Housing inventory at 20-year low, B.C. Real Estate Association says

[Source: CBC News, May 15, 2017] New data from the B.C. Real Estate Association (BCREA) shows housing supply in the province is at a 20-year low, and the association says that lack of supply is making the ongoing affordability problem worse. The BCREA, the provincial real estate professional association, says the supply of homes for sale is down 17 per cent from April 2016 and down 50 per cent since 2012 after adjusting for seasonal variance. "We're really in almost uncharted territory [...]

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Home Buying Costs

[Source: Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver, May 2017] If you’ve decided to buy a home, it’s important you understand all the costs involved in addition to the price you're paying for the property. Here’s an overview. Buying costs Mortgage application Lenders may charge a mortgage application fee, which will vary depending on the lending institution. If you are borrowing part of your down payment through the BC Home Owner Mortgage and Equity (HOME) Partnership Program, there will be additional fees. Mortgage insurance As of October 17, [...]

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Going big with smaller homes

[Source: The Province, May 11, 2017] When Statistics Canada released its 2016 census last week, two figures caught my eye. The first was the fact that for the first time, the number of older Canadians exceeded the number of younger ones. The second was the news that the population of families in the city of Vancouver is now in decline. What does this mean for our housing mix in Metro Vancouver? It goes without saying that vibrant communities need people of all [...]

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Vancouver’s final development frontier – False Creek Flats poised for office boom

[Source: BIV, May 16, 2017] Fifteen years after Finning International Inc. left the flats of False Creek, bequeathing 18.6 acres of its property on Great Northern Way to the University of British Columbia, Simon Fraser University, the British Columbia Institute of Technology and the Emily Carr University of Art and Design, the area is finally coming into its own as the office hub it was long intended to be. With more than 20 years of city planning fuelling a vision for [...]

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Ontario’s rent and housing reform: 16 big changes, explained in charts

[Source: The Globe and Mail, April 20, 2017] On Thursday, Ontario announced it would widen its rent-control rules and take pages from B.C.'s playbook to bring skyrocketing housing prices down. Here are the highlights. Rental housing What Ontario is doing: Expanding rent control to all private rental units Introduce legislation to strengthen the Residential Tenancies Act Making sure multiresidential apartment buildings are charged property taxes at similar rates to other residential properties A $125-million program over five years “to further encourage the construction of new rental [...]

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Remodel vs. Renovation: What’s the Difference?

[Source: Realtor.com, February 13, 2017] You say potato, I say potahto. Remodel vs. renovation … same thing, right? While the terms remodel and renovation are used interchangeably all the time, they are actually very different animals. So exactly what is the difference between a remodel and a renovation? The key difference is how deep the changes go. A renovation means you’re updating an existing structure with cosmetic changes, whereas a remodel involves changing the structure through demolition and construction, explains Jason [...]

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BC Election Checklist: where do parties stand on housing?

[Source: Metro, Apr 12 2017] As NDP leader John Horgan promised a $400 a year tax credit for renters, B.C.’s former minister responsible for housing was committing to help homeowners with a tax credit of up to $20,000 to create rental basement suites. Rich Coleman, BC Liberal candidate for Fort Langley-Aldergrove, made the comment during a panel event organized by the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver in New Westminster on April 12. Coleman appeared with David Eby, the BC NDP’s candidate [...]

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Pressure is growing for the Bank of Canada to raise interest rates

[Source: Maclean's, April 7, 2017] Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz insists the economy is weaker than it appears, but that argument is now in trouble. Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz used a history lesson Tuesday to make a case for a policy mix frequently promoted by the federal government -- an openness to more foreign investment, immigration and free trade. In a prepared speech, Poloz said Canada has seen these ingredients produce positive economic results in its past, including [...]

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Bank of Canada leaves key interest rate steady at 0.5%

[Source: CBC, April 12, 2017] The Bank of Canada today left its benchmark rate unchanged, at 0.5 per cent, saying it is too early to conclude that the economy is on a "sustainable growth path" despite a recent rebound that led it to bump up its 2017 outlook. "During the rest of this year and into 2018 and 2019, growth in Canada is expected to moderate but remain above potential," the bank said Wednesday. Economists had widely predicted that the bank would [...]

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BoC signals earlier rate hike, upgrades growth forecast

[Source: The Globe and Mail, April 12, 2017] The Bank of Canada is signalling that its first interest rate hike since 2010 could be less than a year away as the Canadian economy continues to grow faster than expected. The central bank once again kept its key overnight rate unchanged Wednesday at 0.5 per cent, where it has stood since July 2015. But the bank acknowledged what most economists have been saying for months – that the Canadian economy is gaining traction, [...]

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