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A decade of changing development pro formas

Ten years ago when I was working on development pro formas (here in Toronto), we used to assume that we would launch condominium pre-sales, and then start working drawings once we hit somewhere around 50% sold. And for our hard costs, we would carry a modest inflation rate of say 2-3% per year.

The thinking at the time was that construction documents are expensive, let’s not spend the money until we know that we have a good amount of sales under our belt. In Toronto, you can also use purchaser deposits toward project costs, so this is an equity efficient way of managing your cash flow.

But then this go-to-market strategy started becoming too risky, probably around 2017-2018. Sales were happening faster and costs started increasing a lot faster, and so now everyone wanted to minimize the lag between their pre-sales (your revenue) and when they procured construction (your costs).

So as an ideal and totally risk-averse approach, the objective was to be ready to start construction and to know what your hard costs would be before you even started selling condominiums. It didn’t matter that you were going to spend a bunch of money on technical drawings, because it was still going to be many multiples less than your cost escalation exposure if you didn’t do it. There was also a high degree of confidence that you would get the pre-sales once you did launch.

This is how things mostly worked during the pandemic. But strategies once again changed in the second half of 2022. Pre-sales slowed and people started wondering, “wait a minute, could hard costs actually come down?” The answer turned out to be yes and, this year, most people in the industry expect them to come down even further.

This is a good example of how quickly and dramatically things can change in development. In 2021, it was “we need lock in construction costs immediately or we might get hit with a 40% increase on glass.” Now it is, “let’s wait as long as possible because we’re in a deflationary cost environment and I’m sure it’ll be cheaper later.”

To some extent, you can look to leading indicators like architecture billings and home pre-sales to determine what the future might look like. But it’s far from perfect. I don’t know anyone that accurately predicted what we just went through over the last number of years.

So as a developer, you just have to do your best to stay ahead of what’s coming and manage your downside risk as best you can. In all cases, you’re going to need to be creative and nimble. Because clearly a lot can change in the span of even a single development project.

Photo by Ben Allan on Unsplash

5 Comments

  1. Lisa McGill

    Deposits are held in a trust account usually with a law firm. When did developers have access to this money to use for construction?

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  2. Myron Nebozuk

    I appreciate this comment very much. I wish I knew this when I graduated from architecture school three decades ago. Had I known this, I would have better understood why developer clients ran alternately hot and cold during my first ten years of practice. Fresh graduates would do well to absorb this lesson; knowing where we are in this cycle can help graduates choose work that is most helpful and personally rewarding during each point of the cycle. Hint: architectural graduates shouldn’t necessarily work for architects 100% of the time.

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      • Yes, indeed. An intern architect working for a firm that is continually in the starting blocks (predominantly working on conceptual and schematic design phase work) is not likely to complete their professional logbook requirements quickly. For this reason, it makes sense for graduates to seek experience from developers and builders during fallow periods. If an intern eventually comes back to architectural practice, that intern will become more valuable to a firm and will be given client facing opportunities because they can walk the walk.

        P.S. One of my heroes coming into architecture school was John Portman. I was soon dissuaded from following this “false prophet”.

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