Posts Tagged ‘Agency’

Housing Starts in May – Moishe Alexander

Affordable Housing, Ontario, Quebec | Posted by admin
Jun 15 2010

The seasonally adjusted annual rate1 of housing starts was 189,100 units in May, according to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC), down from a revised 201,800 units in April.

housing start - Moishe AlexanderMoishe Alexander points to Bob Dugan’s remarks. “Housing starts decreased in both the singles and the multiples segments in May,” said Bob Dugan, Chief Economist at CMHC’s Market Analysis Centre. “The decrease in housing starts in May is consistent with our forecast that housing starts for 2010 will reach 182,000 units.”

The seasonally adjusted annual rate of urban starts decreased by 9.5 per cent to 165,200 units in May. Urban multiple starts decreased by 5.6 per cent to 92,800 units, while single urban starts decreased by 14.1 per cent to 72,400 units.

May’s seasonally adjusted annual rate of urban starts decreased 21.8 per cent in the Prairie region, 13 per cent in Quebec, 12.9 per cent in British Columbia, and 2.7 per cent in Ontario. Urban starts increased 23.3 per cent in Atlantic Canada.

Rural starts2 were estimated at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 23,900 units in May.

As Canada’s national housing agency, CMHC draws on more than 60 years of experience to help Canadians access a variety of high quality, environmentally sustainable and affordable homes. CMHC also provides reliable, impartial and up-to-date housing market reports, analysis and knowledge to support and assist consumers and the housing industry in making vital decisions.

Canadian housing market

Affordable Housing, Financing, Ontario | Posted by admin
Feb 22 2010

The former head of the Bank of Canada has jumped into the debate over the housing market, warning that prices have reached a point where they are almost unsustainable.

“One would have to say that the relation of house prices to Canadians’ income is right at the high end of what one would think would likely be sustainable over time,” David Dodge told Business News Network on Wednesday.

Mr. Dodge, the central bank chief from 2001 to 2008, said the remedy is not necessarily higher interest rates. Rather, the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. should start scrutinizing more closely the kind of mortgages that it insures.

“That’s not to say the Bank [of Canada] ought to somehow raise interest rates really quickly, but it does say that [CMHC] should be very careful about the terms and conditions on which they are giving mortgage insurance,” he said.

As part of Ottawa’s policy to encourage home ownership among Canadians, the CMHC provides insurance for higher-risk home buyers such as those who are unable to make a 20% down payment, enabling people who would not otherwise be able to get a mortgage to enter the market.

The CMHC also guarantees billions of dollars of mortgages that are converted into Canada mortgage bonds and sold to investors.

Mr. Dodge said we’re “getting to a stage where one begins to get quite nervous” about the ability of some consumers to pay off their mortgages if rates rise. He notes that it is “clearly appropriate” to have very low interest rates because of the economic recovery and where rates stand in the rest of the world. He said that is why it’s more relevant to look at the “terms and conditions” of mortgages to deal with this issue.

The comments come less than a week after Jim Flaherty, the finance minister, said there is no compelling evidence of a housing bubble in Canada.

With residential real estate prices across the country close to record highs, many observers have expressed concern about the state of the market particularly with the run up that took place in the months since the financial crisis.

The concern is that when interest rates rise starting later this year many Canadians could find themselves struggling to make their payments. And if the economy reverses course at the same time – as some economists predict – the situation would be exacerbated, with serious negative implications for the housing market.

Moody’s warned last month that expanding consumer debt levels could leave Canada in a worse position than the United States in the next few years if current trends continue.

“We believe the housing market is the principal driver of this expansion,” said the report by Peter Routledge, senior vice president at the rating agency. “We have the uneasy sense that we have seen this movie before…. As witnessed in the United States, this movie does not end well.”

Many blame the meltdown south of the border on the availability of cheap credit even to people with no chance of meeting their obligations.

While nothing in Canada compares with the subprime market in the United States, experts say that the CMHC mortgage insurance program enables lenders to offer cheaper mortgages than they could otherwise to a wider range of borrowers.

At the same time, the CMHC’s mortgage bond progra – the underlying loans are also guaranteed by the agency – creates incentive for banks and other lenders to sell more mortgages by providing access to hundreds of billions of dollars of cheap funding.

The basic idea of making it easier for people to buy homes was a noble one but instead the Crown corporation’s programs have had the opposite effect of making houses less affordable.

And at the end of the day taxpayers are left holding the risk because CMHC mortgage insurance is effectively guaranteed by the federal government.

Read more: http://www.financialpost.com/news-sectors/economy/story.html?id=2547222#ixzz0gIYII5tg
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Graduated Commissions Not Allowed By Brian Madigan LL.B.

Canada, Ontario | Posted by admin
Jun 16 2009

Moishe Alexander, CFC CEO, presemts:

If you read Freakonomics by Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner, you will have the impression that realtors are not particularly interested in getting the best price for your property.

The reason according to the authors is due to the fact that during the final negotiations the realtor doesn’t have as much to lose as the homeowner. The authors are economists and their analysis is pure economic theory, but it doesn’t really work quite that way in the real world.

So, let’s have a look at what they say. Let’s assume that you are selling your house and you have agreed to pay a 5% commission based upon the ultimate sale price. You have it listed at $309,900.00 and you are hoping to get it sold for $300,000.00. If that occurs, then, you will pay $15,000.00 in commissions. So let’s say you get an offer for $290,000.00. You would lose $10,000.00, but the agents would only lose $500.00, because the commission on the lower amount is still $14,500.00.

If the sole and only motivation for your agent was the money, then, they should convince you to do this deal and move on to another client. In fact, of the last $10,000.00 in the deal, your own agent may only get $62.50, so that’s not much motivation at all. Here’s how that works: the additional commission is $500.00, and that’s split equally between the two brokerage firms, one for the purchaser and one for the vendor. Your agent might only get one half of the commission based on their own arrangements with their own broker, so now we’re down to $125.00. But, that’s not the whole story, Canada Customs and Revenue Agency will probably take one half of what’s left. So, the bottom line is if you sell for $300,000.00 rather than $290,000.00 your chief negotiator will get another $62.50. That’s not much of an incentive!

The economists are suggesting that the better deal would be to have the agent motivated by re-directing commission entitlements to the tail end of the deal. So, what if we had graduated commissions; the higher the price the higher the rates. Taxing authorities do this same thing. The higher the income, the higher the rates. Let’s presume that the commission at the tail end of the deal was 50%. For example, nothing on the first $250,000.00 and all the commission payable out of the excess above $250,000.00.

Now, I’m not talking about the total amount of commission, I’m going to assume that the $15,000.00 is reasonable. But, under the system suggested by Levitt and Dubner, the entire $ 15,000 would have to come out of the last $ 50,000.00 of the purchase price. And, let’s assume that by the time we get to $ 290,000.00, one half of the excess goes in commissions. So, who cares about the final sale price now? Presumably, the agents care, more than you care. It’s one-third of the total commission payable. Yet your own agent may still only get 1/8 of that amount (œ other agent, œ broker, œ tax) or $625.00. So, while it seemed like a lot of money to put on the table to create an incentive, it’s really not that much.

So let’s move it up to 75%, that’s $7,500.00 in commission out of that last $10,000.00 (yet only $937.50 to your own agent); or 90% that works out to $9,000 and $1,125 to your agent. Now, out of that last $10,000.00, your agent finally has more at stake than you do. So, that should be a real motivator. And then, what about the final step, 100% of the last $10,000.00? So, this would work out well. You don’t even care about the final sale price.

The problem here is the law of agency. The common law is designed to ensure that the agent meets all of the legal obligations to the principal. It’s the principal’s contract, not the agent’s. Contingency fees for lawyers were outlawed until the latter part of the last century in most jurisdictions, for much the same reason. Now, fees of up to about 30% subject to Court approval are permitted.

The 100% commission under discussion is the same thing as a guaranteed price with the agent taking the excess. Now there’s an opportunity for the agent. This is not particularly professional. It does not comply with the laws governing principal and agents. Most jurisdictions with consumer protection legislation will not permit this sort of an arrangement.

In Ontario, real estate agents and brokers are governed by the Real Estate and Business Brokers Act which is administered by the Real Estate Council of Ontario(RECO).

Here are the rules when it comes to commission:

The commission may be:
? a fixed amount
? a percentage of the purchase price
? a decreasing percentage of the purchase price

The commission may not be:
? a fixed amount together with a percentage
? an increasing percentage of the purchase price
? the difference between the listed price and the sale price (or any similar arrangement, that is, no guaranteed amount to the vendor with the excess to the agent)

Well, those laws wouldn’t sit well with Levitt and Dubner, but then again it’s a very interesting discussion for an Economics class. By the way, those big time incentives for professional athletes don’t work all that well. Just ask Leaf fans, Yankee fans………..

http://ontariorealestatesource.blogspot.com/2009/06/graduated-commissions-not-allowed.html