i hope that doesn't sound right.
are they expecting inflation of 20-25% over the next 5 years ?!?
if so, that means interest rates will be going up and will affect R/E prices inversely ... not good news
Again it was the commentary by Paul Bagnell.
If we assume 10% decline that would be 20% or 4% average/year over the next 5 years. A lot of forecasters are expecting inflation to pick up next year but who knows?
Again, I apologize as it was a "phrase" from the BNN commentator.
From the Globe now on line: I hope this clarifies the comment.
Pimco downbeat on Canada's housing market Add to ...
Michael Babad
The Globe and Mail (includes correction)
Published Monday, Mar. 03 2014, 7:04 AM EST
Last updated Monday, Mar. 03 2014, 3:00 PM EST
88 comments
These are stories Report on Business is following Monday, March 3, 2014.
Follow Michael Babad and The Globe's Business Briefing on Twitter.
Pimco cuts Canadian holdings
The world’s biggest bond fund is taking a downbeat view of Canada's housing market, projecting a decline over the next few years and slashing its holdings in the country.
Ed Devlin, who heads up Canadian investing for
Pimco, told The Globe and Mail's Tara Perkins that the company expects a decline in house prices of possibly 10 per cent to 20 per cent in real terms in about three to five years.
"
In nominal terms, I see it flat to down 10 per cent," he said.
"And if you get that kind of 10-, 20-per-cent real correction, that should alleviate some of the stresses," he added in an interview with our real estate reporter.
"And so that's kind of what what we're seeing. It will start this year, it could be bumpy along the way."
To be clear, Mr. Devlin is not forecasting a sudden crash, but he joins a chorus of voices, from Deutsche Bank to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, in raising red flags.
Deutsche Bank, for example, believes the Canadian housing market is the most overvalued in the world.
Toronto-Dominion Bank, in turn, believes the market is overvalued by 10 per cent.
(Editor's note: The Financial Times earlier reported that Mr. Devlin called for a decline of up to 30 per cent, but later revised that to between 10 per cent and 30 per cent.)
Pimco’s primary Total Return Fund, with assets of almost $250-billion (U.S.), cut its holdings of Canadian debt to 2 per cent in the third quarter of last year, compared to 4 per cent 12 months earlier, according to the newspaper.
About a month ago, on Pimco’s website, Mr. Devlin wrote that there is little chance of an all-out meltdown in Canadian real estate and that he expects a more orderly cooling.
A full crash, he wrote, would only be sparked by developments he doesn’t see in the cards, such a sharp hike in interest rates, a sharp rise in unemployment or a disruption to mortgage credit.