Dabills wrote:
respectable prices are not at 6:1 to income, regardless the masses decide the price.
if those changes were to take place prices would fall and fall hard. who knows, changes will be made i do agree on that.
I think the issue with this blanket statement is you are mixing two different stats together to make it appear like a huge issue. It's always said you can't look at average prices or average incomes because one high or many lows will skew your statistics.
There aren't any home owners being approved for a house at 6:1 ratio in the GTA. It's not happening.. not even the Soprano's Savings & Loan would give that to you. You are seeing a top of 35% of gross based on current rates. Hardly 6:1.
In Vancouver you are also not seeing 6:1. You are seeing people with a lot of money buying high priced property, a lot of people with extremely low incomes renting. There is a middle tier as banks in BC *will* allow you to be approved for a higher mortgage based on a potential rental income from the property. Very few middle class in Vancouver are the sole occupants of their homes.
Basically, everyone that is living in a house today was approved at some point based on that 35% gross ratio (it varies by bank).
Here is another article I found today -- I believe it's the BMO report you mentioned earlier.
http://www.torontolife.com/daily/inform ... t-toronto/Quote:
A new report out from BMO Capital Markets suggests that Canada is in increasing danger of a housing price collapse—especially if prices keep going up. The good news for Toronto is that while other provinces are steadily inching closer to the danger zone, Ontario doesn’t seem to be.
...
By comparison, in Ontario, the price-to-income ratio is only 10 per cent higher than historic norms, suggesting prices are moderately overvalued but not in bubble territory.
Who do you know in Milton who was approved for a $600,000 mortage with 5% down and a household income of only $100,000?
At TD, that income with 5% down over 30 years with NO debt (no car payment, no loans, no credit card debt) would afford you a $450,000 mortgage. Still very high, but that sounds more like 4.5:1 than 6:1. And that's a best case example using the super low 5 year fixed posted rate (what is needed to qualify now).
I would say for the average home owner, it would be somewhere around $425k tops.