Waterloo Region Record

Bidding wars so fierce, buyers skip inspection­s

Shortage of supply has home buyers taking a risk

- Kim Chipman

Some Toronto homebuyers are so desperate to win bidding wars that they’re rushing to make offers without even getting an inspection.

The average price for a detached home in Canada’s largest metropolit­an area jumped to $1.21 million in March, up a third from a year earlier, amid a dearth of properties for sale. In the same period, Toronto-based homeinspec­tion firm Carson Dunlop saw a 34 per cent drop in volume. Murray Parish, president of the Ontario Associatio­n of Home Inspectors, said he’s seen a 30 per cent decline at his firm, Parish Home Inspection­s.

“The bottom line is we are in a shortage of supply,” said Tasis Giannoukak­is, a Century 21 Leading Edge Realty broker based in Toronto, adding that it’s not uncommon to see bids of as much as $200,000 over the asking price. “That pressure is what’s causing everybody to remove the conditions on an inspection.”

Home-price increases in North America’s fourth-largest city and its suburbs have outpaced growth in places including Manhattan, Vancouver, Seattle and San Francisco. The frothy market, buoyed by low interest rates, is resulting in frenzied bidding wars, causing many shoppers to leave once-standard clauses such as a profession­al home inspection and financing contingenc­ies out of their purchase offers.

Giannoukak­is noted that homebuyers are generally savvier when it comes to repairs and renovation­s than they were a decade or two ago, thanks to informatio­n on the Internet and the popularity of home-related TV shows. Still, removing conditions such an inspection aren’t due to voluntary risk-taking, but are “100 per cent” a byproduct of multiple offers, he said.

“When you are the only offer on the table, you can submit a conditiona­l offer,” said Lorand Sebestyen, an agent with iPro Realty Ltd. in Toronto, adding that he counsels clients on the risks of skipping an inspection. “But when competing with several other offers, you don’t have that luxury.”

Even for do-it-yourself types, the potential pitfalls are myriad — especially if a buyer is already going over budget to complete a purchase. Alan Carson, founder of home-inspection firm Carson Dunlop, said problems his team has found over the years include faulty pipes, eroding foundation­s, termite infestatio­ns, old roofs and a bathroom that seemed functional but actually lacked any connected plumbing. Other surprises have included finding a loaded rifle and large bag of jewelry in an attic, as well as a “very sooty raccoon” jumping from a fireplace damper, he said.

“You don’t know what could be hiding behind the walls,” said Shubha Dasgupta, owner of Capital Lending Centre, a Torontobas­ed mortgage brokerage.

The average home-inspection fee is around $450 these days, according to Carson.

A move away from inspection­s isn’t unique to Toronto. Vancouver, Canada’s hottest real estate market until Toronto took that mantle last year, saw a surge in unconditio­nal purchase offers in the first half of 2016, said Adil Dinani, an agent with Royal LePage West Real Estate Services in the city.

The same is true in hot U.S. markets. Mark Attarha, president of Bay Sotheby’s Internatio­nal Realty, which has seven offices in the in San Francisco Bay area, said he’s seeing a spate of offers without contingenc­ies, along with a raft of “overbiddin­g.”

Attarha estimates that 75 per cent of prospectiv­e buyers he works with are accepting a home-inspection report from the seller rather than ordering their own or including an inspection clause in their purchase offers.

“I don’t think the trend is people don’t want to do inspection­s anymore — it’s somewhat being forced on them in order to compete,” Giannoukak­is said.

But, he added, if someone is buying a property in the milliondol­lar range — something far more common after the steep increase in home prices — then a few thousand dollars of potential repairs may be of little concern.

There are other instances where buyers can sometimes skip the inspection without feeling like they’re taking too big a gamble. With newer homes, an argument can be made doing so is fine because municipali­ties ensure properties are built to code, said Dasgupta, the Toronto mortgage broker.

Inspection­s are also less of a concern for condominiu­ms, which are “well-protected and insulated from some of the potential damages that may occur in detached properties,” he said.

The financial burden typically falls to the buyer who opts to skip an inspection. Because the buyer “supposedly has the ability to see problems and ability to negotiate either a lower price or for work to be done, the law doesn’t see any reason really to protect you,” said Michael Lamb, a real estate lawyer and professor at Western University in London, Ont.

There is one group that doesn’t see much of a problem with the decline in home inspection­s: mortgage providers. Banks are far less concerned about costly repairs that may arise later and are instead focused on the appraised value of a property, Dasgupta said.

“From a home value standpoint, the appraisal is really the key indicator for the bank. Lenders aren’t liable from the perspectiv­e of any deficienci­es in the property.”

Just as Toronto’s surging prices have stretched to other parts of Ontario, so has the decline in inspection­s. Barrie, about 105 kilometres north of Toronto, has “gone nuts,” said Peggy Hill, with Keller Williams Experience Realty. Hill said she now sees offers with no conditions about 80 to 90 per cent of the time, compared with 10 to 20 per cent previously. Like his counterpar­ts to the south, Derrick Vogel, owner of EnerOne Inc., an inspection service in Barrie, said his business is down too — by about 45 per cent this year.

Nicholas L’Ecuyer, a managing partner at Barrie-based loan brokerage Mortgage Wellness Group, said he doesn’t view skipping inspection­s as a red flag for the market, but rather as a necessary evil for buyers seeking to win bidding wars.

“For about $400, everybody wants to do it,” he said. “But they know they can’t.”

 ?? TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? The average price for a detached home in the Greater Toronto Area jumped to $1.21 million in March.
TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO The average price for a detached home in the Greater Toronto Area jumped to $1.21 million in March.

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