Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Interesting article form Andrew Coyne


Here. Lets call it the baby bear case. He says we will see weakness but not a collapse in RE and pokes fun at the 'forever-in-crisis reporting' of Macleans. It is a valid view-point which we need to consider.

It also fills me with dread that a crappy biased tabloid like Macleans which sensationalizes 'news' in between the fawning pieces about convicted criminals, like Conrad Black, written by their wives.. is now on our side (again). Oh no! the kiss of death.

Did they complain about the doubling of the CMHC or ZIRP or lax bank lending for the last 4 years like we did? have they admonished Flaherty for lack of CMHC or bank oversight? Hmmm

HARBINGERS OF DOOM

Apr 10, 2012 – 6:00 AM ET | Last Updated: Apr 10, 2012 11:55 AM ET


Even by Maclean’s standards, the cover was alarming. “You’re about to get burned,” screamed the headline, over a picture of a house that was literally on fire. “Canada looks like the us before its devastating housing crash — maybe even worse.” And the kicker, for those still hesitating: “Why it’s officially time to panic.”

This last was doubtless something of a little in-joke. For my old colleagues at Canada’s newsweekly, it is always time to panic, especially about house prices. The magazine’s editors inhabit a world beset by all manner of hitherto undetected demons, from more expensive groceries (“sudden shortages, riots over prices, the world food crisis is about to hit home”) to insomnia (“the truth about a modern epidemic”) to, well, “The Return of Hitler.”

But nothing, nothing frightens the magazine or, it is hoped, its readers, more than real estate. For years Maclean’s has been shuddering in terror of the imminent collapse of the Canadian housing market. From the relative calm of its late 2007 cover story (“Buy? Sell? Panic?”), the magazine soon picked up signals of the coming apocalypse. “House prices start to fall,” the magazine announced the following summer. By autumn, with the world financial crisis in full swing, so was Maclean’s. “Canada’s Looming Real Estate Crisis,” the cover shouted: “Why house prices may soon fall through the floor.”

As the months wore on, and the cataclysm failed to arrive, Maclean’s remained ever hopeful of a real collapse. But durned if prices, after a brief dip, resumed rising. By June 2008, a grumpy Maclean’s was warning readers “Don’t believe the housing hype,” insisting there are “plenty of signs that the Canadian housing market is still on some very shaky ground,” even if “average home prices are up more than 16 per cent this year.”

Fast forward through several more stories in the same vein and by this year the magazine and others were in even less doubt: Canada was in a housing bubble. Why, just look at the numbers. For starters, there’s the oft-repeated fact that Canadians are carrying debts worth 153% of their annual income. That’s true: but other countries’ citizens manage much heavier debt loads, from the spendthrift Swiss (200%) to the feckless Dutch (260%) to the profligate Danes (320%). We may be carrying almost as much debt as the Americans before the crash, but with nothing like the same risk factors, from subprime mortgages to small regional banks, that made their economy such a firetrap. And if we’re mentioning how Canadians’ debts have grown, we should surely also mention that their assets have as well: still five times as large as their debts.

Mortgage costs, interests and principal combined, are currently running at about 30% of disposable income — again, higher than a few years ago, but barely half what they were in the early 1990s. Yes, house prices were still rising as of year-end, but more slowly than before, as even the Maclean’s piece acknowledges — though somehow it cites this as evidence for its doomsday thesis. But then, what doesn’t? If prices were rising quickly, that would be proof of housing “mania.” If they fell a little, that would be the bubble starting to burst. And if they fell a lot? Look out below!

The truth is the real estate market is cooling slightly, helped by a modest tightening of lending regulations. It’s true that a rise in interest rates from current, historically low levels would put some homeowners in distress, but they’d have to spike a long way before the damage grew widespread — a concern, sure, but nowhere near as frightening as, say, the return of Hitler.

Posted in: Financial Post Magazine Tags: , ,

13 comments:

  1. BTW the bold in the article was added by me.

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  2. Maclean's "doom & gloom" - they're in the business of selling magazines in boom times as well as crash times.

    Wait till you see REBGV's new secret weapon
    http://tinyurl.com/7xy7p4e

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  3. Unfortunately Macleans has such a bad record that when they jump on the band-wagon we should be afraid.

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  4. Fish,

    Please give us neighbourhood MOI numbers. I hear they're looking delicious. Besides, this could be Andrew's moment to hang out to dry.

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  5. The return of Hitler. Didn't see that one coming. Will he crash the housing market?

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  6. Nice picture :-) It would be nice to have a link to the photo source when you have it. You pick out good photos and it would be cool sometimes to have some more details on the pictures.

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  7. i second the request of MOI on erstwhile HAM hot areas. and ofcourse fv numbers including surrey.

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  8. OK guys lets wait for the week-end and I will put out the MOIs.

    1) because it takes time

    2) The week-end numbers tend to be more reliable.

    Fish10

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  9. thanks fishy in advance. Nothing gets me high like the numbers do. Nobody can deny them, they are hard facts.

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  10. We appreciate it. Thanks for all you do. Hope you are feeling well this Spring.

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  11. Thanks Egghead. The duct tape is holding things together for now.

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  12. http://www.theprovince.com/touch/business/story.html?id=6473758

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  13. Owner of the dvpmt reportedly from the same province where Chongqing sits. Must be easy to transfer $4 Billion to BPOE.
    http://www.todayonline.com/World/EDC120419-0000097/Suicides,-bullying-and-bankruptcy-blamed-on-Bos-rule

    ReplyDelete