Court, the Civil Forfeiture Office received about $23,000 in net proceeds from the sale of the building.

The single-level, 3,150-square-foot industrial unit at 7191 Horne St. was sold for about $229,000. Most of the cash went to pay off a mortgage.

Pace told Postmedia News in March that it was unfair for the government to name him in the civil forfeiture suit because he had no idea that his tenant was operating a meth and ecstasy lab in the building.

“I don’t understand why they named me as a defendant when I’m not even charged,” said Pace. “I’m so annoyed. I’m annoyed right now just thinking about it, that they could even do this.”

Pace’s woes began in September 2014, when a fire broke out on the property and the local fire department responded.

Firefighters saw white smoke pouring from the building and chemicals consistent with a synthetic drug lab and called in the RCMP.

Police said at the time that it was one of the largest illegal drug labs in B.C. history.

The RCMP’s specialized drug lab unit dismantled the lab, over several days, recovering significant quantities of MDMA, ecstasy and crystal methamphetamine.

No one was charged, but Mission RCMP sent the file to the Civil Forfeiture Office, which filed the lawsuit against the numbered company that owned the building. Pace is listed as its secretary.

The suit said that Pace’s company financed the purchase of the property in 2008 in part with a mortgage and that it had been used to facilitate unlawful activities that might include storage, concealment, production and trafficking of controlled substances and laundering the proceeds of unlawful activity.

Pace also told Postmedia that he “was so shocked by things that came out of that place.”

 “I didn’t even think they could put so much stuff in there.”

Solicitor General Mike Morris said the office “has always taken drug lab cases seriously.”

“The public safety value of doing so has never been greater, when you consider how prevalent fentanyl is among street drugs today,” Morris said in a statement Tuesday.

“This particular forfeiture is noteworthy for the sheer volume of volatile chemicals involved, which put both the public and first responders in great danger.”

The City of Mission spent several hundreds of thousands of dollars cleaning up the Horne Street property.

Pace is a member of the Haney chapter of the biker gang.

The Civil Forfeiture Office has another long-running court battle involving three Hells Angels clubhouses.

The government is seeking the forfeiture of the bikers’ clubhouses in Nanaimo, East Vancouver and Kelowna in a case that began in 2007.

The Hells Angels have counter-sued the government, arguing that civil forfeiture legislation is unconstitutional.

The trial is scheduled to begin in May.

© 2017 Postmedia Network Inc.

Growing too big too soon can lead to problems

Thursday, October 20th, 2016

JENNY LEE
The Vancouver Sun

Harry Watson hadn’t planned on owning a big company.

“I never wanted any more than six employees. That was my goal,” said Watson, 71, who started Metro Testing Laboratories in 1987 and found a niche providing quick and convenient concrete testing for the construction industry.

“We were cost effective and there was no bureaucracy. We came out to do the test and gave them the results the next day,” said Watson, who added that his competitors were mostly larger firms that took longer, required more paperwork and offered tests only as part of a larger package of professional engineering services.

“I kind of grew like mushrooms,” Watson said. “We started in Vancouver, then we started to get phone calls for Langley and Abbotsford. One of our technicians was living out there. (We said) ‘Why don’t we just open up a small lab out there and you can run it?’ ”

The same thing happened in Whistler.

Each time Watson expanded, he started a new company and gave its manager a 10 to 20 per cent share for a small investment.

“I just thought if they are going to manage the business, they should have a stake in the business,” Watson said. Then those managers began making shareholders of their key employees.

By 2014, Metro Testing had been rebranded as Canadian Construction Materials Engineering & Testing, comprising 14 incorporated companies with 64 shareholders and 275 employees. And that’s when Watson realized he had a problem.

“It became a bit unmanageable,” Watson said. “The model was good at the start.”

Just as Watson started reorganizing to reduce risk to individual owners, someone offered to buy CCMET. That deal fell through, but Watson kept going both with reorganization and selling. His accountant Mike McIsaac, a partner with Renaissance Group chartered professional accountants, handled both jobs.

“It was a big process, and the amount of paperwork, it scared me,” Watson said. “I saw this 14foot table and there was inches of paper from one end to the other. Piles and piles and piles. ‘I have to sign all these?’ (McIsaac) said yes.”

Multiple shareholders are common in professional services firms such as engineering and accounting, and entertainment groups such as pubs and nightclubs — “anything where you need to have

somebody’s boots on the ground,” McIsaac said.

But the structure can create issues around confidentiality, gaining consensus and fairly allocating sale proceeds to each shareholder.

Many professional services firms like CCMET also set up new entities as they expand, but this can mean higher accounting and legal fees and challenges when selling.

“Every potential purchaser we talked to, their requirement was one company that owned all the locations,” McIsaac said. “Executing a restructure of that magnitude is not an easy feat. It involves many months of co-ordinating, planning, legal work.”

An employee-ownership culture can be achieved through one holding company with multiple divisions, an employee stock ownership plan, phantom shares (where employees are compensated as though they were shareholders) or profit-share plans, said Axel Christiansen, vice-president of mergers and acquisitions at Renaissance Group.

But a change to a unified corporate structure can create difficult feelings.

“You may go from owning 10 per cent to a fractional share position, and although your dollar value should be the same in theory, you might not feel the same way about it,” McIsaac said.

Gaining consensus to sell among many shareholders can be difficult. One way to ensure a sale isn’t sidetracked by a few shareholders is a plan of arrangement, drawn up via a court process, in which a vote of 75 per cent approval would be enough to go ahead, McIsaac said. Watson chose not to do this. “I think my 64 people will all say yes. I took that risk,” Watson said. “If it hadn’t worked, that would have delayed the whole transaction by at least a year … (but) I didn’t like the other way.”

Professional services firms are also often project-based so their working capital requirements (current assets minus current liabilities) can vary significantly, leading them to hold more cash as a buffer. This can lead to tax consequences such as not qualifying for capital gains deductions due to excess non-business assets, and difficulty negotiating working capital when selling the company.

“Working capital is invariably one of the most heated negotiation points in a sale,” Christiansen said.

If the company hasn’t been managing its working capital efficiently, the average net working capital is higher than it needs to be and the purchaser will push to have those excess funds included as part of the sale.

“My company was very complicated for someone to buy,” Watson said. “It’s one of the reasons the first offer fell through.”

Even though the entire presale process cost him about $250,000, he has no regrets. “If I had to do it all over again, I’d do it the same way.”

He believes his managers, who nicknamed the parent company “Mama Metro,” felt “more ownership because it was their own company rather than a big company.”

Watson ultimately sold 70 per cent of CCMET to Equicapita, a Calgary private equity firm, earlier this year at 80 per cent above the early target price. CCMET is now one of the largest material testing firms in B.C., and Watson is looking to expand eastward.

Fifteen original shareholders now own 30 per cent of CCMET and still work at the company. “But now we have some money to put in the bank. If something happens to us and our families, we’ve all got our security blanket,” Watson said.

© 2017 Postmedia Network Inc.

Grouse Mountain owners put resort up for sale

Thursday, October 20th, 2016

Grouse Mountain, the ‘iconic Vancouver landmark’, put up for sale

DERRICK PENNER
The Vancouver Sun

The owners of Grouse Mountain Resorts are hanging a for sale sign on the iconic North Shore ski hill and tourist attraction as its principals pursue other interests.

Grouse Mountain Resorts announced Monday that it has retained commercial realtor CBRE to advise the company on marketing and selling its operations and its close to 490 hectares of privately held lands, at a time such facilities are in the news as hot properties.

“From our perspective, (at) our current operations, it’s business as usual,” said Grouse Mountain manager of communications Julia Grant.

However, the resort’s owners, “have decided to pursue other interests, so have decided to make the resort available for sale in order to do that,” after more than 40 years with the property.

In a news release, the company said a sale would include some 490 hectares of land plus all of the existing operations of what has become one of Metro Vancouver’s top tourist draws between its ski runs, summer trails, ziplines, Eye of the Wind turbine and viewing platform, wildlife refuge with marquee resident grizzly bears Grinder and Coola and Altitudes Bistro.

Grouse Mountain president, and owner, Stuart McLaughlin wasn’t available for comment, but grizzly-bear conservation is a cause that he has publicly embraced having signed on as a founding board member to developer and philanthropist Michael Audain’s Grizzly Bear Foundation.

“Grouse Mountain management and staff are very proud of our success and look forward to continuing to deliver world class experiences to Vancouverites,” resort president Michael Cameron said in the news release announcing the development.

CBRE executive Tony Quattrin called it a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to acquire an iconic Vancouver landmark,” in which its owners have poured $55 million since 1989 to turn it into a four-season resort and top tourist draw.

What price the resort might fetch remains an open question, but the announcement of a potential sale comes on the heels of Vail Resorts Management Co. striking a $1.4 billion deal in August to buy the Whistler Blackcomb resort.

And it follows another major development in the ski business. The province, also in August, approved the master plan for Valemount Glacier Destinations Ltd.’s proposal to build a destination resort nestled in the Rockies on Highway 5 halfway between Kamloops and McBride.

Other ski properties have traded hands recently, but under different circumstances.

Mount Baldy, a ski facility in the south Okanagan that closed during the 2013/14 ski season after running into financial difficulties, was bought out of receivership by the backers of a B.C. numbered company for $3.4 million, according to a report in Business in Vancouver.

Mount Washington on Vancouver Island also sold last November to Park-City UT Pacific Group Resorts for an undisclosed price, according to BIV.

© 2016 Postmedia Network Inc.

Federal Changes to Mortgage Insurance Rules

Thursday, October 20th, 2016

BCREA
other

The Federal Government recently announced significant changes to regulations for new-government backed insured mortgages. As of October 17, 2016, all insured homebuyers have to qualify at the posted five-year qualifying rate. This is a change from previous policy where only variable rate mortgages and mortgages with terms less than five-years were subject to a higher qualifying rate.

With this move, the Federal Government has chosen to offset a modest risk to the taxpayer by severely eroding affordability for low equity home buyers, particularly first time home buyers. The qualifying rate is updated weekly and available on the Bank of Canada website. It is currently 4.64 per cent, about 200 basis points higher than the best bank offered rates.

To qualify for mortgage insurance, a homebuyer’s debt servicing ratio must be no higher than:

  • Gross Debt Service – 39 per cent of household income, including mortgage payment, taxes and heating costs.
  • Total Debt Service – 44 per cent of household income, including mortgage payment, taxes, heating costs and all other debt payments.

The announced measure applies to new mortgage insurance applications received on October 17, 2016 or later. This measure does not apply to mortgage loans where:

  • before October 3, 2016: a mortgage insurance application was received;
  • the lender made a legally binding commitment to make the loan; or
  • the borrower entered into a legally binding agreement of purchase and sale for the property against which the loan is secured.

Mortgage loans for which mortgage insurance applications were received after October 2, 2016 and before October 17, 2016 are also not affected by the rule change, provided that the mortgage is funded by March 1, 2017. Homeowners with an existing insured mortgage or those renewing existing insured mortgages are not affected by this measure.
        
The Federal Government also instituted new eligibility rules for low-ratio (higher than 20 per cent down payment) mortgages backed by government insurance. As of November 30, 2016, to be eligible for government insurance, new mortgages must meet the following requirements:

  • A loan whose purpose includes the purchase of a property or subsequent renewal of such a loan;
  • A maximum amortization length of 25 years;
  • A maximum property purchase price below $1,000,000 at the time the loan is approved;
  • For variable-rate loans that allow fluctuations in the amortization period, loan payments that are recalculated at least once every five years to conform to the original amortization schedule;
  • A minimum credit score of 600 at the time the loan is approved;
  • A maximum Gross Debt Service ratio of 39 per cent and a maximum Total Debt Service ratio of 44 per cent at the time the loan is approved, calculated by applying the greater of the mortgage contract rate or the Bank of Canada conventional five-year fixed posted rate; and
  • A property that will be owner-occupied.

These new criteria, in particular requiring a maximum purchase price below $1 million, will essentially make the majority of single family homes in Metro-Vancouver ineligible for government issued insurance for low-ratio mortgages. In a recent Market Intelligence Report, Millennials Bear the Brunt of Fed Policy Changes, BCREA’s Economics Team examined how these new rules could cause the sharpest drop in the purchasing power of low equity home buyers in years. Click here to read the full report.

Copyright ©2016 BCREA

Zoocasa prepares for sold data release

Wednesday, October 19th, 2016

Justin da Rosa
REP

The brokerage has announced its official relaunch, with an eye to the future of sold data availability.

“The recent Competition Tribunal negotiations with the Toronto Real Estate Board has the potential to spur more innovation with the availability of past sold data, which Zoocasa is preparing to incorporate into future tools,” Zoocasa said in release for the relaunch of its website.

The brokerage is concentrating on the digital space in a bid to reach clients both online and offline.

“This is a significant milestone in Zoocasa’s story. Modernization in this industry is slow and fragmented, and we have the opportunity to build a cohesive and informative real estate platform to better serve Canadians,” Zoocasa CEO Lauren Haw said. “We believe that the best online offerings should be paired with the best offline service, and that’s what we’ve spent the last year building.”

Zoocasa was acquired in 2015 from Rogers Communications by a group of investors that included RateHub.ca, one of the country’s most widely used mortgage rate comparison sites.

It’s been a rocky road for the brokerage, which – under its original owner Rogers – ceased operations in June 2015, following a warning from the Toronto Real Estate Board over its publication of sold data.

“Rogers has made the decision to no longer continue our investment in Zoocasa as the business is no longer a fit with our overall company plan, and core areas of focus,” a Rogers rep told REP at the time. “We will close down our website and mobile app effective June 22, 2015.”

However, that is all in the past.

With new owners – and, indeed, the prospect of sold data being opened to the public – Zoocasa’s may be the brokerage model of the future.

Copyright © 2016 Key Media Pty Ltd

No crash for Canadian housing market say experts

Wednesday, October 19th, 2016

Steve Randall
REP

The Canadian housing market will escape a hard landing but is expected to see a slow-down, according to two economists.

Moody’s Analytics economist Andrew Carbacho-Burgos believes that growth in prices will slow nationally to 2 per cent with Vancouver and Toronto leading the decline as domestic buyers continue to struggle with affordability and foreign investment eases.

Moody’s says that some areas including Alberta and Saskatchewan may experience home prices declining, as growth rates have already slipped due to the slump in commodity prices.

The caveat to the Moody’s report is that it is based on data from before this week’s new mortgage rules were introduced.

Meanwhile, the former CEO of RBC said Tuesday that he does not see a “major, major collapse in housing” despite the new mortgage rules aimed at cooling the market.

Gord Nixon told BNN that with low interest rates and the banks managing housing risk, he does not expect a problem; however, he said that a major economic shock could be a problem due to high home prices.

Copyright © 2016 Key Media Pty Ltd

Chinese billionaire to tell PM that Vancouver sales tax is wrong

Tuesday, October 18th, 2016

Steve Randall
Mortgage Broker News

The 15 per cent tax on foreign buyers of Vancouver homes should be changed to be more targeted, a Chinese billionaire will tell the prime minister Tuesday.

Frank Wu, vice-chair of the China Real Estate Industry Association plans to discuss the tax with Justin Trudeau during a visit to Ottawa. Wu says that the tax is discouraging Chinese investors from the market and may mean them re-focusing on other cities or outside Canada.

Wu is planning to invest $100 million in Canada over the coming years, building homes for mainly Chinese buyers.

Copyright © 2016 Key Media Pty Ltd

B.C. Minister Expects Modest Housing Correction From Regulations

Tuesday, October 18th, 2016

Katia Dmitrieva
REP

The finance minister of Canada’s priciest province for real estate expects new regulations will cool housing appreciation in Vancouver, where there’s already been a marked decline in sales and foreign investment.

“We’ll see a slowdown in the rate at which the value of housing goes up; we may see a modest correction,” British Columbia Finance Minister Michael de Jong said Monday on Bloomberg TV Canada. “I think it will occur in a managed and orderly way.”

The federal government introduced new rules this month aimed at moderating housing in Toronto and Vancouver, where prices have doubled in the past decade. The moves include a new stress test for buyers and closing a tax loophole used by some offshore buyers. De Jong announced a foreign buyer levy in July, and in September the city of Vancouver said it’s planning a tax on vacant properties starting in January.

Vancouver home sales slipped in August and September, the first two months of data since the 15 percent land transfer tax on offshore buyers came into effect.

Still Rising
Although home sales in the province’s largest city fell 33 percent in September, the most since 2010, prices continued to rise compared with the prior year. The benchmark price of a home, a measure used by the local real estate board, is now C$931,900 ($710,000), up 29 percent from a year earlier.

Foreign investment made up 12 percent of the C$20.6 billion in home transactions in Vancouver from June 10 to Aug. 31, but plunged to less than 1 percent following the tax’s implementation, the British Columbia Ministry of Finance said last month.

The minister said Monday high housing prices are also caused by local demand and a dearth of supply in the city bordered by water and mountains. Applications to build 120,000 housing units are currently before the city seeking approval, he said.

“There’s another part to this equation that we can’t forget and that is supply of building housing,” de Jong said. “That’s something that the private sector has a big role to play and governments need to facilitate at all levels.”
“Let’s not delude ourselves into thinking that the answer to this lies purely within the maneuvering or manipulation of taxation levers,” he said in a separate interview in Bloomberg’s Toronto office.

Copyright Bloomberg 2016

Online real-estate brokerage Zoocasa to relaunch with cash injection

Tuesday, October 18th, 2016

Tamsin McMahon
The Globe and Mail

An online real-estate brokerage shuttered by Rogers Communications Inc. last year is relaunching with a new website and an injection of cash from a group of technology-focused investors.

Zoocasa is set to announce Tuesday that it has raised $1.35-million in seed money from a group of investors that includes Wind Mobile founder Globalive Capital Inc., Hedgewood Inc. and Impression Ventures, whose backers include Franco-Nevada Corp. chairman Pierre Lassonde.

Toronto real-estate broker Lauren Haw purchased Zoocasa with business partners from Rogers last year, less than a month after the telecommunications giant announced it was closing it down. She has continued running the site since then, but has kept a low profile. She plans to relaunch Zoocasa with a faster platform, more search functions and better mapping features.

The investment is a positive sign for the nascent online real-estate industry in Canada, which has struggled to gain traction in the face of a battle between Ottawa’s Competition Bureau and the Toronto Real Estate Board over whether Internet-based brokers should be allowed to share home-sales data with the public.

Earlier this year, the Competition Tribunal issued a ruling ordering the country’s largest real-estate board to loosen rules that prohibit its member brokers from posting Multiple Listings Service data online. The Federal Court of Appeal is set to hear an appeal on the case in December.

Many had hoped that the prospect of unlocking home-sales data would revolutionize the real-estate industry, leading to a proliferation of sites that offered lower commissions and do-it-yourself home sales in the same way that online robo-advisers and DIY brokerages have put pressure on the traditional financial services industry.

But the revolution has yet to materialize. Last month, Toronto-area broker Fraser Beach shut down a popular newsletter that offered details of recently sold homes to subscribers, pending the Federal Court appeal on Toronto home-sales data.

Rogers, which launched Zoocasa in 2008, initially positioned the company as a low-fee service. It made money primarily through selling ads and leads to realtors and then offered a 15-per-cent rebate on real-estate commissions for customers who used its referral services.

For Ms. Haw and her investors, however, the appeal of bringing more data and better tools online isn’t to offer cheaper services, but to make the old full-service brokerage model more streamlined.

“The approach that Lauren and her team are using [is one] where you’re providing the customer with data they need, you’re also looking at providing them with full service, holding their hand through a transaction that is very complicated for most people and not something they do every day,” said Wayne Bigby, president of Hedgewood, which is among Zoocasa’s investors.

After taking over Zoocasa, Ms. Haw, who was then a broker with Keller Williams Referred Urban Realty, scrapped the low-fee model. She has since left Keller Williams and licensed Zoocasa as its own full-service brokerage. It now uses its site to generate sales leads for its team of 15 in-house agents, who then offer their real-estate services at commissions similar to what traditional real-estate brokerages offer.

“It’s very important to me that our agents are of a high calibre,” she said. “It’s very difficult to attract great agents that are willing to work at a discount.”

Zoocasa’s investors say the site was appealing in part because Rogers had poured so much money into promoting the service that it was already a well-known brand among consumers, giving it an advantage over its competitor startups.

Zoocasa has among the highest profiles with consumers of Globalive’s investments, said the firm’s CEO Brice Scheschuk. “It took Wind much more money and more time to get that type of name recognition,” he said.

Mr. Scheschuk does not see the site’s success as dependent on the notion that online real-estate brokerages will need to offer fewer services and lower fees. “What I have found is that a race to the bottom on price ultimately harms the user, generally because something suffers in the experience,” he said.

A founding investor in RateHub.ca, a rate-shopping website, Ms. Haw also runs Scholarhood.ca, a website that generates sales leads for Zoocasa agents by letting home buyers search for properties based on school districts and rankings. She sees Zoocasa’s future as a service that can make the process of buying and selling easier for clients, rather than help consumers avoid using a realtor.

“The reality is that buying and selling a home is still very tactile,” she said. “There’s still that first impression and the way a home is marketed and staged and priced will absolutely affect that the seller nets.”

Copyright 2016 The Globe and Mail Inc.