I've been hearing it for ten years now. I mentioned to an acquaintance that I was thinking of buying a condo. "Oh, the market's going to crash, and you'll lose all your money" he snapped back.
That was in 2004. Needless to say, I'm glad I didn't listen. I sold it last year for 70% more than I paid for it, and even that's with the unit not appreciating much due to a number of reasons, and me willing to let it go for less rather than leave it on the market for months trying to get a bit more.
Ever since then, on any online news article about real estate article I've seen, are dozens of comments of people who are convinced that a massive market meltdown is imminent, and yes, it's happening for sure, this is just the first warning, it's really happening now, we'll see the devastation in a matter of weeks, here it comes, all the wicked speculators who inflated property values are gonna lose their shirts!!!1 First they said we would follow the US, just two years later, because it's not "different" here. Then a bunch of them were absolutely convinced that the market would collapse five years after the first zero down/40-year mortgages came up for renewal, as if millions of people bought with that sort of financing (in reality, very few did). Then some cited changes in the Chinese economy and real estate market as "proof" that the collapse was imminent. They also all seemed to believe that the vast majority of sales were to speculators and investors, and that downtown TO was filled with finished but vacant highrises. The slightest trend downward was ample evidence that the collapse was coming. Any positive trends were dismissed as deceptive propaganda by the real estate industry.
And then there are the infantile, predicatable remarks: "Pop goes the bubble because the bubble goes pop!" "Get out now while you can, the market's got nowhere to go but down!" "Once the dust settles, I'll be buying foreclosed property for what it's really worth, which is pennies on the dollar" "gullible people throwing money away on WORTHLESS condos deserve what they get"
If I had a nickel for every time someone claimed the market was on the verge of imploding, I could buy half of Vancouver.