Investment report ranks Calgary #1 in Canadian real estate markets
Investment report ranks Calgary #1 in Canadian real estate markets
CALGARY – Calgary is the best place in Canada to invest in the residential real estate market, according to a new report released today.
The Real Estate Investment Network’s report said that Calgary experienced one of its best economic and real estate periods in Canadian history a couple of years ago but then entered a strong, and needed correction.
“During the economic downturn, Calgary’s market is making a predictable correction resulting in slightly more affordable housing compared to recent years passed,” said the report. “It was economically impossible for the market to continue at the pace at which it was heading and now finds itself adjusting to market realities.
“This adjustment period, as the market searches for its new foundation from which to build, should continue in 2010 as the provincial economy is poised for another growth spurt.”
The REIN report said the in-migration pace in the city continuing to lead the country combined with the “renewed affordability” will help propel the local market over the coming years.
“We, fortunately, should not see the massive over-boom situation we previously witnessed as the market remains more in line with the fundamentals,” said the report.
Following Calgary as the top Canadian real estate investment cities are Kitchener-Waterloo-Cambridge, Edmonton, Surrey, Maple Ridge, Hamilton, St. Albert, Simcoe Shores (Barrie-Orillia), Red Deer, Winnipeg and Saskatoon.
“Successful real estate investing is all about identifying a town or neighbourhood that has a future, not a past,” said the report. “Sadly, many investors like to invest based on past performance; thus, they are constantly chasing the market. This is called speculating – not investing.”
Canada’s banking system healthiest in the world
Canada’s banking system healthiest in the world
| Tuesday, 1 June 2010
Canada’s banking system is a model for the United States and European countries struggling to cope with mountains of debt accumulated through a series of market crises, massive bailouts and recession according to a report in the Washington Post this morning.
The International Monetary Fund and World Economic Forum (IMF) is showcasing Canada for having the healthiest banking system in the world. . The IMF, in probing what made Canada’s mortgage lending system so resilient during the crisis, concluded that it was “boring” compared with the complicated, sophisticated and expensive financing system in the U.S., but nevertheless effective and safe.
Canada and its banks were barely touched by the 2008 financial crisis that nearly brought down the U.S. banking system and led to the biggest recession since the Great Depression.
Canadian bank losses were so low, and their cushion of reserves so high, that the banks managed to post profits for months in the aftermath of the 2008 crisis while major U.S. banks were teetering on the brink of insolvency and getting $250 billion in Treasury bailouts to cover burgeoning losses on bad mortgage loans.
“The Canadian experience showed that more prudent lending and borrowing played a big part in preventing the housing bubble that proved the near-undoing of the American banking sector,” said Robert Elliott, a Canadian banking lawyer at Fasken Martineau.
Though major U.S. banks have been recapitalized by the government and are posting profits again, “all the fresh capital in the world may not prevent another cycle of misery down the road” unless the U.S. also adopts more prudent lending practices, he said