Thursday, March 17, 2011
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Vancouver Real estate Continues to Climb
Great Article on the Vancouver real estate market and how the prices drive ever higher.....
See this Amp at http://amplify.com/u/bu3re
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Business In Vancouver article
| Canadians confident about investing in real estate |
| Wednesday, 09 March 2011 | |
In B.C., home-buying intentions remain steady, according to the RBC poll. Some 29% of residents indicated they are likely to buy a home in the next two years, on par with the national average and equal to last year. Of those intending to buy homes in B.C., 30% are more likely to purchase a new home rather than a resale. This figure is the highest in the country and eight points above the national average. Those intending to buy a home are also looking more long term, with almost four in 10 planning to purchase in the next one to two years rather than right now. Almost half of the province believes that it’s a buyers market, which is also eight points above the national average. British Columbian’s top concerns when purchasing a home are increasing housing prices and having a sufficient down payment. British Columbians indicate they are looking to buy the following types of homes, according to the poll: • Detached house 54% • Condo/loft 17% • Semi detached house 11% • Townhouse 13% |
Friday, March 11, 2011
Vancouver real estate gets a Second Life
Brian Shuster built a mini empire developing internet marketing tools, and now the one-time Silicon Valley player is based in Vancouver and looking to capitalize on the city’s extreme real estate obsession.
Mr. Shuster is famous for creating those irritating old pop-up ads that made internet surfing an obstacle course, but he says he also invented banner advertising as a business model. Early on, he also carved out a lucrative career in the adult entertainment business, as a porn webmaster. For the last few years, he’s been focusing on 3-D internet worlds, such as social networking game Virtual Vancouver — which looks like a world of beautiful people. The social networking game has users attending simultaneous real-time art gallery openings, concerts and comedy shows. Mr. Shuster sees the 3-D virtual cyberspace as the future of the internet, and real estate is a “killer app” for it.
“I am largely credited with building a lot of foundational elements that the flat web works on, and I have dozens of patents on those pieces too from many years ago,” says Mr. Shuster. “For a long time I’ve dreamed of how the next version of the internet would really work. So this has been very exciting, but it’s all been done because of my past successes contributing to this project.”
The web developer, marketer and CEO of Utherverse has trained his high-tech sites on Vancouver’s often lucrative real estate market. This month, Mr. Shuster launched virtual house tours so that potential buyers can examine a house on the market without having to actually step foot inside it. If successful, it might save buyers time and realtors money because it would lessen time spent driving potential buyers around on house tours. It is also available to non-realtors — homeowners who’d simply like to have their home made into an online facsimile, accessible through a website. Users will soon be able to “prop edit” furniture in rooms and change paint colour, also making it useful for interior decorating. Anyone who’s ever used an avatar in a virtual world game like Second Life will understand the look and feel of Utherverse’s home tours.
“From the home buyer’s standpoint, there’s no longer the frustration of being taken out to a house and rolling your eyes at the realtor after the 20th time, and saying, ‘Ok, let me explain this to you again. I need a workable office space. Don’t show me houses that have a closet for a work space,’” says Mr. Shuster.
Downtown Vancouver realtor Paul Albrighton held the first virtual open house earlier this month for Mr. Shuster. One of his clients also happened to be a manager for Utherverse, and the connection was made. As the inaugural tester for the service, Mr. Albrighton was waived the $300 to $400 fee that Utherverse will charge to build a virtual 1,500 sq. ft. space.
“They noticed that I do a lot of business online — it’s probably 60 per cent of my business,” says Mr. Albrighton, who specializes in marketing lofts. He also maintains a website as a loft listing service.
For Mr. Shuster’s 3-D home tour project, he chose a 1,355 sq. ft. loft that is listed at $1.099 million. It is available for viewing with the downloading of free 3-D software available on his website.
“I guess the key is that the user is in control,” says Mr. Albrighton. “With the normal video tour, you have either a panorama shot around the house or suite and you scroll left or right. It’s like a camera with a really wide picture.
“With this, you get a better feel of how the space feels. You can sit down and get a feeling of perspective like ceiling height…it’s almost like a video game.”
Ravi Benjamin
Chinese investors once again pouring money into Canadian real estate
In Vancouver, real estate is the economy. So for many, news that Chinese investors are once again arriving in droves to buy up property is being cheered.
Real-estate agents haven’t seen anything like it since the mid-1990s, when fears surrounding the Hong Kong handover fuelled the first rush into the local market by Chinese investors. This second charge could be as substantial as the first, which drove up property values by hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Back then, suburban Richmond was the destination of choice. And while it remains the preferred location, investors from mainland China are buying up property throughout Greater Vancouver. Toronto too.
Cam Good, a Vancouver real estate marketer, created a buzz a few weeks ago when he invited the media along on a helicopter tour of Greater Vancouver he was giving a group of interested Chinese buyers. The fact they were willing to look outside of Richmond was considered news.
Not everyone who read about the tour or watched stories about it on television was thrilled. Within days, Mr. Good began receiving angry e-mails from Vancouver-area residents worried that this latest push from China will make prices in the area even more obscene.
“I got a lot of, you know, how are my children ever going to be able to afford a home?” Mr. Good said the other day. “There was an undercurrent of racism in a lot of them. That we should put up a barricade. We have enough Chinese, that sort of thing.”
One e-mail qualified as hate mail. It also contained the hope that someone blow up Mr. Good’s offices. He was so concerned he turned it over to the Vancouver Police Department, which is investigating.
That there would be some of this type of sentiment is perhaps not surprising. But Mr. Good says people are hypocrites. Many live off the avails of the wealth real estate generates in Greater Vancouver. And yet some of those same people are the ones “complaining about the Chinese buying up the place.”
They may be grumbling for a while.
Mr. Good said there are several reasons for what is occurring.
There are more wealthy people in China than ever before. Concerns about inflation and a real-estate bubble prompted the Chinese government to limit the number of condominiums people can own to two. So the wealthiest Chinese are looking elsewhere to invest their money.
That it’s hard to get money out of the Communist country appears to be a myth.
“Real-estate values in China have doubled over the last two or three years,’ said Mr. Good, whose company The Key has opened an office in Beijing and has plans to open another in Guangzhou next month. “So real estate in Vancouver and Toronto doesn’t seem too expensive to them any more.
“We’re also seeing a lot of Chinese looking for a parachute plan. These are people afraid of a regime change in China and what that might mean for their wealth base. Canada is seen as a safe place to put their money.”
The Chinese love the political and economic stability Canada offers. We have a good education system too, which is why so many mainland Chinese send their children here to go to school. It is common for a mother and her children to come to over, while the husband remains in China to earn a living.
Mr. Good’s company has sold more than 500 condos in Vancouver and Toronto in the last two months to Chinese investors. The latest rush into Richmond has moved a growing number of homes over the $1-million mark. A 34-storey condo tower in suburban Burnaby sold out immediately, with the majority of purchasers reportedly being Chinese. The $98-million in sales set a single-day record for the municipality.
Thanks largely to the latest great push from China, the average price of a home in Greater Vancouver rose 12 per cent in 2010 and is expected to rise another three per cent this year, according to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.
“We’re just on the cusp of this,” Mr. Good said. “The massive middle class in China is just now getting to the point where they can afford the international option.
“People here better get used to it.” posted by Ravi Benjamin
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)