The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Toronto bidding wars so fierce homebuyers skip inspection­s

- By Kim Chipman Bloomberg

In Toronto, some 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 C$1.21 million ($905,950) in February, up a third from a year earlier, amid a dearth of properties for sale. In the same period, Toronto-based home-inspection firm Carson Dunlop saw a 34 percent drop in volume. Murray Parish, president of the Ontario Associatio­n of Home Inspectors, said he’s seen a 30 percent 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 Inc. broker based in Toronto, adding that it’s not uncommon to see bids of as much as C$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, leading local officials to search for ways to control price gains and spurring concerns a correction may be coming. 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 percent” a byproduct of multiple offers on the same property, 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.

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

The average home-inspection fee is around C$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 West Coast 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 percent 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 million-dollar 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.

Marcus Simon, a property attorney based outside Washington, D.C., said the last time he saw a marked increase in waived inspection­s in his region was around 2007, just before the full financial crisis hit. Recently, the trend has popped up again in some Washington suburbs, he said.

Removing the inspection clause is a sign that “speculatio­n has entered the market,” said Simon, owner of Ekko Title in McLean, Virginia. Some buyers believe property values are appreciati­ng so quickly they can’t lose.

“People think they know the worst-case scenario, but their imaginatio­n doesn’t always serve them well,” he said. “They don’t realize how bad or how expensive it can get.”

 ?? MARK SOMMERFELD — BLOOMBERG ?? A “For Sale” sign stands on display outside an open house in Barrie, Ontario.
MARK SOMMERFELD — BLOOMBERG A “For Sale” sign stands on display outside an open house in Barrie, Ontario.

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