![]() |
Toronto's construction boom has just been insane this past decade..I was just reading another thread re: Dallas..I never realized how large Dallas was..Texas as a whole seems to be growing at a good clip as well.
|
There is nothing more predictable in life than death, taxes and DC_denizen anti-Toronto/Canada posts.
|
Quote:
Almost all recently purchased homes in the GTA are cash flow negative https://www.thehabistat.com/post/alm...-flow-negative Quote:
|
Weird. Why would anyone buy cash-flow negative RE when they could just put cash in a basically no-cost, nothing-to-manage index fund that generates averaged 10% returns forever?
RE returns are irrelevant unless you're constantly flipping, which sounds like an extremely dangerous game. And getting killed in the interim. |
Not to interrupt the perception of a sea of investor-driven condos u/c in Toronto (many of which are actually mixed-use), but a brief commercial for the office construction contribution to the downtown boom. Other than NYC, not sure how other NA cities are faring in the commercial sector, but a number of major office developments are u/c or nearing completion downtown.
Finishing touches are underway on the Wilkinson Eyre-designed CIBC Square Phase 1 (1.3 million square feet) and below grade construction for the slightly taller Phase 2 (1.4 million square feet) is progressing quickly. The Well office tower (1 million square feet) is topped out, the AS+GG-designed TD Bank on Front Street (1.2 million square feet) is well into construction, and the 820,000 square foot Bay Adelaide phase 3 (ScotiaBank) is nearing completion. Google’s 400,000 square foot local HQ at 65 King East and Menkes’ 690,000 square foot 100 Queens Quay Sugar Wharf office building are getting closer to completion. First Gulf’s 460,000 square foot EQ Bank Tower is climbing to grade. More office space will be coming online via mixed-use projects u/c such as WestBank’s 19 Duncan (includes 150,000 sq feet of office). The 54 storey 11 Bay office tower near the waterfront has supposedly landed a major anchor tenant (yet to be officially revealed but likely Amazon) so we might see a start next year. More are in the development pipeline including a couple of supertalls (Oxford’s Union Park and 191 Bay Street). Westbank’s BIG-designed Union Centre proposal was recently bumped up to 298m but no news yet on an anchor tenant. No doubt the impact/longevity of WFH will likely stretch the timelines of new proposals moving to construction. |
Quote:
Secondly, unless these investors have very deep pockets, they able to charge enough on rents to cover carrying costs. Property taxes in Toronto are very low, so it's just debt service and condo fees. With interest rates below inflation, the government is practically begging people to borrow money and invest. I'm making a couple of assumptions, so if anyone has any unbiased data on these topics, they would make an interesting read. Please post away. Quote:
|
regarding office construction, in the US:
LA expects 7M sf of new office space delivered in 2021 Boston — 6.6 million square feet and San Francisco — 5.7 million square feet — were the second- and third-most active markets for new office space. https://therealdeal.com/la/2021/04/0...ats-a-problem/ |
Quote:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/danpont...h=1a2a85711344 Quote:
|
Quote:
And (this is big) because you can buy with heavy leverage. You're making money on the whole value, not just the amount you've paid so far. And because even negative cash flow might be temporary. |
Quote:
eg Boston's vacancy rate is currently 14.6% (oct 2021) https://www.nmrk.com/insights/market...market-reports pre-pandemic it was 12%. so hardly what I would call soaring. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Vacancy rate: Downtown: 6.3% Midtown: 5.3% GTA total 8% From what I posted in the GDP thread: Greater Toronto Area - 252,000,000 SF total office space - ~94 Million SF of which is Downtown - 8.8 Million SF u/c 826,000,000 SF total industrial space total vacant: 3.1M SF or 0.4% Both office and industrial markets have ~100,000,000 SF more than Greater Philadelphia, for example. source: Colliers (Q2 2021) |
Just talking proposed units here, not starts........but Urban Toronto's August summary is a bit of an eye popper.
https://cdn.skyrisecities.com/sites/...442-138284.jpg 8,140 units proposed. That's only for the City proper, and only for August! |
Quote:
Normally I would say that proposals do not equate to building starts, but all the construction photos in the Toronto complication thread proves otherwise. |
Quote:
anyhow seattle has 9.8 MM sq feet of office space under construction per that report , Chicago 3.5 MM sq feet |
Quote:
Colliers says my city has 80,000,000 sf of office, while CoStar says it has 215,000,000 sf -- amost a 1:3 ratio. They have different standards and levels of effort in different cities, even within one firm. |
my whole point was there's a ton of Office (and industrial) space in the GTA and that there's 8-9 Million square feet of Office under construction.
Americans don't seem to realize how big Toronto is and how damn quickly it is growing. |
Agreed on those points.
I'd trust the brokerages to be reasonably accurate on construction stats...though I noticed some incorrect details when I looked at my local Colliers report just now. |
interesting video about buying condos in Vaughn, Ontario:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xhu1LtxWswc some comments: Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
All times are GMT. The time now is 10:53 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2023, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.