It's not just Toronto and Vancouver — Canada's housing bubble has gone national

Authored by cbc.ca and submitted by NineteenSixtySix
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When people picture red-hot real estate markets, they most likely think of soaring prices for the condos dotting Vancouver's skyline. They might also conjure up the bidding wars for massive mega-mansions in and around Toronto.

But they're likely not thinking about properties like Barb Armstrong's quiet bungalow in picturesque Perth Ont., about an hour southwest of Ottawa.

Even so, Armstrong's four bedroom, three-bath home was swept up into a bidding war worthy of any big city this month. It sold for $150,000 over her asking price of $529,900 —and the offer didn't come with any conditions.

"It was quite a shock to see that that amount of money was coming our way for sure," she said. "It was over our expectation and we were really blown away."

Front Burner 33:16 Winners and losers in Canada’s wild housing market A closer look at the flaming hot Canadian real estate market that has defied expectations, through the eyes of one woman struggling to buy her first home far out from the big city, and Bloomberg News reporter Ari Altstedter. 33:16

Armstrong and her husband were lukewarm on selling at first, but a realtor friend explained how hot the local real estate market had become, with families from Ottawa and even as far away as Toronto drawn to Perth by its comparative affordability and bucolic lifestyle.

"We thought, 'Well, jeepers, maybe we should go for it now," Armstrong said. The couple listed their home in mid March. Thirty-five viewings later, they had 11 offers on the table. She says she feels like they won the lottery.

WATCH | Barb Armstrong describes the frenzy of offer night:

Bidding wars in small towns, too CBC News 0:52 Barb Armstrong describes what it was like to sell her home in Perth, Ontario, recently, a frenzied process that ended up with here selling her home for $150,000 more than she was anticipating getting. 0:52

Half a country away, on Vancouver Island, Lars Reese-Hansen isn't surprised to hear about buyers taking their best shot at getting into the market, however they can. He sold his 60s-era single family home in the Comox Valley last fall, and planned to buy elsewhere in B.C. this spring.

He's looking to downsize into something newer with less maintenance as he heads into retirement but he can't find anything that fits the bill, even though he's casting a wide net and is willing to compromise.

"Most of the places that I requested to view are sold before I actually get a foot out the door," he said.

Reese-Hansen recently lined up four newly listed homes to see that he thought had potential. Just as he hopped in the car to drive down the highway to see them, his realtor called to say they were already gone.

Canada's housing market is indeed flush with cash at the moment, with the national average selling price hitting an all-time high of $678,091 in February. That's up more than 25 per cent from the same month last year, pre-pandemic.

Against all odds, the pandemic seems to have prompted a flurry of buying by Canadians spending more time at home than ever before.

While there's a perception that high prices are mostly a problem in big cities like Toronto and Vancouver, sales are booming just about everywhere, with bully offers becoming the norm.

Paul Martin, president of the Rideau St Lawrence Real Estate Board that covers Perth, Ont., where the Armstrongs live, says "the market just took off," last year.

"We've seen our property prices jump close to 50 per cent in the area," he said.

About a third of the new buyers are from Toronto, he says, despite the region being about three hours from the city. About half are from Ottawa, which is closer but still up to an hour away.

Realtor Paul Martin, who has been selling homes in the corridor between Toronto and Ottawa for more than 30 years, says he's never seen anything like what's happening right now. (Brian Morris/CBC)

One of the area's major draws is extra space as more people ponder permanently working from home.

Underpinning the frenzy are record low interest rates, which are lower than they've ever been , built on the back of Canada's central bank slashing its lending rate to practically zero to stimulate the economy out of COVID-19.

Economist Mike Moffatt, senior director at the Smart Prosperity Institute, an Ottawa-based think-tank, says low mortgage rates are key to what's happening, but they're not the only factor.

If it were just cheap lending, markets should be heating up fairly evenly across the country. But they're not. Some smaller towns an hour or more outside the orbit of large urban centres are faring better in real estate than some big cities.

Though he lives in Ottawa, Moffatt hails from southwestern Ontario and he says affordability issues were a problem there even before the pandemic because of supply and demand issues. The area's population was increasing largely from new immigrants and foreign students, and now pandemic-era low rates have poured gasoline on those fires.

"Cottage country places in southwestern Ontario — Woodstock, Ingersoll, Tillsonburg — those are the places seeing the big price increases," he said.

The numbers back that up. According to data from the Canadian Real Estate Association, prices in Owen Sound are up by 29 per cent in the year up to February 2021. They're up 39 per cent in Tillsonburg, by 36 per cent in Woodstock, and by 26 per cent in Guelph. All those markets have fared better than the Greater Toronto Area, where CREA's House Price Index has risen by about 14 per cent in the same time frame.

"It's fuelled by that the coupling of white-collar professionals who have a lot of money right now and globally low interest rates."

WATCH | Mike Moffatt explains why a hot housing market is bad for the economy:

Why high house prices are bad for the economy CBC News 0:26 Economist Mike Moffatt says high house prices are great for existing owners, but could be bad news for Canada's economy overall if new buyers are priced out. 0:26

Buyers in small towns are finding themselves priced out of their own markets because local salaries can't compete with the buying power of out-of-towners.

"We're going to have a lot of both political and economic problems if we price an entire generation of young families from ever owning a home," Moffatt said.

Back in B.C., the frenzy is so great that some people are resorting to buying without ever setting foot in their new homes. That's what happened to Ean Jackson and his wife Sibylle Tinsel. They recently sold their home in Vancouver and were looking to downsize somewhere farther afield.

The couple settled on the tiny community of Powell River, B.C., about 100 kilometres up the coast. They have friends in the area so it was always a long-term plan, but their home sale sped up their timeline.

There were few houses available when they started looking, and what was there was hard to see given pandemic restrictions. "We couldn't get up there in time to even see the place," Jackson said in an interview.

So they did what millions of Canadians did while shopping for consumer goods this year — they shopped online and hoped for the best.

Vancouverites Ean Jackson and Sibylle Tinsel recently sold their home and hoped to downsize to a smaller town, but were surprised by the lack of inventory and prices in a hot market. (Mike Zimmer/CBC)

Their realtor was able to give them a walkthrough of the interior and exterior via video, and they liked what they saw enough to put down an offer.

Though they are excited for this new chapter, it "all feels very awkward," Jackson said.

"It feels really strange. And we look at each other at dinner time just about every night and say, 'Did we do the right thing? … Did we get ripped off? Or is this going to work out?"

Ultimately Jackson says he knows the answer to that last question is yes because they love what the area has to offer, but he does feel for new young families trying to buy in at current levels.

"You save up for three or four years, you get the price that you think, and then the house just got twice as expensive," he said.

"I can't see this lasting, though. It's got to end sometime."

LookAcrossTheWater on April 5th, 2021 at 14:41 UTC »

I live in Cobourg, Ontario. A small town with about 19,000 people. I bought a house here 3 years ago for 365k. A house just like mine down the street sold a couple of weeks ago in a single day. Listed for 650k, sold for 780k. It's not normal for housing values to increase that much in only 3 years.

iToronto on April 5th, 2021 at 13:38 UTC »

To add to the problem, lumber prices are insane right now. New home construction just cost a whole lot more.

I use 2x3 lumber for small projects. I used to get them for just over $2 each. They are now over $6 each. CBC has a new article that says increased lumber prices are adding at least $30k to new home construction.

BelowTheBrae on April 5th, 2021 at 13:04 UTC »

Here in Nova Scotia I will confirm that people are flocking here, to a place rife with poverty, with essentially no jobs available at all, and house prices are rising by 10s of thousands month over month and in the larger areas (halifax particularly) homes are selling for hundreds of thousands over ask. Real estate "value" has become unhinged and a lot of these new buyers will fall flat on their faces when mortgage rates rise in the future, except if they were lucky enough to be buy with cash. Worse are the locals who need to compete with these buyers fleeing Ontario and BC/Alberta (in my experience this is where the bulk are coming from) by taking bigger mortgages than ever, but without the backing of high income job opportunities.

It seems a lot of the younger generation are praying for a crash, so demoralized that they are praying for things to fall apart so that prices return to Earth again. I fear a little that this building resentment for older generations and for government and for the general state of things cannot lead to a peaceful future here. I don't blame them... things are going to break down