National Post (National Edition)

Realtors say foreigners not behind house price rise

- Financial Post gmarr@postmedia.com Twitter.com/dustywalle­t.com The Associated Press

to the strong double-digit price growth reported over the past year or if some of the increase was also a reaction to the Ontario Government’s recently announced Fair Housing Plan,” said Larry Cerqua, president of the board, in a statement.

TREB said there were 33.6 per cent more new listings than there were a year ago. New listings were up by double digits for all low-rise home types, including detached and semi-detached houses and townhouses, but condominiu­m apartments were at the same level as last year.

The board also released new data looking at property assessment land registry informatio­n to analyze foreign and speculativ­e ownership in the Greater Golden Horseshoe, the area that surrounds and includes Toronto and is home to nine million people. The GGH is subject to the 15 per cent tax. TREB analyzed data provided by the Municipal Property Assessment Corporatio­n and Teranet Inc. for the GGH between 2008 and April 2017.

The group finds the number of buyers with a mailing address outside of Canada is what it describes as “wellbelow one per cent” regardless of the year, and most of those buyers had American addresses.

Between 2008 and April 2017, TREB says the average share of foreign buyers in the GGH was 2.3 per cent. The share was 2.2 per cent in 2016 and 2.6 per cent for January through April 2017.

The group also says that 87 per cent to 90-plus per cent of buyers purchased their homes as a place to live. For 2016, that figure was 91.5 per cent, but dropped to 88 per cent from January to April 2017.

TREB noted that a survey of its brokers produced by Ipsos and released earlier this year estimated that 4.9 per cent of transactio­ns between the fall of 2015 and the fall of 2016 were made up of foreign buyers.

On the speculatio­n front, the board looked at purchases between 2008 and April 2017 to analyze the number of homes bought and sold within one year of the original transactio­n by domestic or foreign buyers. The share was less than five per cent in 2016, and about seven per cent between January and April 2017.

The condo market saw record quarterly sales as inventory plummeted in the first quarter, some of it clearly linked to investors looking to profit from units quickly.

Urbanation Inc., a condo research firm, said Wednesday there were 9,932 new condo apartment sales across the GTA over the first 90 days of 2017, a 73-percent jump from a year ago.

Meanwhile, KFC’s U.S. sales rose two per cent . Yum pointed to the chain’s improving results over the past couple of years as an example of how it might be able to turn around Pizza Hut’s results.

Factoring in overseas results, Yum’s overall sales rose two per cent at establishe­d locations in the quarter. The company split from its China business last year.

For the quarter, Yum Brands Inc. earned US$280 million, or US77 cents per share. Excluding non-recurring gains, it earned US65 cents per share. That was better than the US60 cents per share analysts expected, according to Zacks Investment Research..

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