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Tracking foreign buyers in Canada’s housing boom: Can we do it? Should we even care?

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imageA third of people buying homes in Canada may be foreigners, says one real estate company. A leading economist says the number isn’t even 5%. The country’s housing agency says it has no idea what the actual number is.

CMHC leaves out question of foreign condo investors, but economist says it’s only 5%


A survey of Canada’s two largest condominium markets by the country’s housing agency has failed to answer the question many observers have been asking: How many foreign buyers are in the market?

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There is no definitive answer to the persistent question about how much of the current Canadian housing boom is being driven by overseas buyers — as some eyes focus sharply on Mainland China.

Even at Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., the percentage of foreign ownership in the Canadian housing market is a deep mystery. CMHC avoided the issue entirely this month, when it released a massive survey of more than 42,000 Canadian condominium households in Vancouver and Toronto.

“At this point in time, it is still very difficult to identify [overseas investors] as part of the survey,” said Bruno Duhamel, manager of economic and housing analysis at CMHC. “We are exploring what type of method could be used.”

The real issue may be even if we can pinpoint the number of people from outside Canada buying residential property, should we care? Canada has no restrictions on foreign property ownership and the federal government said as recently as last year it has no plans to implement any restrictions.

“If we are talking about people with connections to another country, it’s meaningless. I’m surprised it’s only 33% if it’s just a connection,” says Benjamin Tal, deputy economist with CIBC, referring to a survey by Vancouver brokerage Macdonald Realty that found of its 531 single family sales in 2013, 178 or 33.5%, were to buyers from Mainland China.

The Macdonald Realty results were produced by someone going through the transactions and identifying names the the company identified as Chinese, meaning the buyers may very well have been established Canadian citizens.

Mr. Tal’s own analysis, which he based on the CMHC data, information obtained from developers and his own bank’s business, suggests foreign investment is less than 5% of the condominium market in Toronto and Vancouver.

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“It’s a solid market,” said Mr. Tal about the overseas buyers. “We are talking about people who are putting down 45%-50%. They are not getting CMHC mortgage insurance [backed by the federal government].”

So why all the fear and loathing about overseas buyers?

“I think ‘foreign’ sounds risky,” said Mr. Tal. “You ask people about them and it’s like ‘they’re the bubble, there is going to be a crash when they leave’.”

But demand can fuel price increases. If you feel housing prices are rising too fast, a high percentage of overseas buyers driving the market may be a legitimate gripe, concedes the economist.

Brian Johnston, chief operating officer of home builder Mattamy Homes, says the so-called foreign buyer fear has always been overstated. “A lot of the capital comes from overseas, but the buyers are residents. There is also the phenomenon whereby someone (generally from Asia) gets their Canadian passport and then returns to their country of origin to make the real money (and taxed at much lower rates). Meanwhile, they have bought real estate here.”

I think ‘foreign’ sounds risky… You ask people about them and it’s like ‘they’re the bubble, there is going to be a crash when they leave’
But even if you wanted to “crack down” on foreign buyers it would not be easy.

“You may buy a place for family members or for investment purposes or for both reasons,” says Finn Poschmann, vice-president of the Toronto-based C.D. Howe Institute. “When you’re buying for family members, who are potential future residents, it may look like foreign ownership and in practice the person is going to be there. How one makes sense of that in a statistical context is not at all obvious.”

The only agency that tracks foreign money is FINTRAC, the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada. The agency, which reports to the the Minister of Finance, is geared to towards policing money laundering.

“That [money laundering] is not necessarily an issue at all when it comes to new home or condo buyers,” said Mr. Poschmann. “We haven’t devised in Canada a system for aggregating this information [on foreign ownership], and under the current system I’m not sure it can be done. And, if we did have it, I’m not sure what we would do.”

Tsur Somerville, an associate professor with the University of British Columbia Centre for Urban Economics and Real Estate, said his worry is the people who buy units and then don’t occupy them.

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“That really pushes up the demand for land without satisfying the people who reside here,” said Mr. Somerville. “Then you get people who occupy, but do it sporadically; it’s essentially a vacation property.”

Taken to its extreme, you can end up with the complaint you might hear in a resort town such as Whistler, B.C.: People who work there can’t live there because it’s so expensive.

One method to try to determine how many people are living in the units they own might be to track hydro use, said Mr. Somerville. “It was done in the past and it was found, it was not as high as people thought.”

He concedes the percentage of people who can afford to own a unit in city such as Vancouver and leave it empty is likely small. “I think it’s a huge percentage of relatives of the top end of the Communist Party in China, but not a huge percentage of the market,” said Mr. Somerville.

Restricting this type of activity could be controversial because it would mean the government is effectively forcing you to live in your home. “You know from a municipal standpoint nothing could be better than these people. They pay taxes and don’t demand any services,” said Mr. Somerville.

It may possible to do something akin to what Florida has whereby non-state residents pay higher property taxes. You could then turn around and tell people if you show you’re renting the property, you get a tax break.

Dan Scarrow, vice-president of Macdonald Realty, said his company’s survey found few people who had no connection to the city — meaning they were neither an immigrant or citizen.

“There is very, very little pure foreign investment where the people have no connection to the city whatsoever,” said Mr. Scarrow. “The worry is these are new immigrants who made their fortunes back in China and bring their fortunes to Vancouver.”

There is also a fear the whole debate is just an example of xenophobia, he said.

“I think it’s been blown out of proportion because there has been an impact in certain pockets of Vancouver,” said Mr. Scarrow. “Even so, the issue is there no realistic solution I can see.”

Mortgage rate drop means housing more affordable this spring RBC study finds Vancouver and Toronto still the least affordable

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real-estate-for-sale-sign-20140616Housing across Canada became more affordable in the second quarter of this year because mortgage rates dropped, according to a report from RBC.

Even with prices moving higher, homes became more affordable in nearly every market across Canada, according to RBC’s Housing Trends and Affordability Report.

The least affordable markets were Toronto and Vancouver, where hot competition for properties kept home ownership out of reach for most buyers, despite a marginal improvement in the quarter. Vancouver is the least affordable market with sky-high prices, especially for single family homes.

Most other cities saw housing affordability remain around historic averages, RBC said.

But new buyers in the quarter were treated to lower fixed-rate mortgages than they could have found a year ago, as banks reacted to falling bond yields.

That’s not a situation that will remain, RBC warns. Long-term rates are expected to move higher later this year in anticipation of the Bank of Canada’s move to tighten policy in 2015.

Rising rates would erode housing affordability across Canada and reduce demand, said Craig Wright, senior vice-president and chief economist. However he expects a slow rise in rates will lead to soft landing for housing.

“We remain of the view that any rise rates will be gradual and unlikely to unhinge either overall affordability levels or the market — we expect a cooling in activity, not a crash,” Wright said in a statement.

Wright points to the rebound in sales activity in May and June that resulted in a 9.4 per cent seasonally adjusted advance in the volume of sales for the quarter. It was the strongest quarterly gain in nearly four years.

“We had anticipated a rebound in activity from earlier this year when the harsher than normal winter weather took hold, but the biggest drop in fixed mortgage rates in almost four years and resulting improvement in affordability also gave the Canadian housing market a boost of extra energy,” he said.

New listings also surged by eight per cent.

The RBC Housing Affordability measure, which has been compiled since 1985, is based on the calculated costs of owning a detached bungalow at market value, but also is used to measure the cost of condos and two-storey homes.

Is inflating income, lying on credit applications OK? – Consult with a Vancouver Mortgage Broker

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mortgage.jpg.size.xxlarge.letterboxTen per cent of Canadians surveyed say it’s okay to inflate your income when applying for a mortage, according to a new survey by credit reporting agency Equifax. DREAMSTIME

Ten per cent of Canadians surveyed say it’s okay to inflate your income when applying for a mortgage, according to a new survey by credit reporting agency Equifax.

And 9 per cent say they have lied on credit card or mortgage applications.

The numbers came as a shock to Equifax officials, given that the July survey of 1,500 Canadians was really aimed at gauging their concerns about protection of personal data.

“We hadn’t asked the question before,” says Tim Ashby, vice president of personal solutions for Equifax Canada.

“It’s a bad strategy,” stressed Ashby, noting that lying on any credit applications is a form of fraud. “Obviously it’s not sustainable. It means that people are concerned about their ability to get a mortgage. We definitely want to counsel Canadians to work within their means and approach their debts with financial responsibility.”

The survey also disclosed that only 23 per cent of Canadians know their credit score, and just 26 per cent knew their credit rating at the time they applied for a mortgage. That’s despite the fact a good credit score can be a major negotiating tool in getting lower interest rate mortgages from financial institutions.

A bad score — especially one you find out unexpectedly, as you’re down to the wire trying to close an offer on a house — can be crippling.

“We hear story after story of people who pull their credit report and find there are things on there (such as unpaid bills that belong to others) that shouldn’t be on there. To find that out in front of your mortgage broker can be a really unpleasant surprise.”

Mortgage broker Joe Sammut called the fact anyone would inflate their income “disturbing” and stressed that Canadian lenders have “multiple layers of safety caches in place” to make sure such claims are caught, especially in the wake of the U.S. housing meltdown, much of which was caused by overlending and applicants not even having to file proof of income.

“I’ve had people call me and say, ‘I make $80,000, but my employer is willing to write a letter saying I make $120,000.’ There are websites where you can get fake employment letters and pay slips. There are people out there willing to commit fraud, but it’s very minimal and I suspect it’s on the decline.”

Here in Canada, where lending rules are tougher than they have been in the States, mortgage applicants have to hand over T4 tax slips, employment letters and other documentation as proof of income before money changes hands, said broker Jake Abramowicz.

“Most people who call me say, ‘I don’t know what I can afford. Here’s what I make.’ I’ve never had anyone say, ‘Here’s what I want to afford, how much do I need to make?’

“It’s impossible to lie on your income these days — it would boggle my mind that someone would think they could do it.”

Abramowicz said he’s had the odd new doctor or lawyer come to his office, saying they make $80,000 today and will be making $400,000 in a few years.

“I just tell them to come back and see me then.”

The Equifax survey also found that 79 per cent of respondents are more concerned than ever about protection of their personal information.

Some 81 per cent believe that lenders should be doing more to protect their personal information, so they aren’t at risk of fraud and identity theft, one of the fastest growing crimes.

According to police, identity theft costs the Canadian economy about $2.5 billion in losses every year and the total number of victims grew by 14 per cent in 2013, says Ashby.

It’s become such big business that Equifax now has a suite of products which, for about $15 a month, will provide regular credit scores and reports to consumers so they can track if anyone is applying for credit cards or mortgages in their name.

(By law, Canadians are entitled to a credit report as often as they like, but it can take two weeks to come by mail. To get it immediately from Equifax costs $23.)

Equifax Canada is even considering whether to join its U.S. counterparts in offering family credit rating protections to try to curtail the growing trend of identity theft among children — fraudsters who are using children’s social insurance and other sometimes easily obtainable information.

It’s known in the industry as “synthetic fraud” — using a child’s real name, but altering their age and other details so an 8-year-old may appear to be a 35-year-old, says Ashby.

It can take years until parents even realize their child’s ID has been used to fraudulently obtain credit cards or other loans.

Housing sales in July highest since early 2010

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Web+-+housingSales of existing homes rose for the sixth month in a row in July, hitting their highest level since March 2010, as some of the country’s softer real estate markets sprung to life.

Cities such as Montreal, Ottawa, Victoria, Winnipeg and Halifax received a sales boost from June on a seasonally adjusted basis, even as activity softened in Toronto, Calgary and Vancouver.

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“This latest crop of statistics on Canada’s housing market indicates that upward momentum is being sustained at this point, and that any slowing in activity will have to wait a little longer,” Royal Bank of Canada economist Robert Hogue wrote in a research note Friday.

Overall, the number of existing homes that changed hands in Canada last month was up 7.2 per cent from a year earlier, according to the Canadian Real Estate Association, which represents realtors. Sales activity so far this year is now 4.7-per-cent higher than during the same period last year, and in line with the average level for the past decade.

The sales numbers come after Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. ratcheted up its outlook for Canadian home sales, prices and construction earlier this week, with economists saying that lower-than-expected mortgage rates are fuelling the market.

Friday’s data prompted Mr. Hogue to bolster his outlook, saying he now expects sales to rise 2.1 per cent this year and prices to rise 4.3 per cent (he previously forecast gains of 0.8 per cent and 3.4 per cent respectively). “The national market’s performance has been stronger than we expected so far this year,” he wrote. “We still project home resales to decline slightly in 2015 nationwide [by 0.9 per cent], and prices to decelerate substantially [to a gain of 1.1 per cent]. Outright price declines are likely to occur after 2015, when we expect higher levels of condo completions to match up against cooler homebuyer demand.”

The average sales price in July was 5 per cent higher than a year earlier, at $401,585. Excluding Vancouver and Toronto from the mix, average prices rose 4 per cent to $327,988.

The MLS Home Price Index, which tries to measure prices while removing factors that can distort the average – such as higher sales in more expensive markets – was up by about the same amount as the average, posting a 5.3-per-cent gain.

Price growth had been 5.4 per cent in June. It picked up in July for detached homes and townhouses, and was a bit slower for apartments or condos. Calgary, Toronto and Vancouver continued to show the strongest annual price increases.

Toronto-Dominion Bank economist Leslie Preston noted that price growth were uneven. Only Calgary and Toronto, with year-over-year gains of 10.5 per cent and 7.9 per cent respectively, saw prices rise more than average, Ms. Preston wrote in a research note. Prices in Vancouver were up 4.4 per cent. “Elsewhere, price trends in Regina [-1.6 per cent], Ottawa [0 per cent], Montreal [+0.5 per cent], the Fraser Valley [+1.3 per cent] and Saskatoon [+1.3 per cent] are all below the rate of inflation,” she wrote.

“However, existing home prices [average and on a quality-adjusted basis] are on track to outstrip income growth for a second straight year in 2014, which adds to concerns about an already-overpriced market,” she added. “Affordability, even at low interest rates, has become an obstacle in many markets. This contributes to our view the Canadian housing market will cool later this year and into 2015 as interest rates are likely to nudge higher.”

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Canada’s most expensive housing market not headed for crash, says credit agency DBRS

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house-sale1A leading credit rating agency says Canada’s most expensive housing market may not be all that affordable for the average family, but despite that no major correction is coming Vancouver’s way.

DBRS  looked at 39 markets in Canada, the United States and Australia, releasing its focus feature on Vancouver Wednesday.

“Based on historical data, the Vancouver market does not appear to be significantly overheated,” said DBRS, in the report. “Therefore, a correction of any magnitude may not be justified given the strong fundamentals in the market.”

This month the real estate board of Greater Vancouver said June competition among homebuyers was as strong as it had been since  2011.

Property sales in the region were up 28.9% in June from a year ago while the average sale price of detached home reached $1,200,539.

DBRS acknowledged there are affordability issues and said home prices continue to rise faster than disposable income, “threatening the affordability of housing for many Canadian families” in the market.

DBRS says given the stable economy and the low interest rate environment that could persist for the foreseeable future, it’s hard to envision a correction.

“It is difficult to foresee catalyst that could create a significant price correction in the Vancouver housing market over the medium term,” said DBRS.

In its study, DBRS noted from 1994-1998, Vancouver did have a correction and prices dropped 9% from peak to trough. From 2008-2013, prices increased 1.7% annually through this post recession period. It is over the last year that prices have rebounded with a 9% gain, said DBRS.

The ratings agency also stressed Vancouver has natural barriers that limit development in the city and controlled supply.

At the same time, DBRS says the quality of living in Vancouver is not a factor to be ignored in continued long-term demand.

“Vancouver’s status as one of the Canadian cities with the highest quality of living helps ensure continual population growth, says DBRS. “The city’s diversity and year-round mild weather help attract immigrants, thus keeping demand for housing high.

The agency offered shorter comment on other Canadian cities.

In Calgary, it says a well-paid work force has kept the housing market strong as the city has avoided a worldwide economic recession with its oil and gas economy. DBRS said continued development of new home supply has keep prices stable and it expects more of the same even if the Alberta economy slows down.

In Montreal, DBRS noted its housing price index saw declines from 1990-99 but is up 150% since then. “Housing prices haven’t been strongly impacted by the financial crisis and exhibit a stable, upward trend,” the agency said.

In Toronto, DBRS say restrictions on development allowing it to “expand up but not out” have helped maintain upward pressure on prices.

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Welcome to the world’s most expensive apartment: $440-million penthouse comes with chauffeur, caterer and infinity pool

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france_tour_odeonEven by the sky-high standards of Monaco, a penthouse at the top of the Odeon Tower is set to fetch a vertiginous price, according to developers.

Tour Odeon, which is under construction and when finished will be the principality’s first skyscraper since the Eighties, will be topped with a five-floor penthouse that would cost a potential owner 300-million euros ($440-million), making it the most expensive in the world.

 

 

 

www.odeon.mc
www.odeon.mcTour Odeon will be Monaco’s first skyscraper since Prince Rainier banned tall buildings on the shoreline
to avoid overshadowing the city.

The penthouse will have several swimming pools, including a large infinity pool with a slide leading from a dance floor in the rooms above.

www.odeon.mc
www.odeon.mcThe world’s most expensive penthouse towers forty-nine stories above Monaco, offering the principality’s latest breed of ultra-wealthy transients a place to flash their bling and still enjoy secrecy.

The 35,000 square-foot apartment will also come with a private chauffeur, a caterer, three staff bedrooms, a 24-hour concierge service and access to a health centre.

Tour Odeon, which will house 36 more luxury flats, will be Monaco’s first skyscraper since Prince Rainier banned tall buildings on the shoreline to avoid overshadowing the city. Instead he encouraged the development of wider, lower buildings built on an extension into the sea. His decision was reversed in 2009 by his son and successor, Prince Albert, and plans for the 560-foot Tour Odeon were drawn up.

www.odeon.mc
www.odeon.mcThe view from a kitchen in an apartment in the Odeon Tower. So far, 26 flats have been sold.

One in three of Monaco’s 38,000 residents is a millionaire, according to a study by Spear’s magazine and WealthInsight.
Irene Luke, of Savills, the estate agency, who moved to Monaco in 1990 from London, said it was becoming increasingly popular with wealthy Britons.

“It’s becoming more and more like London by the sea,” she said.

www.odeon.ms
www.odeon.msThe master bedroom in an Odeon Tower apartment. One in three of Monaco’s 38,000 residents is a millionaire.

Tax changes in some areas of Switzerland are also “making Monaco look like a very safe, stable place,” Miss Luke added.

The penthouse is expected to go on the market next year. So far, 26 flats have been sold.

Tax Season Average Canadian house price up 5% to $401,585, CREA says With Toronto, Vancouver out of equation, average home worth $327,988

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hi-housing-realtor-8colThe average price of a Canadian home was $401,585 in July, a five per cent rise compared to last year.

The Canadian Real Estate Association repeated its claim that booming sales in the large, pricey markets of Vancouver and Toronto are skewing the national average higher.

If those two cities are stripped out of the equation, the average Canadian home is worth $327,988 and the year-over-year increase shrinks to four per cent.

Sales hit a high

The real estate market is going strong, based on the number of houses being sold.

Sales have been climbing steadily — rising slightly for the sixth consecutive month.

July marks the highest level of home sales since March 2010, the agency said. Sales activity was 7.2 per cent higher than the same month a year ago.

Increases in sales activity for July also grew in markets such as Victoria and Winnipeg, and the Ontario markets of Ottawa, London and St. Thomas.

“On the surface, national sales activity in July was similar to what we saw in May and June,” said CREA president Beth Crosbie. “That said, July sales picked up in markets that struggled to gain traction in the spring, while activity eased slightly in some of Canada’s largest urban markets.”

This growth shift from Calgary, Toronto and Vancouver to other regions of Canada could indicate a future trend.

“This could mark the start of less regional diversity in housing markets, which saw strength generally in the Western provinces and weakness in Central and Atlantic Canada (except Toronto),​” Sal Guatieri, senior economist​ at BMO Capital Markets.

“The renewed momentum in Canada’s housing market in recent months represents both a bounce back from weather-related weakness over the winter months and a response to lower mortgage rates,” said Leslie Preston of TD Economics.

“Potential buyers who may have sat on the sidelines last year as interest rates rose, are being enticed back to the market by lower interest rates. Meanwhile, a strengthening in economic growth continues to support the fundamental demand in the housing market.”

Market may cool off

This growth spurt may not last much longer.

TD Economics believes that the Canadian housing market will cool later this year and into the next.

Preston says existing home prices “…are on track to outstrip income growth for a second straight year in 2014, which adds to concerns about an already-overpriced market.”

She adds that a likely increase in interest rates and the added supply of new homes currently under construction are expected to weigh on prices as well.

Until this happens however, Guatieri remains concerned with THE upward climb of prices in Calgary, Toronto and Vancouver.

“While there will always be condos to satisfy the demand for reasonably affordable housing in these cities, the widening gap in prices versus detached homes means that a lot of young, growing families will be forced to live the condo lifestyle for much longer than they intend.”

Vancouver housing data reveal Chinese connection – ask a Vancouver mortgage broker

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imageThe Globe’s Real Estate Beat offers news and analysis on the Canadian housing market. Read more on The Globe’s housing page.

One of the largest real estate companies in British Columbia says that more than one-third of all the single-family detached homes it sold last year went to people with ties to mainland China.

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MARKET VIEW Video: Market view: Does Toronto face a condo ‘supply deluge’? Macdonald Realty Ltd., which has over 1,000 agents and staff in B.C., said 33.5 per cent of the 531 single family homes sold by its Vancouver offices in 2013 went to people who the company said were a mix of recent immigrants and Canadian citizens.

Those buyers, the company added, tended to spend more money, too, with the average cost of a house sold to these clients topping $2-million, compared to $1.4-million on average overall.

The figures did not include Macdonald’s sales in suburban areas such as Richmond, Burnaby or North Vancouver.

“This is our snapshot of Vancouver,” says Dan Scarrow, vice-president of corporate strategy at Macdonald Realty.

The information is based on reports from the firm’s sales, anecdotes from its agents and Mr. Scarrow’s own experience working with mainland Chinese clients, and it’s a glimpse into the influence of mainland Chinese money on Vancouver’s real estate market, which is considered among the most expensive in North America.

Vancouver has been flooded in recent years by tens of thousands of investor-class immigrants from mainland China, who have seen the west coast city as a stable – and picturesque – place to park their capital in luxury property.

That has helped drive up the average price of a single-family home in Vancouver to around $1.2-million.

Mr. Scarrow, who noted the firm does not query buyers about immigration status, believes that investment flowing from mainland China into Vancouver real estate is a quantifiable phenomenon, but has not personally seen much of the more controversial type of buyer: Those from abroad who buy for investment purposes but never live in the city. “We still see very few pure investors from China who have no connection to Vancouver,” he says.

Getting a handle on foreign buyers is difficult and Macdonald’s survey is far from exact – though one major property developer in Richmond said “that sounds about right.” The federal government does not collect meaningful data on the number of foreign buyers purchasing Canadian real estate, leaving industry participants to debate the impact of foreign capital on the local market. And that debate has gotten heated recently, with some developers accusing others of racism and criticizing those who want to slap curbs on foreign investment. The issue is complicated by the fact that some of Vancouver’s ethnically Chinese-Canadian citizens with ties to Hong Kong view newer immigrants from mainland China with a degree of suspicion, assuming their wealth might have been accumulated in part by proximity to China’s Communist Party, rather than in a free market with the rule of law like Hong Kong.

The lack of hard data has also complicated discussions about the city’s affordability crisis and fuelled a local cottage industry where analysts attempt to decipher the scope of foreign money by looking at things like electricity usage in downtown neighbourhoods where some suspect foreign buyers have bought condos in which they never live.

“People always say there are no stats. Well, here are the stats,” says Mr. Scarrow. “This is actual evidence.”

There have been some reports and statistics about the scale of foreign money in Vancouver real estate before, but few have been conclusive – and none have settled the debate. One Sotheby’s report based on a survey of its agents found that 40 per cent of the luxury properties it sold in Vancouver were to foreign buyers – but not all of them were from China. Many developers trying to downplay fears about Chinese investment cite a statistic showing that only 1 to 3 per cent of Vancouver real estate purchases are “foreign” buyers – but, as is the case with Macdonald’s sales, many more expensive homes are still sold to people based here but who have come, at some point, from mainland China. A 2011 study by Landcor Data showed that 74 per cent of luxury purchases in Richmond and Vancouver’s expensive west side were by buyers with mainland Chinese names.

Mr. Scarrow says his company is “indicative of the overall market,” since his firm has some real estate agents who target overseas Chinese buyers, but is also firmly oriented toward domestic sales, unlike other real estate firms that deliberately target Chinese buyers.

At the same time, Mr. Scarrow and Macdonald are so bullish on the potential for Chinese investment that he is spearheading the company’s efforts to open an office in China. “While there is very little data about foreign investors in Vancouver real estate, our own internal data is enough for us to commit to investing in a representative office in Shanghai,” said Mr. Scarrow, whose mother Lynn Hsu, who came from Taiwan in 1979, is the majority owner and president of Macdonald.

Others remain unconvinced – not about whether there is an influx of Chinese money, but whether the flow of foreign capital will continue unabated.

Richard Kurland, a Vancouver immigration lawyer who works with wealthy Chinese immigrants, believes Vancouver may see a slowdown in foreign investment. He said some wealthy Chinese buyers might get anxious and sell off second properties because of the current crackdown on corruption in China.

In meetings with top real estate agents earlier this year, Mr. Kurland predicted that luxury residential real estate could drop in value by as much as 25 per cent as foreign investment dips. As evidence, he points to July real estate figures that showed 106 homes for sale on the west side in the $3-million to $3.5-million price bracket, and just nine sales, compared to 73 active listings and seven sales during July of 2013.

Follow Iain Marlow on Twitter: @iainmarlow

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How parents can help their adult children buy a house- ask a Vancouver mortgage broker

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imageWhere there’s a will, there’s a way for parents to help their adult children buy a house.

That’s will as in last will and testament. In the kind of extremely expensive real estate market we have in many cities, maybe what your adult children need is a sweetheart deal from Mom and Dad. Maybe pass the house down in your will, or sell it at a bargain price to a son or daughter.

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Graham Williams, partner at the accounting firm Stern Cohen, doesn’t think much of this latter idea. “We can’t remember a case where we recommended a client sell their home to their adult children,” he wrote in e-mail. “We hate to disappoint the many millennials out there who are currently priced out of the housing market, but from an accountant’s perspective it might not be a financially sound solution.”

One of Mr. Williams’s objections is that you’re wasting the biggest opportunity of your lifetime to make a big investing gain tax-free. A house, as long as it’s a principal residence, can be sold without having to pay tax. This is an especially important detail if your home has doubled or tripled in value in the decades you’ve owned it.

Another objection from Mr. Williams is that parents often need to maximize the proceeds from selling their home in order to downsize to a condo and perhaps have some money left over. One further objection is the family dissension that can be created when parents offer a sweetheart deal on the family home to one child and not others.

But, if you were so inclined, is it possible to help an adult child deke around high house prices by selling her the family home at a below-market price? Mr. Williams said the answer is yes, while offering up an alternative: Sell the house on the open market, downsize and then use some of the leftover money (if any) as a gift to the children. “There’s no gifting tax in Canada, so you can give cash to your kids – as much as you want,” he said in an interview.

Alternatively, if you do help your kids with a down payment for a house, consider designating the money as an interest-free mortgage that must be repaid when the home is sold (you can always forgive the loan if you want). Mr. Williams suggests consulting a family lawyer on this. The goal is that your gift won’t be considered matrimonial property if your adult child divorces his or her spouse.

This measure also gives parents some control if their adult kids unwisely sell their house to move up to something more expensive. “Basically, it means that if they sell the house, your kids have to pay you back the money you gave them,” Mr. Williams said.

Another thought: Pass your house down to your adult children in your will. Mr. Williams said a house would be considered as sold at fair market value on the death of the owner if willed to children directly or as beneficiaries of the estate. Even so, a home that is a principal residence would be exempt from tax in this situation.

Probate fees – they’re charged by provincial governments and cover the cost of validating a will – are likely to be triggered when including a home in a will, said Lucinda Main, a trust and estate lawyer with Beard Winter LLP. Probate fees are nominal in some provinces, but Ms. Main said in Ontario they would amount to $7,000 on a $500,000 house.

This explains probate-avoidance manoeuvres such as adding an adult child’s name on the title of a home. Ms. Main said an arrangement called joint ownership with right of survivorship is commonly used with spouses so that if one partner dies, the house automatically transfers to the other without probate. In turn, the surviving spouse might put her daughter jointly on title. The goal: A seamless transfer of the house to the daughter on the parent’s death, with no probate fees charged on the value of the house.

Ms. Main said she’s not a huge fan of parents and adult children owning a home jointly because of the potential complications. If parents want to sell or mortgage the house, they need the consent of their children. Also, the house could get caught in bankruptcy proceedings or a marriage breakup involving the children.

Adding one child on the title of your house presents fairness issues as well, Ms. Main said. “If you have one child on the title of a property, how do you deal with the other children? Do you try and equalize things in the will?”

Finding a way to transfer a house from parents to adult children is tricky for sure. But then, so is affording a home in today’s extremely expensive market.

Follow Rob Carrick on Twitter: @rcarrick

Five signs you are ready to take the home-buying plunge

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Self Employed

imageIt may seem obvious, with today’s low interest rates, high rents and a strong housing market: If you’ve got the money, buy now.

But how to know when you are truly ready to make the leap?

Not everyone who would like to buy is actually prepared, financially and emotionally. Real estate experts have recognized signs that indicate when someone is, and meeting those criteria can make the difference between frustration and success.

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You’re taking financial steps

The first sign, of course, is the financial foundation upon which a potential buyer can build.

“If they have already started saving toward a down payment, that is a great sign,” said Jeffrey Baker, a real estate agent with Sutton Group in Montreal. “They have either been saving aggressively over a certain length of time and given themselves a target for the amount that will be their down payment. Or they will have had a meeting with a financial adviser or bank, who has shown them the amount they can realistically spend.”

They also should meet with a mortgage broker and gain pre-approval. Although, as Austin Keitner of Keller Williams Realty in Toronto pointed out, “pre-approval doesn’t mean they’re actually looking at your credit rating but asking questions about your income, expenses and getting to know your ratios a little bit.”

A buyer may not get the final approval if his or her credit rating is not up to snuff. But, nonetheless, “if they don’t have that done by the time they are talking to me, I encourage them to do that. Especially in this market, you want to be ready. You want to be able to act fast,” Mr. Keitner said.

You are plotting your spending

Ability to budget is key. “A well-educated first-time buyer needs to know their budgets to know where they stand,” said Russell Westcott, vice-president of Vancouver-based Real Estate Investment Network.

The move itself as well as the fees and taxes and the costs of properly maintaining a house can add considerable amounts to the down-payment and mortgage. Apartment dwellers might not think about these expenses. Whether it’s a lawn mower or a new roof, Mr. Westcott said, “they have to figure out how much their housing expenses are going to be.”

Does the new house need renovations? “As a general rule, renovation projects will take three times longer than you thought they would,” Mr. Baker said, “and cost at least twice as much as you had budgeted.”

You know what you want

Is it a condo, a townhouse or a big, fully detached home? You should decide that before you start browsing the listings.

“Until you have looked at your budget, and talked to your mortgage broker, you can’t really even determine what type of property you should be looking at,” Mr. Westcott said. “And, does it fit with your lifestyle?”

Knowing the neighbourhood where you want to be is another part of that process. It may be trendy or offer great views, but does it mean a longer commute to work, for example, or have the services – schools, supermarkets and transport links – you need?

“The buyer should ideally know what community they want to be in,” said Mr. Keitner, who has on occasion been asked by clients whether they can lease a property for a year, instead of buying it outright, to see whether it’s the right fit for them.

Otherwise, your location choice might come back to bite. “If you end up leaving the house after a couple of years, you’re going to lose money on it,” he said. “Because after your moving costs, legal costs and so on, its sale is not going to compensate you through market growth.”

You know what you actually need

For Mr. Westcott, the fourth sign that new home buyers are ready to make a serious commitment is when they have “put the focus on what they need, not what they want. Three bedrooms, two bathrooms and an attached garage – those are needs,” he said. “A want would be high-end fixtures, granite countertops or a wine cellar.”

Would-be buyers are sometimes seduced by the “bling,” he added, “and all of a sudden the budget gets thrown out the window.”

Conversely, ignoring properties that meet all your needs but not your whims will only make the already complicated process of buying a new home more challenging.

You have tempered your expectations

The final sign you are ready to take the big step is when you realize that, as Mr. Keitner put it, “there is no such thing as a perfect house. I’ve never really seen a eureka moment where it’s, ‘Oh my God, this is the place where I need to live.’” Rather, he said, the home you buy and make your own becomes the home you love.

“You have to be prepared, as a first-time homebuyer, to temper your expectations,” Mr. Westcott agreed. “You are not going to get what you want and, if you are young, you’re not going to get the style and the quality of living that your parents have.”

What’s more, Mr. Keitner said, “there’s a risk that if people don’t act on properties that they can make work, prices continue to go up. So a decision based on emotion, rather than practicalities, can cost tens of thousands of dollars.”

However, losing a home that, in retrospect, would have been the right buy is also part of the education of home buying.

“My experience with first-time buyers,” Mr. Baker said, “is that they have to live the experience of a place getting away from them to realize that sometimes the market won’t wait for them.”

Buying your first house is probably one of the most difficult decisions you will ever make. But understanding the signs of the well-prepared homebuyer will go a long way in ensuring that it’s the right one.

Follow us on Twitter: @GlobeMoney


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