- Joined
- Aug 30, 2007
- Messages
- 13,879
I love real estate .. especially in rising markets with perpetual income .. and thus, the vast majority of my personal net worth is in it.
Where are the markets rising ? Where there is job growth, with (at least flat or better,) rising wages, with a growing population. That exist primarily in two provinces today in Canada, in SK and in AB, and in some BC pockets.
After a 3 year decline in real estate prices from 2007 to 2010 (due to job losses due to drastically lower natural gas prices, lower provincial revenues and the financial crisis of 2008/2009), and a flattish year 2011, prices are starting to rise again in AB: See here, for example: http://www.vancouversun.com/business/Energy+revival+fuels+another+boom/5918015/story.html
However, much of Ontario will likely see FALLING real estate prices for 3+ years because of:
a) a left leaning, taxation heavy, debt increasing, union friendly, top heavy, recently re-elected government
b) vastly increasing utility costs due to poor feed-in-tariff decision (for "green" energy such as bird killing wind mills or very expensive solar energy) and nuclear reactor upgrade costs
c) some further expected tightening of mortgage rules
d) falling wages & employment levels in both the high-tech and manufacturing industry .. see
notice here about Caterpillar strikes & Ottawa's decline in the
high-tech area.. expect that to happen in the auto & general "high tech"
industry too (if one can call a BlackBerry high tech). Ontario's manufacturing might was built on a low Canadian $ and low
utility costs. Those two crucial main competitive advantages are now gone. For now, the work
force remains highly productive and well educated, but new job prospects are very
slim locally, and the upwardly mobile will move south to the US (with
lower wages, but also far lower housing and living costs and better
weather) or west in Canada, for higher wages and better job prospects.
http://business.financialpost.com/2011/12/27/how-ottawas-tech-sector-lost-its-edge/
http://business.financialpost.com/2011/12/30/caw-votes-in-favour-of-london-caterpillar-plant-strike/
e) curtailed federal government expenditures around Ottawa [far too slow in my opinion, as federal and most civil servants have far too high defined pensions, and thus, far too high total wage package compared to the real decline in earnings in the private sector in recent years]
f) failed immigration policies of too many uneducated immigrants
draining the social welfare & healthcare system, creating undue high unemployment and
increased crime
g) a fairly high Canadian $ making wages uncompetitive as we see in the Caterpillar example. Likely those 400 jobs will be lost, moved to Alabama, and the 400 people will join the unemployment line in the affected town.
TD Bank agrees by and large and see -2 and -6% for Toronto (and less, but also negative for Ottawa) here: http://business.financialpost.com/2011/12/22/get-ready-for-housing-market-correction-td/
To me the only thing that makes sense is rental (apartment) buildings in
stable Ontario towns in the 50-70/door range with a 6-8% CAP rate with a
steady flow of rental income, sensibly levered with cheap sub 3% debt.
In fact, I see no reason whatsoever that prices in Ontario will rise, except in a very few isolated instances in cities with job growth.
Do you ?
Until some or all of these 7 issues mentioned above are substantially corrected, Ontario will join the ranks of Spain, Italy and Ireland as failed states with too high debt levels, higher unemployment and thus, falling real estate prices. Thus, if you invest or own in Ontario check the local employment developments very very carefully.
Oh yes, I forgot to mention: too many condos are being built in Toronto. Don't buy those as an investment, unless at clear out deeply discounted prices on bankruptcy sales nor invest in those indirectly, such as some syndicated mortgage investments being marketed right now. 2013 or possibly even 2012 will see quite a few of those towers under construction in bankruptcy.
Where are the markets rising ? Where there is job growth, with (at least flat or better,) rising wages, with a growing population. That exist primarily in two provinces today in Canada, in SK and in AB, and in some BC pockets.
After a 3 year decline in real estate prices from 2007 to 2010 (due to job losses due to drastically lower natural gas prices, lower provincial revenues and the financial crisis of 2008/2009), and a flattish year 2011, prices are starting to rise again in AB: See here, for example: http://www.vancouversun.com/business/Energy+revival+fuels+another+boom/5918015/story.html
However, much of Ontario will likely see FALLING real estate prices for 3+ years because of:
a) a left leaning, taxation heavy, debt increasing, union friendly, top heavy, recently re-elected government
b) vastly increasing utility costs due to poor feed-in-tariff decision (for "green" energy such as bird killing wind mills or very expensive solar energy) and nuclear reactor upgrade costs
c) some further expected tightening of mortgage rules
d) falling wages & employment levels in both the high-tech and manufacturing industry .. see
notice here about Caterpillar strikes & Ottawa's decline in the
high-tech area.. expect that to happen in the auto & general "high tech"
industry too (if one can call a BlackBerry high tech). Ontario's manufacturing might was built on a low Canadian $ and low
utility costs. Those two crucial main competitive advantages are now gone. For now, the work
force remains highly productive and well educated, but new job prospects are very
slim locally, and the upwardly mobile will move south to the US (with
lower wages, but also far lower housing and living costs and better
weather) or west in Canada, for higher wages and better job prospects.
http://business.financialpost.com/2011/12/27/how-ottawas-tech-sector-lost-its-edge/
http://business.financialpost.com/2011/12/30/caw-votes-in-favour-of-london-caterpillar-plant-strike/
e) curtailed federal government expenditures around Ottawa [far too slow in my opinion, as federal and most civil servants have far too high defined pensions, and thus, far too high total wage package compared to the real decline in earnings in the private sector in recent years]
f) failed immigration policies of too many uneducated immigrants
draining the social welfare & healthcare system, creating undue high unemployment and
increased crime
g) a fairly high Canadian $ making wages uncompetitive as we see in the Caterpillar example. Likely those 400 jobs will be lost, moved to Alabama, and the 400 people will join the unemployment line in the affected town.
TD Bank agrees by and large and see -2 and -6% for Toronto (and less, but also negative for Ottawa) here: http://business.financialpost.com/2011/12/22/get-ready-for-housing-market-correction-td/
To me the only thing that makes sense is rental (apartment) buildings in
stable Ontario towns in the 50-70/door range with a 6-8% CAP rate with a
steady flow of rental income, sensibly levered with cheap sub 3% debt.
In fact, I see no reason whatsoever that prices in Ontario will rise, except in a very few isolated instances in cities with job growth.
Do you ?
Until some or all of these 7 issues mentioned above are substantially corrected, Ontario will join the ranks of Spain, Italy and Ireland as failed states with too high debt levels, higher unemployment and thus, falling real estate prices. Thus, if you invest or own in Ontario check the local employment developments very very carefully.
Oh yes, I forgot to mention: too many condos are being built in Toronto. Don't buy those as an investment, unless at clear out deeply discounted prices on bankruptcy sales nor invest in those indirectly, such as some syndicated mortgage investments being marketed right now. 2013 or possibly even 2012 will see quite a few of those towers under construction in bankruptcy.