Gloating About Vancouver Real Estate

pessimist_ovrsize.jpg
Image by: Kelly Sutherland
Poor, stupid Vancouver homeowners: you bought. A Steve Burgess taunt from across Vancouver's real estate chasm.

Back when times were good, Rhonda Byrne made a killing with her uplifting book, The Secret. It’s all about the law of attraction. By wishing and believing, she wrote, you can make your dreams come true.

I’m now anticipating this year’s big publishing success, my as-yet-unreleased Tinkerbell Has Cancer. The new secret is the value of pessimism. It’s the underappreciated virtue that has made me a lifelong renter.

All of Ms. Byrne’s beloved positive energy didn’t help the financial markets very much, unless those wishers and hopers were actually short sellers betting on a crash. Nor has it been a great stretch for people whose hopes involved that most basic of financial desires: real estate. While property values have been dropping all over North America, forecasts for B.C. have been particularly sour. Many new homeowners have found themselves “underwater,” carrying mortgage debts that exceed the value of their homes. Suddenly we renters, formerly a despised class, are feeling rather smug.
I have taken some grief over the years for being a renter. Owning a house – or at the very least a condo – has been seen as a rite of passage from serf-like adolescence to confident, controlling adulthood. Income rises, earning potential is realized and the resulting stability is reflected in the move to home ownership. That’s the accepted path, like those evolutionary ­diagrams that portray humanoid progress from knuckle-­draggers all the way to upright Briefcase Man. Residentially speaking, I never really got my hirsute digits off the ground.

It’s because I’m a pessimist. Renting and pessimism go hand in hand. Renting is the strategy of those who fear the future. To put it another way, I’m a freelance writer. Pessimism and freelance writing are Siamese twins. When there is no telling what your income is going to be from month to month, you tend not to lock yourself into big financial commitments. It’s a necessary strategy for uncertain professions, and one that has suddenly gained wider application. Uncertainty has become fashionable of late.
Before I anoint myself as the new guru of pragmatic financial management, Vancouver’s own Condo Cassandra, I should confess that had I purchased a property when I first moved to the city in the fall of 1988, I would in all likelihood be free and clear today, smirking through the financial storm in a fully paid-up property. Pessimism prevented me from ever making that leap. Perhaps an optimistic Steve would now be a land baron.

The truth is, it wasn’t just financial pessimism that kept me out of home ownership – it was more a global sense of personal incompetence and impending disaster. Even before the leaky condo fiasco, I knew I lacked the analytical tools to understand whether I was buying a palace or a mouldy old lettuce crate. I also understood that, chez Burgess, maintenance problems would be solved with the only tool I can use – the Yellow Pages. I would probably set off some sort of alarm just by walking into a Home Depot. If home ownership required licensing – not a bad idea, actually – I would be unlikely ever to get my learner’s permit. The deed would have to be co-signed by someone with a proven ability to build a shelf.

But now those shortcomings are all secondary. Today, as a renter, I stand tall – no longer marked as an incompetent screw-up but instead a prudent money manager. Even better, I will soon join the ranks of those best-selling sages who are kind enough to share their wise example with others, selling scads of hardcover books in the process. Tinkerbell Has Cancer – the title might need work. But the message is timely.

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Can you pay that mortgage when the interest rates go up?
I see no harm to renting if you do not want to commit. If you are mobile, why would you buy? Spend some 25% on a place to only sell it in 2 years? Makes little sense to me. You have rooms in the house you will not use, and you're spending money on it anyway? Renting it out would make sense because, again, someone out there in nomadic and does not wan to financially commit.
Haha this article is great! Just look at all the furious homeowner comments!! Would hate to be a miserable baby boomer with a huge mortgage chained to my ankle from a house that I still think is worth twice what the market price is. Vancouver homeowners remind me of college wine snobs. The intelligence bar is so low but they enjoyed a few years of inflating assets and proclaimed themselves geniuses and start telling everyone that they are a developer or property investor. LOL. Have fun in your, excuse me, the banks home!
Looks like you traded an anonymous blog of hype for a more legitimate venue.
Steve, gloat as you choose, but housing prices are rebounding and you are still paying someone else to borrow their home. Due to low interest rates, I pay the same for my mortgage as I did for rent, the difference is that it's going into my home rather than paying someone else 10's of thousands per year for the privladge of paying for thier properties as I lived in them and improved them. Interest rates could double and triple and I'll still be miles ahead. I think it all gets down to weather or not you want Canada Pension and he Welfare system to look after you when you retire, or weather you want to look after yourself. You can justify it in 18 different ways, but you are an absolute foo lif you don't own your home.
Yes renting is OK, in the short term but in the end, you will not have any equity for all the $$$$ that you have given your landlord. Only his/her BANK ACCOUNT will be getting fatter! It leaves a sour taste in my mouth when I think of my friends and family renting vs buying, although you need to be careful not to extend your financial obligations. If it is at all possible, I'd be increasing my Real Estate holdings! Home owner and Landlordx2 Pam Plunkett Surrey BC
I believe that a lot of people buy just to keep up with the Jones' - it looks good, it makes people believe that you are doing well. In addition, it's tough to buy with a single income and still have room to live your life. I wouldn't give up my fun lifestyle just to say I own.
30 years ago I bought a $80,000 lot in Richmond and built a 3700 sq ft home on it. You can figure out what it's worth now while your still paying rent, on & on & on till you die. On the negative side I have paid a lot in payments and have had to stay in one location.
If deflation continues, it will be an even huger slap in the face for homeowners w/ outstanding debt
Owners pay a huge premium ... In Vancouver you can not buy a property and rent it for enough to make the payments on a 25yr mortgage cost. I have been happily renting a condo for about half of what the mortgage payments would cost on the same property. This situation is partially thanks to the tenancy act, since I've lived in the same place for10 years and rental rate increases are controlled. And of course the savings can be leveraged and re-invested into higher returning business ventures. That you should own a property is a myth and there are a lot of suckers who pay a huge premium for the luxury of owning.
did this guy have a tv show on cbc a few years ago? ...i liked that show
Rentings great if you don't know where you will be in one year or two. I bought 10 years ago,worked hard and now have a $50,000 Mortgage left and no one telling me when to move.The timing was good but in those 10 years my home doubled in value even at todays downturn. I estimate I would have had to put $20,000 away each year to be at par.Buying Real Estate is the best investment you can make. Now is a very good time to get in again if you have a decent downpayment 10-20% . The best time to buy Real Estate is always a long time ago, just buy.
I loved this article, probably because I'm a renter at the ripe old age of 47. I did own a condo for a brief 4 year period from 1992-1996. My timing was bad. I bought with a minimum down payment and high interest rates in Surrey which I absolutely hated. That was the only area I could afford at the time. When I went to sell 4 years later, new 2 bedrooms were coming on the market at a lower price then what I paid for mine. I had to sell at a lower price then what I paid, but I had to get the hell out of Surrey. I moved downtown and have rented ever since. I had friends that tried to convince me to buy into another strata 3 years ago when I came into a bit of money. I'm glad I didn't. Now I look like a genius because I actually have a modest amount of savings, no debt and can afford to take one month vacations every year. Timing is everything.
I loved this article, probably because I'm a renter at the ripe old age of 47. I did own a condo for a brief 4 year period from 1992-1996. My timing was bad. I bought with a minimum down payment and high interest rates in Surrey which I absolutely hated. That was the only area I could afford at the time. When I went to sell 4 years later, new 2 bedrooms were coming on the market at a lower price then what I paid for mine. I had to sell at a lower price then what I paid, but I had to get the hell out of Surrey. I moved downtown and have rented ever since. I had friends that tried to convince me to buy into another strata 3 years ago when I came into a bit of money. I'm glad I didn't. Now I look like a genius because I actually have a modest amount of savings, no debt and can afford to take one month vacations every year. Timing is everything.
The Author
Steve Burgess

Steve Burgess is a freelance writer, broadcaster, and the author of Who Killed Mom? Follow him on Twitter.

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