4,438-square-foot industrial building sells $2.55 million

September 11th, 2020

Vancouver 4,438-square-foot industrial nets $2.55 million

William Wright
Western Investor

The free-standing building fitted out as a martial arts studio and has ample parking on the Graveley Street site in East Vancouver.

Type of property: Industrial

Location: 2619 Graveley Street, Vancouver

Building size: 4,438 square feet (approx.) over two storeys

Zoning: C-1

List price:$2.95 million

Sale price: $2.55 million

Brokerage: William Wright Commercial Real Estate Services

Brokers: Meg Cooney and Amrita Guram

 

© Copyright 2020 Western Investor

Offices and warehouse soon to rise in Seaspan Victoria Shipyards projected price $26 million, Vancouver

September 11th, 2020

Omicron pitches $26 million shipyard plan near Victoria

Carla Wilson
Western Investor

The 81,500-square-foot space would allow Seaspan Victoria Shipyards to amalgamate its supply-chain operations on one site at Colwood

 

Vancouver developer Omicron has submitted an application to build a custom $26-million office and warehouse complex for Victoria Shipyards in the new Allandale District, on the Langford-Colwood border, has been submitted to Colwood city hall.

The 81,500-square-foot space would allow Seaspan Victoria Shipyards to amalgamate its supply-chain operations on one site. The plan was presented to Colwood City Hall in early September and appears to have support from the mayor.

Seaspan currently uses three office locations for its logistics and procurement services and stores materials in four warehouses in Greater Victoria.

Joe O’Rourke, vice-president and general manager of Victoria Shipyards, said Wednesday that the “growth and complexity” of Seaspan Victoria Shipyards’ long-term customer contracts have increased its need to consolidate sourcing and management of materials for vessel repair, refit and conversion projects.

The development application for the shipyard site was submitted by Omicron Development Inc. and Lotus Capital Corp., partners in developing a 20-acre mixed-use development plan with new businesses and services on four parcels at Veterans Memorial Parkway and Allandale Road. The 3.95-acre lot destined for shipyard use is on the west side of the parkway.

New zoning is not required on the lot planned for the shipyard because it already allows a range of related uses.

Development of the entire site is estimated to be worth $100 million. Once it’s built out, about 353,000 square feet of buildings are expected on the four parcels, Peter Laughlin, Omicron’s director of development on Vancouver Island, said earlier. A rezoning application for other parcels has been submitted to Colwood.

Construction would take about 18 months and create an estimated 90 jobs.

Mayor Rob Martin said Colwood is thrilled at the prospect of Seaspan Victoria Shipyards and its employees moving to the municipality.

Martin said he welcomes the construction jobs and the long-term shipyard jobs.

“We look forward to it being the first of many announcements for the 20-acre Allandale District which will expand Colwood’s tax base and create jobs for residents.”

 

 

© Copyright 2020 Western Investor

Housing market still getting strong despite given forecast on housing recession

September 11th, 2020

The pandemic housing recession that never was

Frank O?Brien
Western Investor

On May 27, 10 weeks after COVID-19 was declared a global pandemic, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. (CMHC) released a doomsday-style housing forecast that envisioned a nightmare collapse of the housing market with national sales dropping up to 29 per cent, starts plunging by from 50 per cent to 70 per cent and average house prices dropping as much as 18 per cent with no real recovery until 2022.

“Canada will see a historic recession in 2020 with significant falls in indicators of the housing market,” stated the Housing Market Outlook special edition spring 2020.

B.C. and Alberta would be especially hard hit, CMHC forecast, because of a reliance on the tourism and travel industry and resource prices.

Never happened.

Instead, as of July, Canadian home sales posted the highest level of any month in history after transactions soared 26 per cent from a month earlier, the fourth straight month-over-month increase, according to the Canadian Real Estate Association. Average home prices were up 14 per cent from 2019.
Home sales in Calgary were 14 per cent higher and they rose 10 per cent in Edmonton from a year before.

B.C. became a stellar performer in the Canadian housing market. July provincewide sales soared 26 per cent from a year earlier and the total sales dollar volume jumped 43 per cent to $7.8 billion.

By August, Metro Vancouver housing sales were up 36 per cent from August of 2019 and nearly 20 per cent higher than the 10-year average for the month. Detached house prices, already the highest in Canada, increased a further 6.6 per cent to nearly $1.5 million.

Remarkably, the Canada-wide sale and price surges occurred not only during a national recession but as CMHC tried to curb the market.

On July 1, the federal housing agency established a minimum credit score of 680 for buyers, up from 600. They also limited gross and total debt servicing ratios and outlawed borrowing funds for a down payment, such as with an unsecured line of credit.

It is not just the housing market that has defied predictions.

Statistics Canada reports that the disposable income of Canadian households jumped nearly 11 per cent from the first to the second quarter in 2020, both a record high. The Canadian household savings rate also climbed to a record high of 28.2 per cent in the second quarter of 2020, eclipsing the previous record of 21.2 per cent in 1982. Meanwhile, household credit market debt as a proportion of household disposable income fell to 158.2 per cent in the second quarter, down from 175.4 per cent in the first three months of 2020.

“This is not a typical recession,” said Brendon Ogmundson chief financial officer of the BC Real Estate Association, which is now predicting that provincial housing sales will end 2020 higher than in 2019.

But he added a caution in a special housing report the association released September 9, noting that the pandemic has hit lower-income Canadians the hardest.

“The asymmetric impact of the recession helps to explain the strength in home sales, but also has serious implications for already troubling trends in inequality and housing affordability. This dichotomy may be a lasting legacy of the COVID-19,” Ogmundson wrote.

 

 

© Copyright 2020 Western Investor

CMHC housing activity at highest level since 2007

September 11th, 2020

CMHC: Housing starts activity reaches highest point in 13 years

Ephraim Vecina
Mortgage Broker News

A surge in multiple-unit home construction boosted Canada’s housing starts activity to its highest level since 2007, according to new data from the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation.

Nationwide, housing starts increased by almost 7% month over month in August, with the seasonally adjusted annual rate at 262,396 units, the highest in 13 years. The annual pace of urban starts had a similar 7.1% increase in August to 248,154.

Taken together, the annual pace of urban starts involving apartments, condos, and other multiple-unit housing projects grew by 9.1% to 201,214 units. To compare, single-detached urban starts ticked down by 1% to 46,940.

By province, the largest year-over-year increases in starts were seen in Ontario (32%) and Quebec (18%).

“To say ‘this is a solid level of building activity considering the pandemic,’ and all that, would be a massive understatement,” said Robert Kavcic, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets Economic Research. “Another very strong showing in August suggests that builders have fully made up any lost time during the spring. Where we go from here is another question.”

Bob Dugan, chief economist at CMHC, echoed these reservations, saying that the Crown corporation is projecting a slower housing starts trend by the end of the year.

This period will coincide with a sizeable increase in housing inventory, which will precede a possible arrears spike.

A recent Better Dwelling analysis said that widespread lack of liquidity will become more apparent in the first few months of 2021. At the same time, many struggling Canadians will be thus forced to put up their properties for sale.

“The inability to pay doesn’t always turn into defaults when there [are] buyers,” Better Dwelling said. “Instead, people list their homes for sale and hope it sells and closes before the lender tries to claim it. … We should see a spike in inventory first.”

 

Copyright © 2020 Key Media

Mortgage Stress test updated

September 11th, 2020

Stress test must be revised to reflect market realities ? economist

Ephraim Vecina
Mortgage Broker News

Improved purchasing power will stem from the mortgage stress test being updated to reflect the sub-2% rates currently available in the market, according to economist Will Dunning.

The disparity is particularly jarring when one considers that new borrowers are tested against an interest rate of 4.79%, Dunning said in an interview with the Georgia Straight.

“This is an impediment to many Canadians achieving their reasonable home-buying goals and is also an impediment to the broader economic recovery,” Dunning said.

Moreover, the stress test does not take into account rising incomes, which Dunning said has been a decades-long trend.

“It is omitting one of the most important factors that will affect people’s ability to make their future payment, and so that’s a major flaw in the testing system that exists today,” Dunning said.

The economist added that while it’s “very good policy” to put borrowers through these assessments to ensure that they can actually pay their loans, some adjustments might be appropriate at this point.

“It’s time to recalibrate that policy to say, you know, what is a reasonable expectation about the conditions that will exist in five years and will affect people’s ability to make their payments,” Dunning said. “If you think interest rates might rise by two points over the next five years, and you also have an expectation that incomes will continue to rise the way they have in the past, then the way to simulate that combination is to say that the test should be the contracted interest rate plus three-quarters of a point.”

 

Copyright © 2020 Key Media

2800-square-foot development site sells $2.45million below assessed value

September 10th, 2020

Chinatown development site sells below assessed value

Avison Young
Western Investor

Property type: Development site

Location: 275 East Pender Street, Vancouver

Property size: 2,800 square feet

In acres: 0.70 acres

Zoning: HA-1

Potential: FSR 4.8, to seven storeys

BC Assessment value 2020: $3.08 million

List price: $3.15 million

Sale price: $2.45 million

Date of sale: September 8, 2020

Brokerage: Avison Young, Vancouver

Brokers: Michael Buchan, Mitch Knoepfel, Jake Luft and Justin Omichinski

 

© Copyright 2020 Western Investor

Top 5 reasons Canadians are confident about housing market

September 10th, 2020

Five reasons Canadians have little reason to fear a housing crash

Clayton Jarvis
Mortgage Broker News

Whether they take place during a pandemic-fuelled recession or during a period of sustained economic expansion, record-shattering home sales in Canada always seem to be accompanied by the same phenomenon: talk of the country’s “inevitable” housing crash.

Questioning the logic of homebuyers who engage in wild bidding wars in the midst of historic job losses is hardly unreasonable, but saying that behaviour will trigger a catastrophic fall in home prices, like the 18 percent decline projected as a potential outcome by the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation in May, is a train of thought Nick Kyprianou, president of RiverRock Mortgage Investment Corporation, is encouraging Canadians to abandon.

Talk of a crash in home prices has been persistent since CMHC first floated its dire 18 percent figure, even though neither CMHC nor any other housing authority, lender or brokerage has provided any evidence or metrics that tie current market activity or the economic slide caused by COVID-19 to plummeting home prices. And yet, the spectre of an 18 percent decline persists, hanging over the market like the reaper’s scythe, just waiting to harvest the souls and credit ratings of unfortunate Canadians.

Kyprianou is another market-watcher who can’t fathom the CMHC’s projection. His theory is that, in determining its absolute, institution-destroying, worst-case scenario as part of its annual report to the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions, CMHC may have concluded that its own breaking point would come if home prices shrank by 18 percent.

“I think [CMHC CEO Evan Siddall] just spouted off the worst-case scenario,” Kyprianou says. “Well, the chance of the worst-case scenario is so remote, everything has to line-up perfectly – multiple times – for it to happen.”

Using five key metrics to compare the current economic situation to that which proceeded the last true housing crash in Ontario (1989-1995), Kyprianou says today’s consumers can remain confident that home values will largely maintain their strength, even as COVID-19 continues to cast its shadow over the Canadian economy.

1. Interest rates

“Interest rates are your biggest factor,” Kyprianou says “If interest rates keep going up, that’s the biggest burden on housing because your dollar just doesn’t go as far.”

Interest rates almost doubled during Ontario’s last crash, rising from from eight to fifteen percent, putting pressure not only on buyers but the province’s builders as well. That is simply not going to happen this time around. The Bank of Canada estimated that it may not raise its key interest rate target before 2022.

2. Unemployment

There is no question that Canada’s employment situation is a worry. Unemployment was 10.2 percent in August 2020, almost double the rate seen in August 2019. But Kyprianou says there’s more to the story than just the headline.

In the early 1990s, when unemployment was hovering around 11 percent, most of the jobs being lost belonged to high earners – middle management, skilled tradespeople, factory workers – who saw their employers close up shop and move their operations to countries like Mexico during the first rocky years of the North American Free Trade Agreement.

“When these jobs are evaporating and the bulk of the unemployed are the higher income earners, that is going to have an effect on housing,” Kyprianou says, adding that most of the labour disruption caused by COVID-19 has been proven to involve low-wage earners who are predominantly renters, not prospective home buyers.

“That’s a big dynamic change,” he says. “You just can’t look at what the unemployment number is. You have to drill down through it and look at who is unemployed.”

3. Equity

Much of the concern expressed by CMHC’s Siddall over Canadian debt levels and high-ratio mortgages is the risk of borrowers being dragged underwater if falling home prices leave them in a negative equity position. Fair enough. But Kyprianou, quoting statistics provided by Canadian Mortgage Professionals, says the vast majority of Canadians have far more than five percent equity in their homes.

In its most recent Annual State of the Residential Mortgage Market in Canada report, CMP found that 88 percent of Canadian homeowners have equity ratios of 25 percent or higher. Among the 6 million homeowners with mortgages, 81 percent have equity ratios of 25 percent or more.

Kyprianou says there is also the concept of emotional equity to consider. Defaulting on a mortgage is seen as an embarrassing failure most homeowners will do all they can to avoid. He saw many of them get resourceful during the last recession – taking on boarders, getting a second job, asking their families for assistance – as a means of making their monthly mortgage payments. He expects the same level of effort from today’s borrowers.

“You gotta make it work,” he says.

4. Taxes

In the early 90s, sky-high personal and corporate tax rates were deemed responsible for driving companies and individual professionals into the waiting arms of the United States. The resulting brain drain eventually led to lower tax rates in Canada, but the damage was done.

With unemployment high and business confidence muted, it is highly unlikely that taxes will see any kind of significant spike over the near-term. Canadians are likely to be up in arms when their CERB payments are taken into account come tax time next year, and the billions in government aid used to prop up the economy for six months will eventually need to be recouped, but it’s safe to say the feds won’t threaten the nation’s economic recovery – or their polling numbers – by implementing any significant new taxes.

5. Immigration

In the 1989-1995 downturn, the problem wasn’t a lack of new Canadians, it was an inability to keep them. The brain drain days are over, but by limiting international immigration, COVID-19 has thrown a wrench into the works. With just over 100,000 permanent residents being welcomed into the country in the first six-months of 2020, Canada has little chance of hitting its immigration target of 341,000 for the year.

Immigration has been a significant driver of all things good in Canada over the past several years – population growth, innovation, economic expansion, home sales – but Kyprianou doesn’t see a fall in immigration numbers having too negative an impact on home prices, largely because immigrants don’t tend to buy properties for the first two years after arriving in Canada.

“If the pandemic affects immigration for three years, it’s not going to be a problem,” he says. “If it’s just a year, year-and-a-half, it’s not going to be a problem.”

Canada’s reputation for being a stable presence in a chaotic world has also been strengthened by the country’s handling of the pandemic (and the humiliating failure of our neighbours to the south to do the same). Once recovered from COVID-19, the country should still offer the same opportunity for new arrivals to find not only a safe environment to raise their families, but high-paying jobs in growing industries like tech and financial services.

The only sub-market where Kyprianou sees prices softening is high-rise condos. But with so many investors having purchased rapidly appreciating pre-construction properties over the past five years, even those who may be forced to sell, like unlucky Airbnb operators, are unlikely to face a loss. If the average price per square foot in Toronto, for example, falls from its current level of approximately $1,100 to $900, anyone who purchased at $500 per square foot in 2015 will still be making a hefty profit.

“It’s not like there’s going to be a bloodbath,” Kyprianou says. “They just don’t make as much money if they have to sell.”

 

 

 

Copyright © 2020 Key Media

Federal government mandates rental extension

September 9th, 2020

CECRA extended for the last time

Ephraim Vecina
Canadian Real Estate Wealth

The Liberal administration will be extending its pandemic fiscal assistance program for small businesses to help beleaguered ventures cover September rent costs.

Initially slated to end back in June, the Canada Emergency Commercial Rent Assistance (CECRA) mandates governments to shoulder 50% of rent, while landlords and tenants cover 25% each.

Eligible businesses must have experienced a 70% revenue decline for April, May, and June, either on an annual basis or when compared to their January-February average. Businesses that qualified during the original period will still be eligible without the need to evaluate if the 70% revenue decline lasted beyond June, BNN Bloomberg reported.

“Our government recognizes that while small businesses’ needs are evolving, many still require support to face the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Chrystia Freeland, deputy prime minister and finance minister. “That is why we are extending the rent relief provided through CECRA by an additional month, to ensure that Canadian businesses hit hardest by COVID-19 get support when they need it most.”

The federal government said that no further extensions are planned. Official records indicated that as of Sep. 7, more than 106,000 small businesses have participated in the program, with over $1.32 billion disbursed as rent assistance.

“This will be the final extension of this program as the government explores options to support small businesses as they face the ongoing challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic – including the challenges of fixed costs at a time when health concerns and precautions prevent many businesses from operating at full capacity,” the government said in a statement.

 

 

Copyright © 2020 Key Media Pty Ltd

Rents extends ban on small business eviction, Ontario government

September 9th, 2020

Ontario government extends ban on small business evictions

Ephraim Vecina
Canadian Real Estate Wealth

The Ontario government has announced the extension of its ban on small business evictions, which expired on Aug. 31.

The policy was put in place to assist businesses who have been struggling under the worst economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We’re extending it, as of today” Premier Doug Ford said on Sep. 4, as reported by CBC News. “It’s going to go for another month, to the end of September. Our priority is always to make sure we protect businesses out there.”

The ban will be made retroactive to Sep. 1, according to a statement by Municipal Affairs and Housing Minister Steve Clark. The statement also said that the provincial government is working with the federal administration to implement an extended Canada Emergency Commercial Rent Assistance program.

Per CECRA rules, tenants need pay only 25% of their dues, while landlords are paid back 50% of the rent. However, while the program was intended to prop up both tenants and landlords, the well-intentioned policy has encountered significant challenges.

“The biggest frustration we’ve been hearing from tenants on CECRA is that landlords just aren’t applying,” said Ryan Mallough, director of provincial affairs (Ontario) with the Canadian Federation of Independent Business. “The number-one concern we’ve been hearing from landlords is that the program is both overly complicated to apply for and actually doesn’t work for them on the cost side.”

CFIB data indicated that as of Aug. 23, more than 20,000 landlords in Ontario have applied for CECRA. The organization estimated that this will be affecting approximately 44,500 commercial tenants.

 

 

Copyright © 2020 Key Media Pty Ltd

Canadians have around 500,000 mortgage on payment deferral with the Big Six

September 9th, 2020

Canadians have more than 500,000 payment deferrals with the Big Six

Ephraim Vecina
Canadian Real Estate Wealth

At the Big Six banks alone, Canadians have around 510,530 mortgages on payment deferral as of the quarter ending July 31, falling by 17.53% from the previous quarter.

Royal Bank of Canada accounted for the largest slice of the pie, with 138,830 payment deferrals (down 30.18% quarterly). This was followed by Toronto-Dominion Bank at 107,000 deferrals (down 15.08%), and then by Scotiabank at 99,000 deferrals (up 5.32%).

These postponed payments at the Big Six amounted to $136.27 billion, representing a 15.38% quarterly decline. RBC’s total stood at $41.27 billion (down 23.66% quarterly), while the second largest volume of mortgage deferrals was at the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, which had $33.3 billion (down 6.2%).

Bank of Montreal was the only one of the Big Six that saw its deferral volume increase, with $17.25 billion (up 0.52% quarterly).

The latest round of quarterly reports pointed to robust financial market conditions, for the most part.

A late August Reuters analysis indicated that RBC and National Bank, in particular, “comfortably beat” earlier estimates for their Q3 profits. This was mainly because the institutions were able to set aside approximately half of their provisions – which were $512.3 million and $109.2 million, respectively – for bad loans.

However, RBC executives said that the bank will be shoring up its resources for its downside scenario, which placed unemployment at roughly 10% until mid-2022, and prices at a “depressed” state until mid-2023. This is in response to the “increasing uncertainty about how the economy will perform through the fall,” Reuters reported.

 

 

Copyright © 2020 Key Media Pty Ltd