Toronto Star

Condos cancelled amid hot market

Since start of 2017, 17 plans have been scrapped in GTA

- NATALIE WONG

Builders in Toronto’s frenzied condo market are walking away from giant towers they have pre-sold, reflecting a rougher road to profits — and leaving buyers in the lurch.

Soaring constructi­on costs and condo values in Canada’s largest city, where prices have surged amid a booming economy and strong immigratio­n, have spurred developers to cancel projects they started when constructi­on was cheaper and pre-sales were less lucrative. Condo prices have increased about 20 per cent since February of last year, according to the Canadian Real Estate Associatio­n.

“Many projects launched for pre-sales prior to having their proper approvals in place,” said Shaun Hildebrand, a senior vice-president at Urbanation Inc. “By rushing to bring units into a hot market, some projects jumped the gun and added risk to the developmen­t.”

According to Urbanation, which studies the Toronto condo market, there are 10,622 condo units in the Greater Toronto Area that were offered for presale before 2017 and still await constructi­on. Since the start of last year, 17 projects, with 3,627 units, have been cancelled in the region, according to real estate services firm Altus Group Ltd. That’s up from seven projects, with 808 units, in 2016.

This month alone, Liberty Developmen­t Corp. pulled the plug on a three-tower, sold-out condo developmen­t, citing problems with constructi­on financing. Liberty didn’t respond to an email seeking comment.

The threat of still more cancellati­ons looms over Toronto, where housing is tight and expensive as it is.

Typically, developers need pre-sales of at least 70 per cent to get financing to move a project forward, said Phong Ngo, director of data solutions at Altus. That isn’t their last hurdle. From there, the longer it takes to break ground, the higher the costs of materials and labour, especially as interest rates rise. Builders may face delays in getting government permits, finding contractor­s and workers amid the hot demand or parrying special-interest groups that oppose constructi­on.

As of February, 143 condo projects that are at least 70-percent pre-sold hadn’t started constructi­on yet, according to data from Altus. Of these, 43 had hit the 70-per-cent mark more than a year earlier.

Constructi­on costs in the Toronto area, which typically have risen in tandem with inflation, increased 6 to 8 per cent last year (compared with inflation of about 2 per cent), according to Altus. “We believe that going forward next year, it’ll be at least that or more,” said David Schoonjans, senior director at the firm. At the same time, la- bour costs are rising, with hourly compensati­on up 2.4 per cent across Canada in 2017.

“At some point, the project stops making financial sense,” Schoonjans said.

It is that environmen­t that the GTA finds itself with 412 condo projects totalling 101,208 units in the works, Altus reports.

In the end, “only a small portion” of condo buildings will be cancelled, said Lauren White, senior vice-president of the Land Services Group at CBRE Group Inc. “Therefore, the effect will be a minor tightening on supply as purchasers from cancelled projects move to active projects.”

Homebuyers who had their projects scrapped will be back in the market again, increasing demand even further, said Mike Czestochow­ski, CBRE executive vice-president.

With the intense demand for housing in and around the city, many new projects are bound to rise and cancelled ones to be revived — at higher prices.

“We haven’t seen an increase in supply yet,” he said. “It would be hard to imagine what else they do with the site.”

 ?? BERNARD WEIL/TORONTO STAR ?? Liberty Developmen­t cancelled a condo developmen­t at Maplecrete Rd. and Hwy. 7.
BERNARD WEIL/TORONTO STAR Liberty Developmen­t cancelled a condo developmen­t at Maplecrete Rd. and Hwy. 7.

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