The Hamilton Spectator

Developer under fire for $1B rental plan

Company treating homes as a vehicle for wealth, not a necessity, critics say

- JACOB LORINC

A Toronto-based condo developer’s plan to buy $1 billion worth of single-family homes and use them as rental properties has sparked outrage from critics who say it’s an example of how corporatio­ns can profit from the country’s housing crisis.

Core Developmen­t Group, which develops and manages a wide range of real estate projects across Canada, said it plans to build a far-reaching single-family home rental business that will consist of 4,000 rental units in Ontario, Quebec, B.C. and Atlantic Canada.

The plan, first reported by the Globe and Mail, will target eight cities in Ontario — including Hamilton, London, Kingston, St. Catharines, Barrie, Peterborou­gh, Cambridge and Guelph — before expanding outside Ontario by 2026.

Critics say the strategy mimics similar moves by U.S. corporatio­ns in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis that bought swaths of housing stock and rented units to tenants while keeping the equity.

It’s called the “financiali­zation” of housing — where corporatio­ns and financial markets treat housing as a vehicle for wealth and investment rather than a social necessity, often to the detriment of individual homebuyers, says John Pasalis, president of Realosophy Realty.

“It’s hard enough for first-time homebuyers to get into the market. Now, they’re competing with billion-dollar investors who are just buying properties to rent them out, in a market where we’re not building enough single-family homes to begin with,” said Pasalis.

“It’s wrong on all possible levels. It takes more properties out of our inventory, and can only do harm to an already-tight supply,” said Ron Butler, a mortgage broker with Butler Mortgage.

In an interview with the Star, Core founder Corey Hawtin defended the plans to purchase single-family homes, saying that the company is buying far less than one per cent of the homes that trade in the Ontario market on a yearly basis.

“I really, deeply sympathize with people aspiring to own homes across Canada but simply can’t afford to do so,” said Hawtin. “We’re trying to provide an environmen­t where our tenants — that’s young families, students, divorcees — can rent a place and get an experience within a neighbourh­ood that they can’t afford to buy in.”

Hawtins said the company is not participat­ing in bidding wars for the homes they purchase, and that most of them are already rental homes.

“There’s a compoundin­g percentage of the population that are renters. And whether they are renters because they can’t afford to buy or because that’s the lifestyle they choose, the rental marketplac­e is exponentia­lly growing on a demand basis. And it will for the foreseeabl­e future,” he said.

The move is not unpreceden­ted in Canada, though it is unusual. Wealthy investors typically profit from the housing market by buying apartment buildings and renting individual units to tenants. Core Developmen­t’s model, alternativ­ely, is to focus on single-family homes as rental options.

News of Core’s plans reached the Ontario and federal government­s on Monday, prompting politician­s from across party lines to criticize the government’s housing policies.

“How can first-time home buyers compete with a $1-billion dollar developer for a home? They can’t. The housing market is unfair,” wrote Jessica Bell, New Democrat MPP for University-Rosedale, on Twitter.

A spokespers­on for Ottawa’s Ministry of Families, Children and Social Developmen­t said the government is “aware of the situation” and “monitoring it closely.”

 ?? STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Homes in Guelph are among eight cities in Ontario, which also includes Hamilton, targeted for purchase by Core Developmen­t Group. The developer plans use the homes as rental properties.
STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Homes in Guelph are among eight cities in Ontario, which also includes Hamilton, targeted for purchase by Core Developmen­t Group. The developer plans use the homes as rental properties.

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