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Posted by StagingWorks on March 26th, 2011
The article below by Bill Johnston was published in the National Post on March 19th.
Existing home sales in the Greater Toronto Area remained strong in February. There were 6,266 transactions on the MLS, representing a 14% decline from February 2010′s record. While not representing a record, February 2011 sales were 50% higher than February 2009′s during the recession and slightly higher than the average February sales over the previous 10 years.
One of the key factors underlying transactions in the resale home market is consumer confidence. If people are confident they can purchase and pay for a home over the long term, sales levels will remain strong. Continued improvement in the GTA economy over the past year has arguably kept confidence levels high. There has been steady growth in the number of people employed, the unemployment rate has receded markedly from the recessionary peak and income growth has accelerated.
The results of RBC’s recent annual Home Ownership Study confirm what we have experienced in the housing market over the past year. The percentage of Canadians who said they would likely purchase a home over the next two years was at 29% -down from 31% in 2010 (the highest level on record), but the second highest reading since 2006. The percentage of Ontarians planning on purchasing a home over the next two years was slightly lower than the national average at 28%.
“The RBC survey results follow recent GTA trends,” says TREB senior manager of market analysis, Jason Mercer. Last year at this time, home sales were running well above what the level of population dictated,” Mr. Mercer says. “In 2011 and 2012, the pace of sales is expected to be in line with the expected level of population and population growth. Expect to see between 80,000 and 85,000 transactions through the MLS this year, and another 85,000 to 90,000 sales in 2012.”
When asked about where price is headed, Mr. Mercer says he’s confident that we will continue to see growth through the end of 2012, albeit at a subdued rate.
“Average existing home selling prices are expected to increase 3% to 5% annually over the next two years,” he says. “Even with mortgage rate hikes in 2011 and 2012, the share of the average GTA household’s income dedicated to mortgage principal and interest, property tax and utilities will remain manageable in relation to accepted lending standards.
“Recently, average price growth has also been supported by relatively tight market conditions. While sales have remained strong, the number of new listings has been low from a historic perspective. There has been enough competition between home buyers to promote price growth.”
Market conditions through the recession-recovery period between 2008 and the end of 2010 can be characterized as volatile. Over the next two years, by most accounts, it seems like the housing market in the GTA will get back to normal.
Bill Johnston is president of the Toronto Real Estate Board, a professional association that represents 30,000 realtors in the Greater Toronto Area.
Independent of market conditions, home staging is a highly effective marketing tool used to maximize the selling price of Toronto area homes and condos.
StagingWorks is the premier Toronto home staging company. We provide a complete range of professional services which include vacant home staging, occupied home staging and condo staging. We have staging packages to accommodate most budgets and serve Toronto, GTA and surrounding areas.
Please visit our home staging portfolio for more samples of our staging projects. Give us some some details on your home and when you’re planning to sell, and get a free home staging estimate. Or, call us for a free estimate at (647) 409-2091 or anne@StagingWorks.ca.
StagingWorks has been voted Toronto’s top home stager by Toronto Life.


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Posted by StagingWorks on March 26th, 2011
The article below by Jennifer Wilson was published in the Toronto Star on March 23rd.
Whether you’re moving out of town, moving up or splitting up, everyone has the same goal when they’re selling their home: to make as much as they can.
One way to get the best sale price is to invest a few dollars to spruce up your place for prospective buyers. One rule of thumb is that you should set aside 1 per cent of your asking price, so, if you’re listing for $400,000 a renovation budget of $4,000 isn’t out of line.
Of course, certain projects will get you more, though in most cases you won’t get all your money back. The return can be anywhere from nothing, for skylights and pools, to an average of 75 per cent on high-performing kitchens and bathroom projects.
Here are some tips:
Kitchen
You can expect to recover 75 to 100 per cent of your investment in kitchens and bathrooms.
“The payback is tremendous,” says Frank Turco, Home Depot’s trend and design manager. That’s because buyers don’t want to undertake a cumbersome renovation that restricts access to these key spaces.
A few hundred dollars can give your kitchen a whole new look. Cabinets can be cleaned, lightly sanded and painted to look like new, while hardware can also be updated quickly and inexpensively, with new pulls and handles starting at a few dollars a pop. Outdated track lights can be replaced with more fashionable varieties, focused task lighting and undercabinet lighting. Dingy backsplashes can also be refreshed with a coat of paint or new tiles, which are available in peel-and-stick varieties.
For a bit more of a splurge, try replacing laminate cabinets with wood and laminate countertops for something a higher end, such as Corian or granite. New appliances are also a worthy investment, with stainless steel and once again trendy glossy white appealing to buyers.
Bathrooms
In the bathroom, like the kitchen, painting the vanity, and swapping out light fixtures and pulls can refresh the space inexpensively. Upgrading faucets, taps and shower heads are another simple project in the $50 – $100 range.
Additional storage is also essential in the bathroom, so look into closet and cupboard organizing systems and adding extra shelving.
Or go all out and embrace the trend for more spa-like bathrooms with marble tiling, full glass showers with extra nozzles and high-end showerheads or a steam shower. Double sinks, heated floors and upgraded countertops are also nice perks.
Paint
In all spaces, a fresh coat of paint works wonders – bringing homeowners a return of 50 to 70 cents on the dollar, says says Mariano Gigante, a sales representative with Sutton Group. Others like, Re/Max salesperson Justin Kua estimate a fresh paint job can bring in returns of 300 per cent.
“Even if it is a simple thing to fix, buyers want it done,” says Gigante, noting it also helps sell homes quicker than other upgrades. Wipe away scuffed paint and outdated colours with neutral hues for a fresh, buyer friendly look.
Flooring
Ripping out worn carpets and refinishing, or replacing, battered floors can offer returns of 75 to 100 per cent, says Gigante, noting that laminate and wood offer the highest rate of return.
Turco recommends laminate vinyl options, explaining “vinyl has come a long, long way” and is now available in durable planks, tiles and sheets that can mimic almost any look and texture, with many varieties available in the $60 range for 24 square feet. Plus, as far as projects go, it’s “inexpensive and easy, as long as you have a box cutter and a ruler.”
Other upgrades
Replacing doors and windows can bring in 50 to 75 per cent – and help you save on energy costs to boot.
Landscaping, meanwhile, will put roughly 25 to 50 per cent of what you spend back into your pocket. A well-maintained garden, brick paths and even urns can also do a lot to boost your home’s curb appeal.
A buyer’s first impression is key so for an easy fix up under $100, Turco suggests cleaning up the front yard, repainting pots and planters, laying a new welcome mat and painting the front door.
What not to do
Finishing a basement will see about a 50 per cent return on your investment, but as a big and costly job, Gigante says it’s only worthwhile if the homeowners intend on using it themselves for a while.
Skip the skylight. While additional natural light can be a boost, this project is expected to bring you absolutely no return, says Gigante.
Also avoid adding a swimming pool or Jacuzzi. It usually doesn’t improve your resale value and can even discourage buyers, such as families with small children.
If you are tackling a larger scale reno or working with a contractor, make sure the project comes in at less than your one per cent resale renovation budget, including a hefty contingency fund. The projects that offer the biggest returns – kitchens and bathrooms – can also bring the biggest surprises, snowballing costs as mechanical problems are uncovered.
Independent of market conditions, home staging is a highly effective marketing tool used to maximize the selling price of Toronto area homes and condos.
StagingWorks is the premier Toronto home staging company. We provide a complete range of professional services which include vacant home staging, occupied home staging and condo staging. We have staging packages to accommodate most budgets and serve Toronto, GTA and surrounding areas.
Please visit our home staging portfolio for more samples of our staging projects. Give us some some details on your home and when you’re planning to sell, and get a free home staging estimate. Or, call us for a free estimate at (647) 409-2091 or anne@StagingWorks.ca.
StagingWorks has been voted Toronto’s top home stager by Toronto Life.


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Posted by StagingWorks on March 26th, 2011
The article below by Tony Wong was published in the Star on March 20th.
Tammy Siergersma spent most of the winter renovating a home in east Toronto. It was a big investment for the designer, who over the last decade has bought and gutted about half a dozen properties, each time making a profit as she put them on the market.
This time the project was much more personal. The property was within walking distance of her own house near the increasingly gentrified neighbourhood of Leslieville.
“It was much closer to home, and I know I would likely end up meeting the buyers at the No Frills, so the last thing you want them to do is complain about the place,” laughs Siergersma.
But with reports that the spring market may be weaker this year than last, and with Canadians up to their eyes in debt, Siergersma could be forgiven for wondering — are there any buyers left?
Spring is the ultimate barometer for the housing market, when buyers are venturing out once again after shaking off the shackles of winter. While the season doesn’t officially start till March, the hyper market of the last few years has seen activity generated as early as February.
So far sales have been trending down from last year’s record levels, but have been holding up better than expected. In the first half of March, sales in the Greater Toronto Area are down by 5 per cent compared with last year. The average price of a home is now $460,196, up 4.6 per cent from last March. But the million-dollar question for buyers and sellers is whether prices will hold. So far the current run-up in house prices has been one of the longest since the end of World War 11. Home prices have increased every year since 1996. But analysts are wondering whether this is the year that the party will stop.
“This spring should be reasonably vibrant, but the second half of the year could be a different story,” said Sal Guatieri, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets.
Many economists think the market is overvalued, but not all agree that a correction is in the cards. With the economy giving mixed signals, the experts are not in agreement. Forecasts range from a 25 per cent drop in housing prices to an increase of 5 per cent.
The consensus though, seems to be that the housing market is in for a relatively soft landing, although house prices aren’t going to be galloping ahead as they have in the past, with modest gains at best in the future.
“I think this spring is the last kick at the can,” said Benjamin Tal, senior economist for CIBC World Markets. “Next spring will definitely not be as good. After that we are in for a long period of maybe five to seven years of stagnating house prices.”
Tal says a “little stagnation” after 16 years of continuously rising prices in the GTA is probably not a bad thing.
Property prices in relation to incomes and rents are already much higher than long term averages, says Tal.
“In order for things to go back to normal levels you would either have a crash, or for prices to go flat.”
BMO’s Guatieri agrees that pricing will be constrained moving forward. The Bank is forecasting that the key overnight central bank rate will double from 1 per cent to 2 per cent by the end of the year which will put a further crimp in some budgets, especially for first time buyers.
New stringent mortgage regulations reducing amortizations that kicked in last week are also expected to take some buyers out of the market.
And by this time next year overnight rates could be as high as 3 per cent, according to some analysts.
That’s significant. According to a recent survey by the Canadian Association of Accredited Mortgage Professionals, about 4.5 per cent of variable mortgage rate holders said they couldn’t afford their payments if rates increased by just 100 basis points.
“My concern is that given relatively high house prices and high levels of consumer debt in Canada, as soon as interest rates begin to rise significantly, purchases of new and existing homes may decline rapidly, especially for first-time home buyers,” said John Andrew, a urban and regional planning professor at Queen’s University. “The relative equilibrium that currently exists in the market could quickly give way to a glut of houses for sale, due to a rapid drop in transactions.”
Guatieri says all bets are off if the economy dips back into recession. Global stock markets are in turmoil as Japan fights a potential nuclear disaster, while the Middle East faces an uncertain political future.
“If you have a situation where people start losing their jobs again, then that would be a trigger,” says the economist.
At home, Canadian debt-to-income levels are already at the highest in history, and equivalent to the United States. A combination of rising rates and job losses could be devastating.
However, Tal feels a crash is unlikely.
“Just because we are overvalued doesn’t mean we will correct. You need a catalyst. That could be a huge increase in interest rates, or it could be some kind of subprime loan situation that you had in the United States. None of that seems to be on the horizon.”
There are a few mitigating factors. On a macroeconomic level Canada is doing relatively well, and will likely top the Group of Seven economies with GDP growth.
“Economic conditions in Canada continue to improve. The unemployment rate is trending lower, employment levels are above pre-recession levels, wages are growing and financial conditions remain very easy,” said Bank of America Merrill Lynch in a report.
But no need to get cocky. Growth will still be weak.
“It’s really just a reverse beauty contest. We look the least ugly in many economic measures,” said Scotiabank chief economist Warren Jestin.
Still, the housing market in Canada has avoided the mess in the United States. And buyers and sellers this spring look like they’re in for a reasonably balanced market.
When Siergersma started her renovation business four years ago, every home sold for more than what she had bought it for. The current spring market will likely see that trend continue.
“There is still a lot of interest out there. People have the money in hand and they are ready to go,” she said. “I don’t know what’s going to happen in the future. But so far it’s been a great spring.”
When she first bought the property, it was in such bad condition that the appraiser from the bank assessed it as “unliveable.” The first bank wouldn’t advance a mortgage.
But more than $200,000 later, the detached home has been transformed from decrepit to designer chic.
After placing the home on the market two weeks ago, Siergersma had more than 90 buyers the first weekend of her open house. It sold conditionally this week for $695,000, the highest price on the street.
Independent of market conditions, home staging is a highly effective marketing tool used to maximize the selling price of Toronto area homes and condos.
StagingWorks is the premier Toronto home staging company. We provide a complete range of professional services which include vacant home staging, occupied home staging and condo staging. We have staging packages to accommodate most budgets and serve Toronto, GTA and surrounding areas.
Please visit our home staging portfolio for more samples of our staging projects. Give us some some details on your home and when you’re planning to sell, and get a free home staging estimate. Or, call us for a free estimate at (647) 409-2091 or anne@StagingWorks.ca.
StagingWorks has been voted Toronto’s top home stager by Toronto Life.


Please take 60 second to complete our poll on the left side of the screen.
Popularity: 22% [?]
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Posted by StagingWorks on March 26th, 2011
The article below was published in The Montreal Gazette on March 21st.
The average price of a resale home in Canada is almost 80 per cent higher than one in the United States.
The average price for a U.S. resale home in February was $203,000, a spokesperson for the National Association of Realtors told The Gazette Monday.
By comparison, in February, the average resale price for a home in Canada was $365,192, according to the Canadian Real Estate Association.
Average resale prices were $251,902 for a home in Quebec and $300,471 for one in Montreal.
Residential real estate prices have appreciated in Canada and in Quebec since last year. Some analysts predict the rise in property values will moderate in 2011.
Independent of market conditions, home staging is a highly effective marketing tool used to maximize the selling price of Toronto area homes and condos.
StagingWorks is the premier Toronto home staging company. We provide a complete range of professional services which include vacant home staging, occupied home staging and condo staging. We have staging packages to accommodate most budgets and serve Toronto, GTA and surrounding areas.
Please visit our home staging portfolio for more samples of our staging projects. Give us some some details on your home and when you’re planning to sell, and get a free home staging estimate. Or, call us for a free estimate at (647) 409-2091 or anne@StagingWorks.ca.
StagingWorks has been voted Toronto’s top home stager by Toronto Life.


Please take 60 second to complete our poll on the left side of the screen.
Popularity: 44% [?]
1 Comment » Tags: Aurora Home Staging, condo stager, condo staging, condo staging company, condo staging company in toronto, condo staging markham, Home Staging Markham, home staging toronto, Home Staging Woodbridge, homestaging toronto, markham condo staging, Markham Home Staging, staging toronto condo, Toronto Condo Stager, toronto condo staging, toronto condo staging companies, toronto condo staging company, toronto home staging, toronto homestaging, Woodbridge Home Staging Posted in Real Estate
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