Times Colonist

Montreal hot spot for luxury sales: Sotheby’s report

Home sales over $1 million jumped 60%

- ALEKSANDRA SAGAN

VANCOUVER — Montreal is emerging as a luxury real estate hot spot, while Vancouver and Toronto sales should pick up this fall after somewhat sluggish times, according to a new report.

Sotheby’s Internatio­nal Realty Canada’s rosy outlook comes despite a slew of policy changes, including some from Ottawa and a couple of provincial government­s designed to cool the country’s hot housing markets. However, Canada’s strong economic performanc­e will boost the market in the coming months, says the real estate sales and marketing company.

“The psychologi­cal confidence that people had in the marketplac­e was shaken by all of the different factors that were put in there,” said Brad Henderson, CEO of Sotheby’s Internatio­nal Realty Canada, of a recent drop in sales in properties of more than $1 million in Toronto.

In July and August, sales of condominiu­ms and houses over $1 million in Toronto fell 27 per cent compared with the same months the year before, according to the report. Transactio­ns of properties over $4 million in the city fell by nearly the same amount — 28 per cent.

Part of that drop came as buyers and sellers in Ontario grappled with a new 15 per cent tax on foreign buyers of properties in the Greater Golden Horseshoe Region, which includes Toronto and several nearby areas, introduced by the provincial government in late April.

Ontario followed B.C.’s footsteps in the policy.

The B.C. government implemente­d a similar levy on foreign buyers in the Metro Vancouver area in August 2016, and the province experience­d a drop in luxury property sales shortly thereafter.

In Vancouver, the report says, sales of luxury real estate over $1 million dropped 23 per cent in the first half of the year compared with 2016. But sales increased five per cent during July and August, compared to the same months last year.

Sotheby’s anticipate­d the Toronto market would pull back, not only due to the impact of its foreign buyers’ tax, but also because of a move to stricter lending rules by the federal government last year, and two recent hikes in the benchmark interest rate from the Bank of Canada.

While that tempered the psychologi­cal confidence in the Toronto market, Henderson said, it boosted people’s confidence in Quebec, where the provincial government has yet to intervene.

In Montreal, sales of condominiu­ms and homes over $1 million jumped 60 per cent year over year this July and August.

Sotheby’s forecasts Montreal will “emerge as a strong leader on Canada’s luxury real estate landscape this fall,” according to the report.

Henderson rejects the idea that growth is primarily coming from foreign buyers who have shifted away from the newlytaxed Vancouver and Toronto markets, though the report cites some anecdotal evidence of “an uptick in interest from foreign buyers seeking residences.”

Instead, Montreal is an attractive place to live and work, Henderson said, with the added bonus of having comparativ­ely less expensive real estate prices.

Sotheby’s also anticipate­s “a brisk and active” market for luxury real estate in Toronto this fall and for Vancouver to regain momentum as a strong Canadian economy is expected to boost confidence and performanc­e in the autumn months.

In Calgary, the report says “tentative optimism is set to gain ground” as the city emerges from a recession.

 ??  ?? A house for sale in the Montreal suburb of Westmount. A Sotheby’s report cites anecdotal evidence of “an uptick in interest from foreign buyers seeking residences.”
A house for sale in the Montreal suburb of Westmount. A Sotheby’s report cites anecdotal evidence of “an uptick in interest from foreign buyers seeking residences.”

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