Thursday, 18 April 2013

Global TV News - Whistler Condo Prices?

Yesterday, Anne Drewa from Global TV BC came to Whistler to do an article on the current value of condos.  (CTV was here two weeks ago doing the same - see my previous post.) Anne interviewed me and Dean Linnell to get the real facts on the Whistler condo market. In my opinion the coverage was well done.  The Whistler condo market can be confusing due to the TYPES of condos. In the Village area there are two types of condos that create two Micro-Markets;  Hotel-Condos and Unrestricted-Condos. The facts are clear... Hotel-Condo units (i.e. a condo that is operated as a Hotel, lots of restrictions, owners have little control and are basically silent investors) have dropped in value 50% to 60% since 2003. Unrestricted condos (i.e. a normal regular piece of real estate,  I call it ..."REAL" real estate, have dropped 20% to 30% since the last peak in mid-2008.  The source data is the Whistler Listing System (WLS). Check out the coverage:  http://globalnews.ca/video/490640/whistler-condo-prices-plummet

Wednesday, 3 April 2013

Real Estate Property Values in Whistler - How much have they dropped?


Re: CTV News Release April 2, 2012.
Real Estate Property Values in Whistler - How much have they dropped?

An interesting article however the focus is on two small micro-markets (Shared-Ownership and Condo-Hotel units). The  CTV article and news coverage (web-link) as below, focuses on a small percentage of the overall Whistler market. Specifically Condo-Hotel units (aka Phase 2 Condos) and Shared-Ownership (Quarter-share / Tenth-share etc). The information presented is accurate although it does not tell the whole story and tends to focus on what is "sensational". As we know "Sensationalism" Sells!

Yes, the current selling prices of Condo-Hotel units and Shared-Ownership have dropped in the range of 40% to 68% from their peak in 2003 however the majority (80%) of Whistler sales in the past year (2012) were Whole-Ownership / Unrestricted-Use properties.  
Buyers are acquiring these types of properties for Personal-Use, Recreational- Lifestyle and Residential purposes. As reported, the majority of these properties have only dropped in value approximately 20% - 25% from when they peaked in late 2007-mid 2008 (before the global financial crisis of Oct 2008). 

The fact is in the past few years Residential Chalets and Townhomes made up the majority of the real estate transactions in Whistler.  In 2012 the Whistler Listing System recorded a total of 579 transactions. Condo-hotel units represented approximately 8% (51 units) and Shared-Ownership represented approximately 10% (58 sales).

Enjoy reading the article below and watching the video.

All the best, 
Ron
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Whistler real estate prices plummet up to 68 per cent | CTV British Columbia News


Real estate prices at one of B.C.’s most popular getaway spots are sliding downhill, with some properties selling for up to 68 per cent less than a decade ago.
Whistler property prices have fallen 25 per cent on average since 2007, but it’s the so-called Phase 2 and factional ownership units that have seen the most dramatic declines.
One 800-square-foot unit at Blackcomb Springs with two bedrooms and two bathrooms, located right on the ski hill, is currently selling for $229,000.
In 2004, a similar unit would have cost $579,000.
Real estate expert Tsur Sommerville said Whistler’s market fluctuates with demand from U.S. buyers, which has been dwindling for years.
“Whistler has been impacted both by exchange rates, which have made Canadian markets more expensive for Americans, and by what’s going on with the U.S. economy,” Sommerville said.
With the Canadian dollar at par, American buyers accounted for just six per cent of sales in 2012.
The nature of vacation properties makes their prices much more cyclical, Sommerville added, and fractional ownership properties, which are similar to timeshares, are generally tougher to sell.
Even Phase 2 properties, which can be purchased by a single owner but contractually must be rented out most of the year, are seeing huge drops.
One such studio apartment next to Blackcomb Mountain that sold for $249,000 in 2003 is now listed for just $79,000.
Phase 2 owners are only permitted to spend 56 days in their properties annually; 28 in the summer, and 28 in the winter.
Whistler realtors told CTV News they’re seeing momentum in some areas, and Sommerville said there could be a resurgence in prices as the U.S. economy picks up steam.
“If we’re having this conversation in a year or two from now it would be a different dynamic,” he said. “We would be talking about Whistler’s recovery rather than Whistler being in the doldrums.”
With a report from CTV British Columbia’s Mi-Jung Lee



CTV News Release Video Clip: