Thursday, August 9, 2012

Richmond realtor warns:"price declines in excess of 30% coming, price collapse looks inevitable!"


Two months ago we introduced you to Richmond realtor James Wong.

Mr. Wong was the first of a growing legion of realtors we profiled in the Greater Vancouver area who have been telling you that if you want to sell "deep price cuts are needed."

He's out with his latest monthly report and comes to a conclusion that should send a chill down the back of any Richmond homeowner looking (or planning) to sell.
"In Richmond, there is a high probability of a price decline for detached homes in excess of 30%."
Wong sees the events over the next few months following the pattern we saw in 2008/2009. But, instead of a recovery like 2009, Wong thinks sales will stay at their current dismal rates with home prices declining even more.

As that happens, Wong finally connects the dots to paint the picture we know all too well is coming:
"Sellers who need to sell will have to cut their prices more deeply to attract buyers. This could be the beginning of a real estate down cycle. The momentum will pick up when more sellers realize that a real estate downturn is in motion."
And by then, of course, it will be too late.

The writing is on the wall. More from Wong:
"The cascading effect of declining home prices will snowball, causing more home sellers to sell before home prices drop further... The in-balance in supply and demand is massive for million dollar homes in Richmond. A price collapse in Richmond detached homes looks inevitable!"
That imbalance Wong speaks of is epic.

There are a total of 722 listings in Richmond right now for homes over $1,000,000. With average sale around 27 homes the past 2 months, there are 27 months supply of homes.

For detached homes over $1,500,000, the past 2 month’s sale averaging 11 units against 361 listings. This translates into a staggering 33 months supply of homes.

As prices implode on the million dollar homes in Richmond, sub-million dollar homes will be dragged down accordingly.

And as Richmond collapses, the contagion will spread quickly around the Lower Mainland.

Here is Wong's full July 2012 month end report....
July home sales in Richmond turned out to be worst than in June and the month before in May. The number of homes sold for the month was 216 which was 13% lower than the previous month sales of 248 homes. Active listings for detached homes, townhomes and condos/apartments in Richmond at the end of July, 2012 totalled 2,700 units, just 30 units shy of the previous month high of 2,730. Home sellers are faced with a dilemma, cutting prices more aggressively to sell or to take their properties off the market.


The real estate market in Richmond deteriorated further at the end of July. The supply of homes now reached 11.02 months compared to the previous month of 9.93 months of supply. The higher ratio was due to lower average sales, although the total listings were around the same level as the month before. Some home sellers were making drastic price reductions and generous concessions in selling their homes. More homes were now listed and sold at prices significantly below their city assessment values for 2012.

Richmond real estate market outlook

The next few months are expected to remain lacklustre. The next few weeks and months would probably follow what happened in 2008. But, instead of a recovery like 2009, home sales could stayed low at current level with home prices declining. In Richmond, there is a high probability of a price decline for detached homes in excess of 30%, and attached homes in the range of 20% or more over the next 3 years.

The biggest problem faced by home buyers are getting their mortgages approved. Canadian banks are now required to underwrite their mortgages based on borrowers’ ability to debt service their loans”.

The cascading effect of declining home prices will snowball, causing more home sellers to sell before home prices drop further. Unlike 2009, even if home prices drop 20% or more, many home buyers and investors would be prevented from buying due to the difficulty in getting financing.

Richmond detached homes over $1,000,000 are not seeing much buying interest. With total listings of 722 and average sale around 27 homes the past 2 months, there are 27 months supply of homes. For detached homes over $1,500,000, the past 2 month’s sale averaging 11 units against 361 listings, translates into 33 months supply of homes. The in-balance in supply and demand is massive million dollar homes in Richmond. A price collapse in Richmond detached homes looks inevitable!

Sellers who need to sell will have to cut their prices more deeply to attract buyers. This could be the beginning of a real estate down cycle. The momentum will pick up when more sellers realize that a real estate downturn is in motion. This could take a few years for home prices in Richmond to reach a more sensible level.

The smart Richmond Boomer is making that minimum 30% price cut right now.

Because, as Wong says, when "sellers realize that a real estate downturn is in motion" - a 30% reduction in asking price won't even begin to attract interest. "The cascading effect of declining home prices will snowball, causing more home sellers to sell before home prices drop further."

Can you say 'Boomer Trigger'?

Sure you can.

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Email: village_whisperer@live.ca
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7 comments:

  1. W... Carney was on BBC's HardTalk today... I only caught the first few minutes... Im going to watch it tonight... but, as he is being possibly tagged for UK central bank, I wonder how hard they were on him.

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    1. Interesting... i'll look for a link later tonight. If you come across it, let me know.

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  2. Carney has said he won't do Bank of England - and, frankly, neither would I. UK's problems make Canada's look like kindergarten - and you think Canada's in thrall to its banks? Oh my.... take a look at the old country!!

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  3. I was watching a property in the coquitlam - chineside area that dropped their price from $720k to $680k and it still took many weeks to finally sell. That one sale at that lower price effectively decimated the other listings which are now all overvalued.

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  4. Wow!

    With this sort of publicity, why would anyone buy right now?

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  5. It's about time. Really, even if we had a 50% drop, who would pay half a million to live in Richmond?

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  6. This will destroy Vancouver's economy as a whole, since this bloated real estate is a major stimulus to numerous trickle down industries.

    Look out below.......

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