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If you are arriving here for the first time, it is highly recommended that you read this blog in chronological order. Start with the first post "Smelling Smoke"


Smelling smoke






There are three simple rules to live by: Don't grocery shop when you're hungry. Don't date when you're horny. Don't text when you're drunk.
Unfortunately, we seem unable to follow such timely advice despite our knowledge of the guaranteed consequences.  We seem to fall victim to predictable disaster despite our awareness of history’s past fiascos. This blog will illuminate the folly of people who repeat the same mistakes again, again and again.  We tend to forget the lessons learned in the past because “it’s different this time” or “the rules have changed”.   Despite popular opinion, nothing has changed. This blog will tackle our favourite water cooler topic du jour – real estate.
The debate on real-estate in Canada, and primarily in the Toronto area, has infected almost everyone.  Anywhere you go people are arguing as to whether real-estate is in a bubble and will crash; whether rich Chinese foreigners are buying up all the land; whether immigration will send Toronto’s prices to the moon; and, of most importance, whether the Leafs will win the Stanley Cup within the next 50 years. 
Real estate is a very personal matter to all of us. We all want a safe, comfortable and nice place to live and grow with our families.   For the longest time, the purchase of a home was a relatively non-event.  House prices were stable, predictable and generally followed the pace of inflation. A couple, let’s call them Sharon and Randy, would go to their bank to figure out how much they could afford to buy.  The bank, as a holder of the loan, would verify the couple’s income and assets and ensure they were credit worthy. Typically, the bank would not loan more than 2.5-3.5x the family income. The couple would then hire a real estate agent and see a dozen or so houses and after careful consideration they would make an offer on a property for less than, or, in rare circumstances, the asking price.  There would be conditions on the offer such as financing and a home inspection. The latter being the most important as this would likely be the couple’s biggest financial transaction in their lifetime and it is important to know that the property is in good working order. There might be some negotiation between the buyer and seller and voila, a deal would be struck. 
Oh, have times changed!
When was the last time you heard one of your friends or family members had an experience like Sharon and Randy?  You probably have not since the system has been turned on its head as of late. It is now common for prospective buyers to participate in veracious bidding wars where young couples have resorted to writing lengthy letters to sellers as to why “they would be perfect fit for the home” while trying to out bid each other by $100’s thousands of dollars at a time with unconditional offers.  People are now obtaining mortgages of 5, 6, or even 7 times their yearly income.  Lenders do not bother checking if you can afford the mortgage and whether you could afford an interest rate hike. Bank of Mom is now handing out huge gifts of money to her kids so they can “get on the property ladder”.  Heck, the real banks do not even care if someone fails to pay their mortgage because there is an insurance policy on it! 
Many people are left wondering whether it is better to buy something now before they are “priced out forever” as “they don’t make new land”. Realtors, newspaper pundits, “investment” gurus like Tony Robbins, everyone wants you to believe that real estate is the sure path to wealth. Parents, wives, husbands, neighbors, even the nice person who works cash at Chipotle are all pressuring you to buy and buy now.  How could they be wrong? Have you seen the gains in real estate prices in Toronto year after year for, I don’t know, the last 14 years?  Anyone in their 20’s and 30’s has parents whose home has increased by a factor of 3, 4, or even 5 times.
The naysayers dismiss the melt down in the US back in 2007-2008 as banks who were behaving badly and poor regulated. Ireland’s real-estate crash? A one off event.  Spain’s real-estate cratering? Who cares about Europeans anyways.
You know there is something troubling in the air but you cannot put your finger on it. As the saying goes, when there is smoke, fire is not too far behind. Somehow, people are lining up in droves and magically affording million dollar properties yet they barely make much more money than you. Every third person seems to be driving a Mercedes, Audi or some other fancy import.  The advertisements on TV are all offering mortgages from some jewellery buyer or offering debt consolidation assistance.
The signs of trouble are staring us directly in the mirror. Unprecedented levels of personal debt held by the average Canadian. Almost one half of people are one pay check away from defaulting on their debt obligations. Banks and lending institutions lending money faster than it can be printed. Insurance products on loans to protect negligent lending institutions. Mortgages with no down payment or income verifications. The hairdresser owning five condos because she is a smart “investor” yet they have negative cash flow.  Incomes which have barely budged in the last decade. Record low interest rates that will be rising. Building cranes on every single corner of the city. HGTV.
All dismissed as nonsense. Time honoured fundamental indicators such as income, rent to price ratio and inflation have become roadkill.
The real estate promoters continue to feed us the same lines over the past several decades: immigrants are flocking to Toronto in record numbers, Canadian lending standards are strict, there is just not enough land to build, Trudeau will never let interest rates rise, real estate always goes up, and, my favourite, it’s different this time.
I suppose I might as well end this blog right here as there would be no point in continuing since real estate can only go up in Toronto as it’s different this time. To the dismay of many, this is the starting point.  We will explore in depth all the factors which got us into this unhealthy situation and where it will ultimately lead us. No stone will be left unturned.