Toronto Star

Buyer’s remorse creeps in as market slows

- TARA DESCHAMPS

A wave of buyer’s remorse is taking shape in several heated real estate markets, after housing prices started dropping and the number of sales slowed over the past two months.

Realtors and lawyers in Toronto and Vancouver say they have noticed buyers looking at what options they have to get out of a purchase and sellers hoping to ensure one goes through because conditions have shifted dramatical­ly from the previous highs and frenzied pace.

The country experience­d a 25.7 per cent drop in the number of homes sold over the past year and a 3.8 per cent slide in housing prices between March and April, the Canadian Real Estate Associatio­n said Monday. The average home price last month totalled $741,517.

Such numbers have prompted some sellers to explore lawsuits to ensure transactio­ns move forward and other purchasers to worry

about the value of pre-sale properties they bought years ago but have yet to take possession of.

“With today’s real estate prices, there’s really no option but to go all in and if you’re going all in, and then suddenly you’re realizing that perhaps you made a bad bet and there’s a way out of that bet, you’re going to do whatever you can to get out,” said Mark Morris, a Toronto real estate lawyer.

In recent weeks, he has seen nine cases where buyers want to back out of deals, but on Monday alone was approached by three sellers keen to use legal channels to keep purchasers from walking away.

Morris doesn’t call the encounters a trend because it’s unclear how many other lawyers are seeing the same spate, but three queries in a day is his new record. He used to see one case of that nature every few months.

People get “spooked” every time the market turns and explore what they can do about deals they signed, but few end up walking away because it’s hard to get out of such transactio­ns, said Phil Soper, CEO of Royal LePage.

He thinks the exception to this pattern came in 2020, when the pandemic broke out and people wanting out of transactio­ns had so many unknowns on their side.

Most buyers trying to end a deal this year won’t be successful because there is no legal way out, but such cases are also impractica­l for sellers, Morris said.

In cases where the buyer has put money into a seller’s trust account, that money can only be released with a court action, the closing of the deal or a mutual agreement not to pursue the sale, Morris said. He’s seen buyers agree to give the seller the money, if the seller mutually agrees to end the deal.

If a deal ends, brokers can sue for their lost commission but not many explore this avenue because it’s “not a good look” to take legal action against a client, who might still turn to you when they try to sell the home from the failed transactio­n again, said Morris.

While Tirajeh Mazaheri hasn’t seen legal action in Vancouver, the Coldwell Banker Prestige Realty agent has seen buyer’s remorse and worry crop up among investors who purchased pre-constructi­on homes a few years ago but have yet to take possession of them.

The people who purchased in early rounds of pre-constructi­on sales for a building are ahead of the curve, but those who bought later will have to wait longer to break even or make a profit, she said.

People get “spooked” every time the market turns and explore what they can do about deals they signed, but few end up walking away because it’s hard to get out of such transactio­ns, said Phil Soper, CEO of Royal LePage.

 ?? R.J. JOHNSTON TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ??
R.J. JOHNSTON TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO

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