shawnrk1 wrote:
RichardAndLiz wrote:
So what happens when it does go down 10%? Arent more people going to want to buy now that its cheaper and thus increase demand on that cheaper house and create a bidding war pushing the price back up at least 10%?
Only way I can see prices going down is if the GTA starts losing people like in Detroit. Can you give me an example on how this may happen?
I just dont see the GTA going down in population.
Do you remember the last housing crash we had? Short lived & as soon as it was over new record high prices.
That's why paranoia over bubbles is just paranoia. In long haul prices keep going up and there is no way a home next year is ever go to be long term cheaper than a home decades ago.
Too many external factors.
This was because paranoia hit over the US situation -- everyone retracted. Builders halted new construction, people living on the edge listed their homes quickly etc. Quickly, Canadians realized that although we were very affected, we weren't nearly in the same situation. Quickly people looked to themselves and said "hey, I still have my job! It's not going anywhere anytime soon" to which caused them to quickly say "hey, look at the prices of these houses.. and look how cheap mortgage money is now! It's a great time to get into the market/upsize/downsize" etc.
So the market came back furiously. Add to that many fence sitters were forced to buy sooner rather than later to blanket them against the coming HST implementation which would mean a more expensive house.
Low interest. Less taxes. Cheaper prices. = strong market.
Then what happened in the new build segment was that many builders had hit the panic button and halted production which actually left a bit of a shortage on new homes right at the point the market was running full tilt which lent to less supply vs. higher demand.
The same thing is happening again right now as builders have dropped new home starts in anticipation of the end of the real-estate run up. (Although nobody has told the condo segment this yet). Builders are pretty darn smart.. they work in waves and they know when to cut supply, focus on acquiring new land, commercial development etc. when they feel the real estate demand is decreasing. They wait until the right moment, then unleash the fury once again. By doing this, they ensure a healthy market and top profits for themselves. It makes no sense to whack out hundreds of thousands of units only to sell them for 5% profit.
Unfortunately in the United States, this didn't happen as there was an endless supply of people with signed mortgage papers in hand thanks to the greed of the many banks and private lending institutions. If your a builder and there are lineups of people offering you 20-30-40% profit on your builds with bank approval, you aren't going to turn them down. Unfortunately, now those builders are likely in for a very long time without growth as the massive amount of over supply is taken care of (if that's even possible).