
The Greater Toronto Area builds a lot more condominiums than purpose-built rental units. This isn't the case everywhere though. I was recently reading an article about Salt Lake City and how developers there don't want to build condominiums. It's mostly rental housing. There's simply too much risk and liability with condominiums. I guess this is one of the reasons why real estate is often said to be a local business.
In any event, because of this dynamic in Toronto, condominium rentals are often used to measure the health of the overall rental market. There are simply more recent comparables to point to when you're trying to figure out what is "market." The Toronto Regional Real Estate Board recently published its Q2-2021 rental market report and here is what they found when it comes to condominium apartment rental transactions in the Greater Toronto Area:
Q2-2021 - 14,920 transactions
Q1-2021 - 13,168 transactions
Q2-2020 - 7,300 transactions
What this report tells us is that rental demand is returning. Transactions and rents are up compared to the first quarter of this year and certainly compared to Q2 of last year (2020), which was the low point of this pandemic. We are not yet back to where we were in Q1-2020 when the city was firing on all cylinders, but I have no doubt that we will get there and ultimately surpass those figures.
For the full rental market report, click here.
Photo by Narciso Arellano on Unsplash
Yesterday the Globe and Mail published an article titled, “Weakening rental picture latest condo market worry." At first glance, this title seems worrisome. Particularly since Toronto’s condo rental market was supposed to be so robust, with vacancy rates hovering around historic lows.
But as I read the article, I was reminded, once again, about how opaque the real estate marketplace is. To make this prediction, the research group quoted in the article mined craigslist postings. Granted, craigslist is probably the largest source for condo rental listings (even more so than MLS), but I don’t think it necessarily makes it a reliable source.
Craigslist is a messy marketplace. You have expired listings; brokers posting listings in the owner section; brokers posting fake listings for the purpose of lead generation; and so on. It seems to me that there could be a huge margin of error if you tried to rely on this data. So I’m not so sure I would put a lot of weight on a supposed 1.6% rental rate decline.
But what does worry me is how imperfect the real estate marketplace is. It’s incredibly hard to get good data and I think that this is bad for everybody involved in real estate. But network effects are a hard thing to overcome, which is why a messy and ugly marketplace such as craigslist can remain so dominant.
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