Posts Tagged ‘half’

MLS® home sales rebound in the second quarter

Affordable Housing, Alberta, British Columbia, Canada, Community Service, Faith-based organizations, Financing, New Brunswick, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Quebec, Uncategorized | Posted by admin
Jul 15 2009

National resale housing market activity bounced back strongly in the second quarter of 2009 above levels reported for the same period last year. Demand continues to rebound sharply in some of the most expensive markets in the country, skewing the national average price upward.

According to statistics released by The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA), actual (not seasonally adjusted) home sales, via the Multiple Listing Service® (MLS®) of Canadian real estate boards, totaled 147,351 units in the second quarter of 2009 – the fourth strongest quarterly sales figure ever. Up 1.4 per cent from the second quarter of 2008, this marks the first year-over-year increase in quarterly activity since the fourth quarter of 2007.

On a seasonally adjusted basis, national MLS® home sales numbered 114,173 units in the second quarter, jumping up a record 31.5 per cent from the first quarter of 2009.

“Potential buyers who moved to the sidelines late last year when economic uncertainty peaked are returning to the housing market now that the worst of the recession may be behind us,” said Dale Ripplinger, President of The Canadian Real Estate Association.

Seasonally adjusted resale activity in the second quarter was up from the previous quarter in about 85 per cent of local markets. Quarterly activity increases in Toronto (45 per cent), Vancouver (77 per cent), Montreal (33 per cent), Calgary (66 per cent) and Edmonton (39 per cent) contributed most to the national increase in activity.

Strong upward momentum for monthly sales activity was sustained throughout the second quarter. June marked the fifth consecutive month in which activity was up from month-ago levels. Some 41,304 homes traded hands via the MLS® of real estate boards in Canada on a seasonally adjusted basis in June 2009. This is up 8.7 per cent from May and represents the first time since January 2008 that monthly activity topped 40,000 units.

Actual (not seasonally adjusted) MLS® home sales climbed 17.9 per cent year-over-year to 54,616 units in June 2009. This is on par with the record for the month of June set in 2007 and is the fourth highest level for activity in any month on record.

The national MLS® residential average sale price reached the highest quarterly level ever in the second quarter of 2009. At $318,696, the average sale price was up half a percent from the previous record set in the second quarter of 2008.

The national average home price also scaled new heights on a monthly basis, climbing 3.6 per cent year-overyear to $326,613 in June 2009. However, only 13 local markets posted new average price records in June, less than a handful of which are among the most active or expensive. The strong rebound in sales activity, not price, in Canada’s most expensive markets is skewing average prices upward nationally and in some provinces, just as a sharp decline in activity in these markets skewed the average lower in late 2008.

MLS® home sales rebound in the second quarter. The price trend is similar but less dramatic for the weighted national MLS® average price, which compensates for changes in provincial sales activity by taking into account provincial proportions of privately owned housing stock. The weighted national MLS® average sale price was up 1.7 per cent year-over-year in June 2009 – less than half of the percentage increase in the unweighted national average price.

The supply of homes coming onto the MLS® market continued retreating in second quarter. Seasonally adjusted MLS® residential new listings were down 16.9 per cent from the previous quarter to 197,049 units, the lowest level since the fourth quarter of 2005.

Nationally, the number of months of inventory was 4.2 months in June 2009. This is the lowest level since August 2007, and well down from the recessionary peak of 12.8 months in January 2009. The number of months of inventory is the number of months it would take to sell current inventories at the current rate of sales activity.

The residential dollar volume for MLS® sales jumped 40.6 per cent on a seasonally adjusted quarter-over-quarter basis in the second quarter of 2009, to reach $34.8 billion.

“Low interest rates have improved the affordability of homeownership, as have price adjustments in housing markets that previously experienced rapid price increases,” said CREA Chief Economist Gregory Klump. “Housing markets where negotiations recently favoured the buyer have become more balanced and the stage is being set for modest price appreciation as inventories are drawn down by sales.”

“Sales momentum remains strong going into the second half of 2009,” said CREA President Dale Ripplinger. “Chances are good that the number of transactions in the second half of 2009 will surpass levels in the first half of the year.”

http://www.myseatosky.com/blog/?p=231

reviewed by Moishe Alexande, CFC canadian funding corp CEO

GTA Resale Housing Sales Up 19 Per Cent in the First Half of June

Affordable Housing, Canada, New Brunswick, Ontario, Quebec, Saskatchewan, Uncategorized | Posted by admin
Jun 18 2009

TORONTO, June 17, 2009- Greater Toronto REALTORS® reported 5,185 transactions in the first half of June – an increase of 19 per cent compared to the same period last year.

“Households in the GTA have become more confident in purchasing a home over the past three months,” said TREB President Maureen O’Neill. “Affordability, due in part to very low borrowing costs, has played a key role.”

The average price for MLS® sales was $407,716, up by two per cent compared to last year. “Heightened interest in ownership housing this spring has solidified resale home prices,” according to Jason Mercer, TREB’s Senior Manager of Market Analysis. “The number of home buyers has been high relative to the number of listings, pushing the average price above last year’s level.”

reviewed by Moishe Alexander, CFC CEO

http://eastyorktorontorealestate.com/gta-resale-housing-sales-up-19-per-cent-in-the-first-half-of-june/

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