With
home-ownership rates headed for record levels and the federal government
tightening lending rules to cool the market, the question now is whether we
have reached the saturation point.
Bank
of Nova Scotia economist Adrienne Warren says that when the latest census
figures come out next month she expects us to be in the elite company —
depending on your view — of countries with more than 70% of households owning
their own homes. Based on the 2006 census, we were at 68.4%. “It’s similar to
the U.S., U.K. and Australia when they came up with the mid-decade census,” Ms.
Warren said.
The
government is saying you should not be a homeowner if you cannot afford it
Some
countries, like Italy and Spain, could be as high as 80% while in others with
expensive real estate, like Switzerland, home-ownership rates are more like
30%, she said.
Ms.
Warren said the biggest jump in home-ownership rates going into the 2006 census
was among young people buying condominiums. Do we need another census to tell
us that that group expanded or can we just look up at the cranes across the
country? “It was people in their early 20s buying as opposed to waiting until
they got older. It probably continued,” Ms. Warren said.
Interestingly
enough, the United States is believed to have cracked that 70% threshold before
the bottom fell out of its housing market.
Already
Ottawa has stuck a pin in the housing balloon with new rules, including a
restriction that limits amortizations to 25 years, which ultimately increases
monthly payments for consumers and limits how much they can borrow.
The
Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions added its own rules
tightening up regulations for financial institutions.
“The
government is saying you should not be a homeowner if you cannot afford it,”
said Benjamin Tal, deputy chief economist at CIBC World Markets Inc.
The
Canadian Real Estate Association released data last week that showed home
prices across the country had actually slipped 2% from a year ago to an average
of $353,147.
“We
are at the peak of home ownership in Canada,” Mr. Tal said. “In fact, we are
probably too high and it will probably go down.”
It’s
not that 70% is some type of threshold we can’t break through but renting is
becoming that much more attractive as the gap between home ownership and
renting costs widens.
It’s
impossible to argue against the emotion of owning your home or the advantage of
forced savings that comes with a mortgage — a clear edge for people with no
financial discipline.
The
principal advantage is you can leverage your investment by putting only 5% down
because the government will back your mortgage with the bank. But leverage
means nothing when your investment is decreasing in value — it just compounds
your losses.
If
you consider that average $353,147 home with a 5% down payment, it will cost
you close to $1,600 in monthly mortgage costs, even at today’s 3% interest
rates with a 25-year amortization. Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. said in
June the average two-bedroom apartment in new and existing structures was $887
a month. Add in other home-ownership costs like taxes and the gap widens.
Beyond
the current expansion, there’s no arguing against the long, steady price
appreciation of housing, which has been going on for decades, but there is an
alternative to home ownership if you want upside exposure to the market.
Michael
Smith, an analyst at Macquarie Equities Research, has published a report for
the past five years comparing condo returns to apartment real estate investment
trusts.
“REITs
win,” said Mr. Smith, adding in a report in January the REITs would have
returned 31.5% over the past year compared to a condo return of 12.4% in
Toronto and 6.1% in Calgary. Going back another four years, the numbers are
even more in favour of the public vehicles.
“What
I would say now, since I did the last study, is if anything the outlook for the
REIT versus the condo is even more compelling given where the condo market
seems to be correcting,” Mr. Smith said.
Sam
Kolias, chief executive of Boardwalk Real Estate Investment Trust, Canada’s
largest apartment owner, says he is already seeing the push back into
apartments.
“If
you wanted to be hedged against housing [going up], you could rent and buy
stock in our company,” said Mr. Kolias, who added that occupancy rates have
climbed close to 99% as house prices have risen steadily. “We’ve never been as
full as we are now.”
While
this may all be bad news for housing, Phil Soper, chief executive of Royal
LePage Real Estate Services, still sees room for expansion.
“There
is nothing magical about 70%. The U.S. rate fell from this rate because of a
collapse in their financial system,” said Mr. Soper, who points out home
ownership in the U.S. is still about 66%, even after “one of the worst
meltdowns.”
He
said one key driver of the housing market that has not changed is the rule that
allows consumers in with just a 5% down payment.
“We
have public policy in place that supports home ownership,” Mr. Soper said.
Okay,
you can probably still get into the housing market. But with prices falling and
the gap between renting and carrying a home widening, the question is do you
really want to make that investment?
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