Archive for the ‘Real Estate Investing’ Category

Basement Suite – Edmonton

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

To view and search all Edmonton and area MLS listed homes visit me at http://www.findmyhouse.ca/

Also visit http://www.findmyhouse.ca/ to enter the free draw for a $5,000 travel gift certficate.


Beautiful bi-level. Featuring spacious open floor plan with vaulted ceilings and large eating kitchen counter with eating bar, double patio door to large deck. Spacious 17.5′ x 14′ master bedroom with ensuite and walk in closet. Main floor also features hardwood floors and ceramic tiles. Newer paint through-out basement: features: lovely 2-bedroom in-law suite with large family room. Large back yard with fire-pit cemented pad. 2-car garage with side R.V. pad.

For more information call me today 780-995-6520 or view at http://www.findmyhouse.ca/

Serge Bourgoin
Re/Max Real Estate
780-488-4000

MLS® home sales hit eight-year December (monthly) low

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009

To view and search all Edmonton and area MLS listed homes visit www.FindMyHouse.ca

The number of properties sold via the MLS® in Canada edged down further in December 2008 to reach the lowest level for the month since December 2000, according to CREA.
Seasonally adjusted residential MLS® sales activity numbered 27,357 units in December 2008, a decline of 1.8% compared to the previous month. However, seasonally adjusted activity was up in more than half of Canadian housing markets. Activity declines in Montreal, Calgary and Edmonton more than offset a rebound in the number of transactions in Vancouver, resulting in a small monthly decline in national sales activity.
The small month-over-month decline in national MLS® seasonally adjusted sales activity in December followed double digit declines in September (-14.9%) and October (-12.1%). Activity plummeted 22.2% in the fourth quarter of 2008 to 86,879 units, with seasonally adjusted quarterly declines in activity in all provinces. The sharp drop in fourth quarter activity accounted for over half of the decline in transactions since the peak in 2007.
Year-over-year declines in the MLS® average home price were reported in about half of local markets in December. Lower activity and average prices compared to one year ago remain most pronounced in Canada’s more expensive housing markets. This continues to weigh on the national MLS® residential average price.
The MLS® national average price of homes in December 2008 declined by 11% from where it stood a year ago. The major market price trend was similar to the national trend, down by 9.9% year over year in December 2008.
“Moderating home prices in Canada should not be confused with the downturn in the U.S. housing market,” says CREA President Calvin Lindberg. “But any local real estate market is not immune to global economic challenges, and that is what we face today. Low prices are not the concern as much as the perception of doom and gloom. Buyers are waiting to see if the real estate market has hit bottom, and that is a very complex thing to try and calculate. Most of us will only be affected by the market correction psychologically, because the majority of Canadians will not buy or sell property in the coming year.”
Seasonally adjusted new MLS® residential listings numbered 72,931 units in December, down 3% from levels recorded in November. New listings are trending lower. In December, they stood 8.1% below the peak reached in May 2008.
Resale housing market balance is represented by sales as a percentage of new listings. The rise in the number of new listings in the first half of last year along with declining sales activity, particularly in the fourth quarter, resulted in an increasingly balanced resale housing market over the course of 2008.
Sales as a percentage of new listings in the fourth quarter of 2008 fell to the lowest level since the mid 1990s. New listings are trending down from the peak reached in the second quarter of 2008. If this trend continues, the balance of supply and demand will stabilize in 2009.
“Average prices will remain under downward pressure during the Canadian economic recession,” said CREA Chief Economist Gregory Klump. “Shaky financial market confidence is pulling down business and consumer confidence. The consensus economic forecast predicts the economy will rebound in the second half of 2009, so housing market trends should strengthen next year.”

Source:Realtors Association of Edmonton

Canada Sees Faster Recovery that Past Recessions

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009

To view and search all Edmonton and area MLS listed homes visit www.FindMyHouse.ca

Jan. 22 (Bloomberg) — The Bank of Canada said the economy this quarter will plunge instead of stalling, while anticipating a “faster” recovery than in earlier recessions as access to credit and exports rebound.
The central bank slashed its economic growth forecast for the first quarter, saying output will shrink at a 4.8 percent annualized pace after predicting in October that it would be unchanged. Gross domestic product will shrink at a 1 percent pace in the second quarter before expanding through 2010.
“The projected return to balance of the Canadian economy is faster than either of the recoveries following the 1981-82 and 1990-92 recessions,” the Ottawa-based central bank said today in an update to its October Monetary Policy Report. “Canadian credit conditions remain better than those in other major countries” and “exports are also expected to recover next year,” the bank said.
Governor Mark Carney two days ago cut borrowing costs by half a point to 1 percent, the lowest since the central bank was founded in 1934, and said he would “carefully” assess how much more stimulus may be needed. The world’s eighth-largest economy is shrinking because of slower foreign orders for goods such as cars and commodities such as crude oil, combined with the global credit crisis which has made banks reluctant to lend.
Currency Falls
The Canadian dollar weakened 0.7 percent to C$1.2637 per U.S. dollar at 11:53 a.m. in Toronto, from C$1.2551 yesterday.
The economy will contract 1.2 percent this year, marking Canada’s first recession since 1992, and then grow 3.8 percent in 2010, the central bank said. That’s almost double the 2 percent expansion predicted by economists in a Bloomberg News survey.
“We would love the Bank of Canada’s growth projections to turn out correctly, and maybe they will, but fear they are too optimistic on 2010,” Derek Holt, an economist with Scotia Capital Inc., wrote today in a note to clients. The bank may be “erring on the side of a relatively sanguine view of Canadian credit markets,” he said.
Exports will shave 2.6 percentage points off of economic growth this year, then add 2.1 percentage points in 2010, aided by a weaker currency and a rebound in U.S. demand, the bank said.
Even amid the financial crisis that has crippled access to credit in the world’s biggest economies, lending to businesses in Canada “grew at a solid pace” through November and household credit “has slowed only moderately,” the central bank said. The cost of borrowing for commercial lenders has fallen by 1 percentage point since October, the bank said, citing reductions in its own benchmark interest rate.
Gaining ‘Traction’
Also, actions taken by Canada and other countries to shore up credit markets and economies “are starting to gain traction,” the central bank said.
The report repeated that the Bank of Canada will assess “to what extent further monetary stimulus will be required” to meet its chief goal of keeping inflation at 2 percent.
Inflation will decline by 0.6 percent in the second quarter and 1 percent in the third and won’t return to the bank’s target until the first half of 2011, the bank said.
Consumer prices haven’t dropped for two or more consecutive quarters since 1953, according to Statistics Canada.
The Bank of Canada didn’t refer to its projection as a bout of deflation, saying risks to its inflation forecast are “roughly balanced.”
Further Tools
Deflation can freeze spending by business and consumers if they hold off on purchases in anticipation of ever-lower prices. Reversing deflation can be harder than inflation because central banks can only cut interest rates so low to encourage demand.
There was also no reference in the report to whether the central bank may eventually use policy tools other than interest-rate cuts to boost credit markets in Canada.
Carney, 43, said after his Oct. 23 forecast paper that Canada doesn’t need to consider buying direct stakes in banks as in the U.S. and some European countries, where governments are trying to catch up to Canadian lenders’ level of capitalization. In December, he said after a speech that it was “premature” to discuss such moves.
Still, Bank of Canada officials and Finance Minister Jim Flaherty have said the country’s banks, rated the soundest last year by the World Economic Forum, have scope to expand lending.
The next rate decision is scheduled for March 3.
The 1 percent policy rate that the Bank of Canada set two days ago is lower than a previous record of 1.12 percent in 1958 when the rate was based on treasury-bill yields.
To contact the reporter on this story: Greg Quinn in Ottawa at gquinn1@bloomberg.net. Last Updated: January 22, 2009 11:57 EST

Real Estate Statistics – Jan 22, 2009

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009

To view and search all MLS listed homes in the Edmonton area visit me at www.FindMyHouse.ca

As of this morning there are 2,395 single family dwellings listed in Edmonton proper. In the last 30 days there were also 249 sales of single family dwellings in Edmonton proper.

With those numbers that gives me a listing to sales ration of 9.62:1. That is over double the 4:1 needed for a neutral market. To me that indicates that we are going to see continued downward pressure on valuations.

So if you are thinking of selling this year the sooner you put your home on the market the better the chance of getting the most money possible.

If you are thinking of selling please feel free to give me a call anytime @ 780-995-6520 and ask for a free market analysis of the value of your home.

Happy New Year!!! & Current Edmonton Real Estate Statistics – Jan 06, 2008

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009

To view and search all Edmonton and area MLS listed homes visit me at http://www.findmyhouse.ca/

Well we are off to a new year with all hopes and expectations of a great year.

Currently there are 2,319 single family homes on the market in Edmonton proper. However in the last 30 days there only has been 230 sales. That gives us a listings to sales ratio of 10.08:1

That is the highest I have seen this ratio since the market turned in mid 2007. Now part of that has to be attributed to the fact that these numbers reflect the activity in December which historically has been one of the slowest months of the year.

Having said that the ratio is still way to high and I would expect there will be more pressure on valuations in the incoming few weeks of the new year.

Low Down, High Assumable

Monday, December 8th, 2008

To view and search all Edmonton and area MLS listings visit me at http://www.FindMyHouse.ca

I currently have access to some homes that can be purchased with low down and assumable mortgages. Call me today as they will not last long. Serge 780-488-4000 and have me paged to call you.

Serge Bourgoin
Senior Managing Partner
Team Leading Edge
Re/Max Real Estate
780-488-4000

Edmonton Real Estate Statistics – Dec 05, 2008

Friday, December 5th, 2008

To view and search all Edmonton and area MLS listed homes for free visit me at: www.Findmyhouse.ca

As of this morning there were 2,982 single family homes available in Edmonton proper. In the past 30 days 415 single family homes were sold in Edmonton proper. That would give us a listing to sales ratio of 7.19:1

With a ratio still significantly higher than the 4:1 required for a neutral or balanced market I expect there to be continued downward pressure on valuations.

Threat of global recession to hinder home sales

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

Threat of global recession to hinder home sales in major Canadian housing markets in 2008 and 2009, says RE/MAX

Recovery linked to economic stability next year

Global economic uncertainty weighed heavily on residential real estate activity in most major Canadian centres during the latter half of 2008. Although the forecast for 2009 promises more of the same, most markets are expected to weather the storm, says RE/MAX.

Housing market performance will clearly be contingent on economic performance at a local, provincial, and national level in 2009. Issues affecting the overall economy are impacting housing markets across the country and the situation is not expected to be remedied until consumer confidence is restored. If inventory levels remain stable, pent-up demand kicks into gear, and lower interest rates stimulate home-buying activity, we could see a bounce back as early as spring.

The RE/MAX Housing Market Outlook for 2009 examined residential real estate trends in 22 markets across the country and found that average price held up remarkably well in 2008, despite 13 centres reporting double-digit declines in home sales. Solid gains earlier in the year likely served to prop-up housing values at year-end. The prognosis for housing activity in the first six to nine months of 2009 is somewhat static, given continued volatility in financial markets and the threat of recession, but as stability returns, housing markets are expected to recover.

Nationally, 440,000 homes are expected to change hands in 2008, down 15 per cent from record 2007 levels. Canadian housing values are expected to hover at $300,000, a nominal three per cent decline from last year’s historic peak. By year-end 2009, unit sales should match 2008 levels, while average price is forecast to fall another two per cent to $293,000.

Major markets are evenly split in terms of housing performance in 2009, with 11 centres forecast to match or exceed 2008 home sales and 11 expected to slide from 2008 levels. The highest percentage increase in unit sales is anticipated in Saskatoon, where the number of homes sold is forecast to climb three per cent in 2009. Housing values are expected to hold the line in 2009, with St. John’s, Montreal, Kingston, London, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, and Regina posting modest gains in average price in 2009.

– more –

RE/MAX Housing Market Outlook 2009…2

Canada’s real estate environment is considerably more complex than it has been in recent years. The landscape is definitely changing — with most markets shifting into either balanced or buyer’s territory. The shut out is over. Sellers no longer rule the roost. Opportunities exist for purchasers like never before, including lower interest rates, greater inventory levels, the luxury of time to make decisions, and the upper-hand at the negotiating table. Motivated vendors will need to take note of the new mindset and set their prices accordingly.

Canadian sellers are slowly adjusting to new realities. For most markets, 2008 started in balanced territory and moved into buyer’s market conditions during the latter half of 2008. The year ahead will prove challenging, especially for vendors.

While the economy will dictate real estate performance next year, it’s important to remember that demand still exists in the marketplace. In the midst of stock market turmoil, sold signs continue to appear on lawns across the country. With affordable lending rates and increased selection, first-time and move-up buyers with good credit may choose to play their investment strategy safe and purchase a home. The comfort of a tangible investment like real estate goes a long way in tough times.

Edmonton Real Estate Investments and Vacancy Rates

Friday, November 28th, 2008

To view and search all MLS listed homes in the Edmonton area visit me at: www.FindMyHouse.ca

We all know that the real estate market is bad right now. Valuation have dropped in excess of 30% from it peak. Is that a bad thing or good thing??? Well if you are a buyer that is a terrific thing, specially if you are or want to be a real estate investor.

Currently in Edmonton we have about an overall 3% vacancy rate, but that includes all rental units including apartments. However the vacancy rate for single family dwellings is less than 1% which is great news for the real estate investor wanting to rent single family homes.

With valuations to the level they are now and with the economic outlook for the Edmonton area for the next 10 years NOW is the time to be investing.

With over 20 years of real estate and investing experience I can help guide you to the best investment opportunities out there. Call me today on my cell 780-995-6520 to discuss which opportunities might be great for you.

The data included on this website is deemed to be reliable, but is not guaranteed to be accurate by the REALTORS® Association of Edmonton. The trademarks REALTOR®, REALTORS® and the REALTOR® logo are controlled by The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) and identify real estate professionals who are members of CREA. Used under license.