Nowhere to live: Rents in Canada surge as home prices fall
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[July 22, 2022] By
Julie Gordon and Shreya Jain
OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canadian home prices are
dropping fast after surging during the coronavirus pandemic, but that is
offering little relief for consumers who face sky-rocketing rents and
fading buying power as interest rates rise.
Desperate would-be buyers found themselves caught in a frenzy of bidding
wars for real estate during the pandemic, when home prices in Canada
rose more than 50% in just two years.
Now the competition has moved to rentals, with landlords demanding
months of rent upfront and at times, even pitting tenants against one
another to see who will pay more, according to real estate agents and
media reports.
The average rent on a 1-bedroom apartment in Canada is up 13.7% from the
start of the year, data from Rentals.ca shows, with year-on-year rents
surging 18.5% in Toronto and 19.2% in Vancouver.
(GRAPHIC: Canada rents up sharply so far this year -
https://graphics.reuters.com/CANADA-ECONOMY/RENT/
gkvlgyqylpb/chart.png)
The shift from frantic demand for homes-to-buy to homes-to-rent makes
plain a broader issue with Canadian housing: that there simply is not
enough of it, said Dan Scarrow, president of Macdonald Realty in
Vancouver.
"Higher (interest) rates are not destroying demand for housing, it's
just shifting the demand from buying to renting," he said. "The demand
just sloshes between renters and buyers, depending on where rates are so
long as you have constrained supply."
The Bank of Canada has raised its policy interest rate to 2.5% now from
0.25% at the start of the year to fight inflation, which hit a near
40-year high of 8.1% in June.
The rapid rise in borrowing cost has chilled the real estate market,
pulling down Canada's average home price by 18.5% from its February
peak, according to data from the Canadian Real Estate Association.
But softer prices do not appear to be helping would-be buyers, who now
can't get loans due to far higher mortgage qualifying rates. And that,
in turn, is driving up rental demand.
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A view of new homes under construction, on the day the Bank of
Canada increased its policy rate a full percentage point in
Brampton, Ontario, Canada July 13, 2022. REUTERS/Carlos Osorio/File
Photo
"Rents have gone insane because people have to have a place to live," said Paul
Eviston, a Vancouver-based real estate agent. "Demand on the rental market has
really taken off as a lot of people that were would-be buyers are now forced to
rent."
That hot rental demand has put a floor under condo prices in large cities, real
estate agents said, with investors feeling confident enough to wait out price
dips and some even looking to snap up more investment properties.
Toronto agent Imran Khan just sold a loft apartment to an investor who was able
to lease it out within days of closing.
"I've listed properties for rent ... and we get multiple offers, right. Like
right away," said Khan.
Rising immigration and a post-pandemic return to urban centers will further
bolster demand for city condos, said Khan. Landlords, for their part, are
pushing for higher rents when units turn over, agents said.
The shift from owned-homes to rental-homes is also starting to show up in
Canada's inflation data, with homeowners' replacement cost increases easing
sharply to 10% from 13% in April, while rent inflation remains near the 32-year
high hit in April.
Mortgage interest costs, which fell sharply as the pandemic took hold and rates
were slashed, are now surging. Homeowners who took out variable loans or those
with mortgages coming up for renewal are feeling the most pinch.
"Right now is actually one of those unique moments where buyers, sellers, and
renters are probably all struggling," said Scarrow. "Usually, there is a winner.
But I think this time it's a struggle really for everyone."
(Reporting by Julie Gordon in Ottawa and Shreya Jain in Toronto, editing by
Deepa Babington)
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