Thursday, October 30, 2008

259 Highway #2, Princeton, ON - MLS # 60-828


You want a home with potential? You’ve found it! Step inside this beautiful 1873 Farm House and imagine the possibilities. This 2-storey home is situated on approximately ¾ acre lot and has many updates, including all copper and pvc plumbing, all knob & tube wiring unused, UV filter, and a newer 30 year roof. Also included are all appliances currently in property. This house has very large principal rooms, and will make an absolutely perfect family home. Don’t miss out on this fabulous opportunity. All RSA.


Ben Sage, Sales Representative

Sutton Group - Right Way Real Estate (2007) Inc., Brokerage

Independently Owned and Operated

Office: 519-539-6194

Friday, October 24, 2008

Home Prices take a Hit

Year-over-year prices plunge 5.1 per cent in August, the sharpest decline since 1996

The average price of an existing home in Canada fell by 5.1 per cent year over year in August, the steepest decline since 1996.
It was the third monthly drop since prices fell into negative territory in June for the first time in more than nine years, and was led by a sharp decrease in sales activity in the country's most expensive markets, including Vancouver, Victoria, and Calgary.
That put the average price of a resale home in Canada at $315,052 last month, according to data released yesterday by the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA).
In Vancouver, the country's priciest housing market, unit sales plummeted by 54 per cent from the year before to an average of $557,114, CREA said.
The drop in sales gave Vancouver a lower weighting in the overall calculation of the country's national home price average, CREA said.
Prices also fell in Calgary, Edmonton, and Victoria, cities which saw dramatic run-ups during the housing boom, and in Windsor-Essex, which has been hard hit by the slump in the auto manufacturing sector.
Economists are sticking with the view that the housing market decline won't become as dramatic here as in the U.S., but said Canadians should brace for a continued slowdown in sales activity and softer prices.
"Canada's housing market continues to face strong headwinds from declining confidence, low affordability, and an upward trend in new listings," Robert Kavcic, economic analyst at BMO Nesbitt Burns Inc., said in a research note.
Resale home prices continued to rise in 20 of the 25 major markets included in the data. However, they edged up by only 0.8 per cent in Toronto, the country's largest market with more than double the sales of the second busiest city by activity, Montreal.
The largest price increases were mainly in smaller markets, led by Regina and Newfoundland & Labrador.
Across Canada unit sales also fell, dropping by 19.3 per cent in August compared with the year before, with increases in just three markets, Edmonton, Quebec City, and Thunder Bay.
Besides Vancouver, sales fell sharply in Victoria, Saskatoon, Regina, and Calgary, and in a number of Ontario cities including Toronto.
After surging for four months, new listings eased below the 50,000 mark in August, dropping by 4.6 per cent from the year before to 44,377 units.
"This report underscores the current shift in the Canadian housing market, as the tone of activity moves slightly closer to a buyer's market," Millan Mulraine, economics strategist at TD Securities Inc., said in a research note.
New listings plunged the most in markets which started slowing the earliest, including Edmonton, Calgary, and Windsor-Essex. Listings rose the most in Regina, Saskatoon, and Thunder Bay.
Despite the overall drop, annual listings growth is still outpacing sales in 22 of 25 major markets across the country, and the ratio of new listings to sales remains near a nine-year high, Mr. Kavcic said.

Source: The Globe and Mail, Lori McLeod, Real Estate Reporter, September 16, 2008.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Canada’s Mortgage Market is NOT Like the U.S.

A Report from Scotia Economics

(Reprinted courtesy of Cathie Davies, Mortgage development Manager, Scotiabank Woodstock / Ingersoll Areas - 519-421-5253, cell 519-533-7743)


We're fielding client inquiries about risks facing Canadian housing and - more importantly - mortgage markets. The following points summarize some key thoughts that we’ve made over time. The bottom line is that we do believe there to be considerable downsides to the Canadian housing market, but that comparisons of Canadian mortgage market prospects to the U.S. experience are off-base.

1. Debt growth over the full cycle

Much is being made of the fact that Canadian debt growth relative to incomes over recent years has been on par with the U.S. experience. Ergo, one is led to conclude, Canada must face similar stresses to its own housing and mortgage markets.

Nonsense. One must look at the full cycle and use the right measures. Recent Canadian debt growth reflects the unleashing of pent-up demand from the 1990s. Canada’s recession in the early 1990s was more severe, and the effects were longer lasting by way of how long it took housing markets and the consumer sector to get back on their feet. The U.S. recession of the early 1990s was comparatively mild, and the economy rebounded faster such that U.S. debt growth over the long-haul has exceeded debt growth in Canada. The effect has been for the U.S. to outpace Canada on growth in total household sector liabilities relative to incomes throughout the past two decades.

2. Leverage - night and day comparisons

Canada’s ratio of household debt-to-income is much lower than the U.S. Despite its popularity, however, this is the worst way to look at leverage since it compares total debt amortized over decades to a single year’s after-tax income which is a stock-to-flow comparison that most economists avoid. One doesn’t take out a mortgage on January 1st with the expectation of having to pay it all back out of the current year’s income by December 31st, so why make the comparison?

The best way to judge the full cycle’s influences upon debt growth in Canada versus the U.S. is to look at where the two countries stand today on leverage on the household balance sheet (i.e., debt as a share of assets). This must be done by making adjustments to ensure comparability of Canadian and U.S. household sector balance sheet data. In Canada, total debt as a percentage of total assets sat at 20% as at the end of 2007. The U.S. ratio is about 26% (chart). By corollary, Americans have used nearly 30% more debt to purchase assets than Canadians. Clearly, Americans and Canadians have different debt tolerances.

3. Canadian mortgage markets are fundamentally healthier than the U.S.


a. Canada’s subprime market is small (5-6% of outstanding mortgages) whereas the U.S. share peaked at about three times that. As a share of originations, 20-25% of new mortgages in the U.S. were subprime over the 2004-06 period. So Canada isn’t anywhere near as exposed to the products that caused most of the damage in U.S. housing markets.

b. Not only is Canada’s subprime market much smaller, but it isn’t even really subprime per se. Canada's subprime market is more like the U.S. near-prime market, whereas the U.S. subprime market often lent to borrowers with extremely impaired quality.


c. Adjustable rate mortgage (ARMs) resets also caused many of the problems stateside, but those resets occur much more suddenly in the U.S. By contrast, the closest Canadian product parallel is the variable rate mortgage, but they get constantly repriced so that people aren't caught off-guard years later. Furthermore, in Canada, some variable rate products adjust the principal, not the payment. On balance, the shock effect from payment resets in Canada is nowhere close to what has caused much of the problem in the U.S.


d. Canada’s mortgage equity withdrawal market isn't like the U.S. We've seen secured home equity lines of credit (Helocs) grow in Canada as a way of withdrawing equity, but nothing like the U.S. withdrawals picture. U.S. homeowners’ equity has been in free-fall with mortgage debt growth outpacing housing assets since the early 1990s. Canada, by contrast, retains much higher homeowner equity, and while it may have reached a plateau, the figure has risen in recent years while the U.S. position has deteriorated.


e. Mortgage interest is deductible against taxes in the U.S. It generally is not in Canada. That creates vastly different incentives to leverage oneself in the two markets.


f. The nature of the products has been very different in Canada versus the U.S. Examples of Canadian innovation like long-amortization mortgage products are absolutely nothing like Ninja mortgages. Mortgage innovation was needed in Canada, but has been relatively more conservative.


g. Further to this latter point, long-amortization mortgage products actually extend the Canadian credit quality cycle. Long amortization periods of over 25 years have been dominant as a share of new mortgage originations since the 40-year mortgage was introduced almost two years ago. However, there is still an overwhelming majority of Canadians who face the option of extending from the previously standard 25-year product into longer amortization products in a manner that lowers their payments in the face of shocks. Even though insured 40 year mortgages now banned in principle, 35 year mortgages still provide this flexibility.


h. Investor mortgages were among the first products to default in the U.S. where they account for about 9% of all outstanding mortgages, similar to the UK (9.5%) and Australia (10%). In Canada, however, they are about 2-3% of all outstanding mortgages. There are problems in the investor segment the world over, but the magnitude of the exposure in Canada is far less significant.


i. If there is an imminent problem brewing, then it’s not showing up in terms of industry-wide mortgage delinquency patterns. Mortgages 90+ days in arrears in Canada remain at 27 basis points which is the range around which they’ve been floating since mid-2004. By contrast, even when the country had double digit variable mortgage rates and double digit unemployment rates in the early 1990s, the peak rate of delinquency was about 65 basis points. We’re of the opinion that delinquencies will deteriorate going forward, but will be nowhere close to the U.S. experience.


j. The extent of runaway house price inflation was much more muted in Canada than in many other countries. Canada’s priciest market is Vancouver, and prices have gone up by about 80% since the mid-1990s start of the global housing cycle. London England, by contrast, went up by about 270% over this time period. Canada’s house price appreciation was, on average, significantly below the U.S. experience since then, and much below the experience of many European countries.


4. Canadian mortgages are funded, underwritten, and enforced in a totally different manner


a. Canada’s funding model is completely different from the U.S. The majority of mortgages are held on balance sheet in Canada, with only 24% having been securitized. Thus, much more of Canada’s mortgage book is funded by on-book retail deposits than is the case in the U.S. That also makes the banks more conservative about the products they are originating since they are mostly stuck on balance sheet.

b. Further, the majority of the securitized totals have been done through the CMHC — a Crown corporation with explicit government backing — thus avoiding the problems in the U.S. caused by the ambiguity of GSE liabilities. Other insured securitizations have been done through private insurers that also receive explicit government backing for the underlying assets through the Canada Mortgage Bond program.


c. Furthermore, Canadian financial institutions are not as reliant upon short-term lines extended by other financial institutions. The degree of reliance upon such funding in the U.S. is what caused excessive exposure to short-term swings in market sentiments, not to mention adverse incentive effects.


d. Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBSs) were not placed in off-balance-sheet SIV and CDO structures as in the U.S. So, Canada MBS investors do not face the same heavily leveraged investor risks. This is perhaps the most important point, since origination mistakes in the U.S. were bad enough, but what really caused the problems were dollops of leveraging that occurred after the mortgages were originated.


e. Unlike many U.S. banks, Canadian banks continue to apply prudent underwriting standards. In other words, they have always checked, and continue to check, incomes, verify job status, ask for sales contracts, etc., such that all those questions your banker asks in Canada have a purpose that somehow got lost on many American bankers. The no-income-no-job-no-asset (“Ninja”) style, here-are-the-keys-to-your-brand-new-home lending just didn’t take hold in Canada.


f. Appraisal standards are generally higher in Canada, where appraisals are more likely to low-ball estimates of property value before making the final decision on how much to lend.


g. Finally, enforcement of Canadian mortgages is not as tilted in the borrowers’ favour as it is in the United States. In the U.S., lenders have little recourse — they can take the keys and settle relatively quickly, or sue and go through great expense for a potentially lengthy period. Alberta is similar to the U.S. treatment in this regard. But the rest of Canada provides greater recourse to lenders than in the U.S.


In conclusion, we do believe that the best days for Canadian housing markets are behind us and that lower volumes of new home construction and resales lie ahead alongside further fairly modest erosion of house prices. Calgary and Edmonton are the most exposed in this regard. But, arguing that consequences to the overall Canadian economy and to debt markets particularly in terms of mortgage-backed securities are as severe as they are in the U.S. is way off-base.

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Thursday, October 2, 2008

553 Alberta Ave - $224,900 - Pick your Carpeting!


MLS # 60-326
$224,900
http://www.realtor.ca/PropertyDetails.aspx?PropertyID=7487791


This two storey, three bedroom, 2 bathroom home is on a quiet family oriented street in a desirable location, close to schools, shopping, dining, and quick access to highways 401/403. This is an excellent family home, finished with shaker style maple cabinetry in the extra large kitchen, fresh, neutral paints, ceramic tiles, and beautiful hardwood flooring. The large master boasts upgraded pot lights and an absolutely massive walk-in closet. The other two bedrooms are very generous in size, and the second floor laundry eliminates carrying heavy laundry baskets up two flights of stairs! PLEASE NOTE - This house is not completely finished. The Seller will install carpeting on the second floor, and will complete final grading and sodding work on the exterior. The seller will also install under-valance lighting, and valance covers in the kitchen. Alternatively, you can take the house "as is" and finish it yourself! This home is clean and easy to show - don't miss out!

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Beautiful Historic Victorian Queen Anne in Highly Sought after Neighbourhood

MLS # 60-324 - $385,000



DESCRIPTION



This absolutely gorgeous Victorian Queen Anne home has been lovingly maintained and meticulously updated. This circa 1885 executive home is located on the square overlooking Victoria Park in the extremely desirable, prestigious Old North area of Woodstock. You will be just minutes from many amenities, such as highways 401 & 403, Woodstock Collegiate Institute (public high school), Central Public School (kindergarten – grade 8), downtown shopping, Woodstock Art Gallery, Woodstock Museum square, restaurants, Lions Pool, Vansittart Park, the hospital and other emergency services.


HISTORIC SIGNIFICANCE


Originally built in 1885 by Helen and William VanIngen, the ownership lineage of 399 Drew street boasts an impressive collection of professional figures, including William Knowles, longstanding bank manager of CIBC, and E.P Hodgins, principal of Woodstock Collegiate Institute and is currently home to the former proprietors of Currah’s Farm Store, and Woodstock Home Hardware, and of Currah and Company Interior Design and Home Staging.

ARCHITECTURAL DISTINCTIONS

Described as the most elaborate and eccentric Victorian house styles, the Victorian Queen Anne utilizes technologies made less-expensive by the Industrial Revolution. Cut field stone foundation
Full 2-storey L shape, white brick with red brick accents above windows, horizontal parallel lines, dog tooth brick work under windows and along strung course. Gable roof with projecting eaves, decorative wooden vergeboard with center pendant post in gable end over 2 storey bay window, small floor under gable, Flat 1/1 flat double hung windows, A-symmetrical veranda, Original Stained glass window

THE CHARM OF YESTERDAY, WITH THE FUNCTIONALITY OF TODAY

You will be awestruck viewing the fourteen exceptionally large rooms, completed with pristine original trim work, unique ornate corner blocks, 10 foot ceilings, and flawless hardwood throughout. The original plaster walls have been restored and repainted in pleasant neutral tones. The building also boasts such modern amenities as copper wiring with 200 amp service, completed in 1996. Every bedroom, the kitchen, family room, and upstairs office has been wired with Telephone and Cable service. The supply plumbing has been updated with ¾" copper to most of the house. The structure is heated with a High Efficiency forced air gas furnace, and cooled with Central Air conditioning. The triple-brick design and original sash & pulley windows provide excellent insulation. You can live comfortably knowing that the entire roof, including the flat portion, was replaced in 2003. At that time, the chimney was rebuilt as well.
Forget lugging a vacuum cleaner upstairs, this house has a central vacuum system, equipped with two sets of attachments – one for each floor.

Step inside this wonderful home and be amazed!

For more information, to book a private tour, or to design a marketing plan for your own home, please contact:

Ben Sage, Sales Representative
Sutton Group – Right Way Real Estate (2007) Inc., Brokerage
Independently Owned and Operated
Brokerage: 519.539.6194
Agent Cell: 519.532.1295




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