Ex-Montreal Girl
Active Member
You're right. We don't know, and I would love to have some demographic data on the foreign buyers. I would love to know how many are purchasing homes through family members, etc. too. But we may not know until it's too late.
As far as the downpayment comment you just made, I read a lot of articles, hear/read from realtors, and read in that book I mentioned about the source of the 20% downpayment for many of these mortgages. And unfortunately, it's more debt. It'd be great if every one of these down payments were hard earned savings, but parents are taking out home equity lines of credit, extending their existing mortgages. Once again, we really don't know how many are doing this, but HELOC's are a on an upsurge, whether it's for more real estate, or personal spending money. For these home owners to continue to increase their leverage introduces new risk. And why not right? Credit is cheap, the offers the banks are emailing out sound great, and their homes are worth a ton! As a result, personal debt levels in Canada are through the roof and provides a new avenue of exposure to the banks that could burn them if there ever is a real estate crisis. I would love to have some raw numbers on all of this.
I'm in my early 30's and my wife and I's income is into 6 figures. Our combined total savings is close to or just over $200k and our credit ratings are superb. My agent has told me that he could 'easily' get us a mortgage worth $1 million. My jaw hit the floor when I heard this. I'd never take out a mortgage that large in my current situation. It's far too high to be serviceable by my income to leave any money left over to live a decently entertaining life. But I wonder how many people in my position would take it or already have?
Thanks for your posts, very interesting.
Just a passing observation about this comment: "It's far too high to be serviceable by my income to leave any money left over to live a decently entertaining life. "
I think that, if we are comparing the current situation to that of our parents or grandparents in the 50s/60s/70s, we miss something crucial and that is that "entertaining" was completely different back then. One didn't pay a few hundred every month for Internet and cable. There was one landline and one TV (or maybe two) and no computers or computer games or apps. You watched what the networks offered and had no iTunes or HBO. Going to the movies didn't involve $20 at the concession stand for two people. Concert tickets for rock stars weren't in the hundreds of dollars. There were vinyl LPs that one approached differently and treasured as opposed to downloading or livestreaming music sub services. FM radio was GOOD, with DJs who knew their stuff and playlists not factory-produced. Hockey equipment for the kids didn't cost thousands. And so on.
All these things have far far far outstripped inflation.
A "decently entertaining life" back then was decently affordable.
Furthermore, our parents "made sacrifices" and economies because many had grown up during the Depression or were immigrants from poorer countries.
So, not only are today's first time home buyers faced with staggering asking prices and bidding wars, they are also generally used to an expensive lifestyle, at least in comparison to our parents back when a 20-30% down payment was sufficient.




