Thanks to Vancouver Journalist Kerry Gold for deciding to write about my 2023 Year-end Holiday Greeting Card and inviting me to offer some additonal thoughts on what might happen in the year ahead. Here is her Storeys.Com article
Predicting
what lies ahead for the year, whether it’s trends or prices, is a matter of
knowing what factors are at play, including the economy and government
policies.
As
a developer, real estate consultant, planner, retired architect and former
Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation official, Michael Geller has about 50
years of experience behind him. Each year he puts out an annual holiday card
with a list of housing ideas regarding policy changes that could generate
better design, more efficiency and affordability.
“I
call them predictions and sometimes they are aspirational,” says Geller.
Several
of Geller’s recommendations from 2021 and 2022 ended up as new provincial
legislation in 2023, including the call for “missing middle” multiplex housing
on single-family lots, reducing parking requirements, streamlining the
approvals process at city hall, eliminating the need for so many public
hearings, reducing the number of rezonings and overhauling the community
amenity contributions that developers must pay when they seek a rezoning.
Through a series of sweeping housing policy reforms, the Province enacted these
measures in some way, as part of an all-encompassing housing program last year.
This
year, he’s hoping his batch of ideas for 2024 also
catches the provincial government’s attention.
He
applauds the Province’s new fixed amenity cost charges, which replace the
negotiated community amenity contributions (CACs) and bring certainty to
projects; however, Vancouver’s fees are
still much higher than those in Toronto and Montreal. Such costs are
transferred to new buyers. Another recommendation is that the levels of
government stop seeking massive building density to generate revenues.
“I
really think we need to reconsider trying to generate revenues at the municipal
level by almost encouraging people to build larger buildings so the
municipalities can then collect more CACs,” he says.
“People
think, ‘Oh if you allow a bigger building it will be more affordable.’ Well,
some will be, but it doesn’t work that way.”
If
a building gets upzoned from a floor space ratio of 2 to 4, for example, that
re-sets the price of the land, he says. From thereon, a developer will pay more
for the site because of that added density.
“Because
at the end of the day, you go to the butcher and buy steak by the pound and
developers buy property by the square foot.”
He
also calls for a two-tier system of taxing residential properties so that
multi-family units are taxed at a lower rate than detached houses. He’d like to
see housing mixed with light industrial to open up industrial land. He
forecasts that intergenerational home sharing will become a huge trend this
year with several home-sharing platforms already
underway, such as Common.com, Nesterly, Sparrow Share, HomeSharingBC.ca and
SpacesShared, to name a few.
“You
watch, that will eventually become a big story,” says Geller, who’ll be
speaking on the topic at an upcoming Toronto housing conference. “When I was at
university and when I had my first job, I shared accommodation…. It’s kind of
like WeWork concept but applied to residential accommodation.”
His
other ideas include policy that makes it easier to incorporate highly efficient
manufactured housing into building design, and approvals for individually owned
rowhouses (called fee-simple). As well, he’d like to see cities offer density
bonuses to protect character houses that are vulnerable to redevelopment,
especially with multiplexes now approved in single-family zones.
Vancouver
realtor and investor Bryan Yan enjoys making predictions and for the last
several years, his predictions have turned out accurate by year’s end.
In
2021, he predicted that detached house prices would go up in Metro Vancouver by
15% in 2022, which they did. In 2022, he predicted price drops for early 2023
of 10%, which also played out.
This
year, he says, buyers and sellers don’t need predictions — they should just use
prime interest rates as a guide.
The
overnight rate determines the prime rate for the lenders. He says history has
shown that if the Bank of Canada rate comes down, prices will eventually go up.
He cites Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver data from 1994 to 2003 that
show price increases of detached houses and condos stayed flat when prime
interest rates averaged 6.3% over a 10-year span.
But
from February 2009 to June 2016, when the prime rate was at 2.66%, the market
saw a 147% price increase.
And
from January 2020 to May 2022, the prime rate of 2.825% triggered a 43.5% price
increase.
Once
the rate got up to 6% from May 2022 to January 2023, prices dropped 13.5%.
“When
the prime rate is around 3% and below, expect huge returns well over 10-15%.
Above a 6% prime rate, expect flat to negative returns. If the prime rate is
between 4 and 5%, the prices will appreciate about 5-10%. Currently, the prime
rate is a whopping 7.2%.
“Basically,
regardless of the foreign buyers’ ban or immigration numbers,
it’s interest rates that affect everybody, even though it doesn’t really affect
people with assets and a lot of money,” says Yan. “They are buying any time.
Based on Statistics Canada, the people who bought 50% of the condos and 13% of
houses last year were buying investments, so they are looking at their return
on investment… places like downtown Vancouver or Burnaby, the rents are good,
they can cover most of the mortgage.”
Royal
LePage’s annual market survey forecast for
2024 predicts a modest year-over-year increase of 3% for the Vancouver region,
bringing the aggregate price of a home to $1,281,732. A detached house will see
a median price increase of 2.5%, at $1,778,785, and the median price of a condo
will go up 4%, to $795,808. Meanwhile, Canada will see an aggregate home price
increase of 5.5% by the fourth quarter.
Their
report says interest rates will guide prices. Higher interest rates will “keep
a lid on price appreciation, even as activity picks up.”
Hani
Lammam, Executive Vice President of Cressey Development Group, says prices will
continue to go up if people can afford to pay those prices, whether it’s
monthly rent or mortgage payments.
“The
market is pretty quiet right now, but not because of demand,” he says. “There
is a lot of demand in the marketplace, but it is a bit of a stalemate, where
the purchaser thinks prices will drop and the seller is saying, ‘No, there is a
ton of demand and I can wait, I’m in no rush to sell.’ They are not in
distress. The reality is, I don’t think prices will come down, I’m just not
sure if they will go up.”
His
prediction is that it will be a quiet first six months, then the market will
start to pick up in the fall by the third or fourth quarter.
“Unique
projects will sell, but those generic offerings will struggle,” says Lammam.
“There’s a dozen of them in Brentwood. Most of that stuff gets sold to
investors, which is not bad. It takes four to five years to build — no end user
would buy it. They are bought by investors making a bet that by the time this
thing is built, it will be worth more than they bought it for. That’s the
motivation. Or ‘I buy at a good price today and rent it and down the road, I
make a return.’ So, investors are the ones buying in those big projects and if
they can envision an upside, they will continue to buy.”
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