National Post

Individual­s still own half of apartments

- Garry Marr

Individual investors own almost half of the apartment stock in the country and a new survey from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. shows those landlords are getting lower rental rates and dealing with higher vacancy rates.

The first-of-its-kind study from the Crown corporatio­n released Wednesday breaks down the ownership f or what is called purpose- built apartments, the historical­ly larger segment of the rental market that doesn’t include condominiu­ms.

“It’s more related to the types of markets that individual­s specialize in,” said Gustavo Durango, senior economist with CMHC, and author of the report, in explaining some of the different rental rates across the ownership spectrum.

Individual investors own 49.3 per cent of the purposebui­lt rental stock in the country’s 35 largest markets. They are followed by private corporatio­ns at 39.7 per cent, real estate investment trusts at 7.9 per cent, publicly traded corporatio­ns at 2.5 per cent and then pension funds at 0.3 per cent.

Despite the emergence of the condo market, the purpose- built rental market continues to play a large role and based on the latest data, albeit from 2011, more than half of renter households were in those type of units. Actual apartment buildings made up 95 per cent of the purpose-built rental stock in 2016, the rest made up of row houses or townhomes.

The study found that, among individual investors, the average rent for a twobedroom apartment was $ 871 nationally, compared with $ 1,085 for private corporatio­ns, $ 1,140 for REITs, $ 1,372 for public corporatio­ns and $1,467 for pension funds.

While it may appear pension funds are squeezing renters harder, a key considerat­ion is that difference in rental rates correlates with average age of a building. On a national basis, the average year of completion for an individual investor building was 1962, but 1972 for private corporatio­ns. By comparison, the average year of completion for pension fund-owned buildings was 1977.

“Generally, what we find is the individual investors tend to own older structures,” Durango said. “That’s a difference right there because a newer unit will tend to have more amenities. The older stock will tend to have a lower rent associated with it.”

Those individual investors also tend to have tinier buildings with an average size of 44 units compared with 92 units for private corporatio­ns and 128 for REITs.

On the vacancy front, the average rate for individual investor- owned buildings was 3.7 per cent which compares with 3.1 per cent for private corporatio­ns, 2.6 per cent for REITs, 4.2 per cent for public corporatio­ns and 0.6 per cent for pension funds.

The breakdown by region shows individual investors concentrat­ed in less- expensive rental markets in Quebec, i ncluding Montreal. More- expensive markets for renting like Vancouver, Edmonton and Halifax have a lower concentrat­ion of individual investors. Toronto proved to be the exception of individual investors having lower concentrat­ion in expensive markets.

Foreign ownership rates were found to be only 2.4 per cent of the market for the entire country, 3.2 per cent in Vancouver, 4.4 per cent in Toronto and 3.4 per cent in Edmonton.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Condos and apartment buildings in downtown Vancouver. The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver says home sales dipped in June compared with a record high set a year ago, but condo sales have risen over the same period.
DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Condos and apartment buildings in downtown Vancouver. The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver says home sales dipped in June compared with a record high set a year ago, but condo sales have risen over the same period.

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