TOperson
Active Member
In theory you could take a loss of course. In reality, where in the Toronto condo market is this happening? If this doomsday scenario is as common as you propose, it must be affecting a large portion of the condo resale market. If this were true, Toronto wouldn't be the world capital of condo speculation.
"Some" of them very well may not be, but we are talking about the Toronto rental market...which is. And I'm in the professional landlord business, so I'm not making anything up.
You can keep on tap-dancing all you like. I don't expect you to acknowledge it, because it brings down your whole house of cards.
The truth is, the potential for issues or worse case scenarios exist in theory, but in reality, it isn't the doom and gloom you predict.
You should definitely look at the links I posted upthread, one from right here on UT. If between those links and the documentary you still think a condo is a wise choice, good luck to you.
One thing though: a lot of your comments are based on the assumption that current conditions will just carry on, but even a superficial look at RE history will show you that conditions and markets ALWAYS change, and there are ALWAYS losers when they do. I remember condo-market dramas in the early 90s, and lot of people lost money on them then. Nothing protects Toronto from a repeat of that, or worse.