The few residents found walking through the empty streets of the Olympic Village were disappointed, but not surprised, to hear Wednesday that the developer of their condos has gone into receivership.
“Sad to hear that,” said Keith MacPherson, who has lived in the Millennium Water development in False Creek since the summer. “I really like the area, the facilities are great and it’s a good environment.”
Vancouver officials announced Wednesday that the city has a reached a “mutual agreement” that would allow a receiver, auditor Ernst & Young, to manage the development, in place of Millennium.
That company is still on the hook with $740 million in outstanding loans to the city.
How hard taxpayers will feel the heat of the debt will not be deteremined for some time, Mayor Gregor Robertson said, as it will take years for the remaining 454 market condos to sell and the city to recoup its losses.
Marie, a woman walking through the neighbourhood’s main square who did not give her last name, said the news of the receivership comes as no shock.
“I’ve had misgivings right from the beginning,” she said. “There’s just been a few too many concerns.”
Scott Hennig, spokesperson for the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, said he didn’t think the city has much chance of recovering any of their investment, let along making any money off it.
“This is bad news and maybe a bit surprising that taxpayers are going to be left holding a bag,” Hennig said. “It’s unique circumstances, but this is what happens in general when governments come in and bail out companies that can’t make a go of it anymore.”
Nov. 2002: City of Vancouver signs deal with Vancouver Olympic Bid Committee to build an Olympic Village.
July 2003: IOC selects Vancouver/Whistler to host 2010 Winter Olympics.
April 2006: Millennium Group outbids better-known Concord Pacific and Wall Financial to build the village, offering the city a record $193-million for the 2.6-hectare city-owned False Creek development site. Millennium expects to spend $750-million, borrowed from Wall Street’s Fortress Investment Group, to develop 1,100 units, including 200 for rental and 250 for social housing.
Oct. 2007: Millennium pre-sells 222 of 737 available condos ranging in price from $600,000 to $3.4-million. Some of those pre-sale buyers are currently in court trying to get out of the deals.
Oct. 2008: Leaked documents show city council unanimously agreed to lend $100-million to the development to ensure it be built prior to Olympics. The city is liable for delivering the village on time.
Nov. 2008: Issue becomes political hot potato during lead-up to civic election, which ends in landslide win for Gregor Robertson and Vision Vancouver on Nov. 15, 2008. Pundits say the controversy played role in demise of the NPA and its mayoral hopeful Peter Ladner.
Jan 2009: Fortress tightens loan conditions on cost overruns, which Millennium can’t meet. Fortress cuts off funding and city starts process to step in.
Feb. 2009: City votes unanimously to bail out project to ensure completion.
Dec. 2009: Olympic Village completed after city agrees to buy out Millennium’s borrowings.
Feb. 2010: Olympics held.
May 2010: Millennium starts trying to sell 450 remaining units with little luck.
Sept. 2010: Millennium now owes the city $740-million and has sold just 259 units with almost 500 unsold.
Oct. 2010: Millennium defaults on $200-million it owed the city, only paying $192-million.
Nov. 2010: Millennium unable to meet payments and a receiver is appointed with the city owed $740-million. Total project cost was just over $1-billion.
Over the past three rate decisions, the Bank of Canada has managed to take the overnight rate off the floor, and up to a level of 1.00%.
However, we concur with the widely held belief that further hikes are off the table for now: a pause is by far the most likely outcome for the October 19th decision.
There are three main reasons for our forecast.
First, global conditions have become increasingly uncertain, and not a little gloomy.
Second, Canadian economic data has consistently disappointed, and suggests future subpar growth.
Third, intra-meeting Bank of Canada communications have been quite dovish.
After a sequence of nail-biting rate decisions extending back to the spring of this year, the market can finally coast into a Bank of Canada rate decision on auto-pilot. This one overwhelmingly argues for a pause, at least insofar as global and domestic economic conditions are concerned. The signals emanating from the Bank of Canada provide a welcome confirmation of this sentiment.
Market Developments
The bond market has suffered from a case of whiplash over the past several rate decisions. The pattern for the Bank of Canada has been to under-promise and over-deliver. That is to say, each statement has bemoaned the uncertainty in the world, and yet a rate hike has always followed like clockwork. This strategy was a clever one, as it prevented the market from tightening rates before the Bank of Canada was ready. Indirectly, it has probably helped to keep the Canadian dollar in check throughout the summer.
However, for the first time in recent memory, the Bank of Canada’s communication strategy was a little off kilter at the September meeting (or, more charitably, the market’s interpretation may have been awry). It failed to convey the expected degree of caution or concern. Thus, although the market had been prepared to take future rate hikes off the table, an October hike was briefly coaxed back into contention. At its peak, the market priced odds for this of over 50%.
However, these expectations were quickly snuffed out by Governor Carney’s speech a few days later. In it, he noted “non-negligible risk to the downside”, that “renewed weakness in the United States could have important implications for the Canadian outlook”, and that “the Bank will have to chart a careful course for Canadian monetary policy.” A subsequent speech on September 30th added to the caution. He noted that “the evidence is mixed [that growth in advanced economies will be self-sustaining]”, he criticized the quality of newly created Canadian jobs, and noted that, internationally, “very low policy rates could be in place for longer, and unconventional monetary policies could even be expanded in some major countries.” Tellingly, he also observed that “there are limits to [the] divergence” between Canadian and U.S. policy rates.
In turn, the market has worked to price out rate hikes, and currently sits at a cautious probability of under 20%. This is about right. A hike would be most unexpected, and a pause is entirely justifiable.
International Context
Canada can never be contemplated in complete geographic isolation. As a small open economy, it is especially susceptible to global influences. These influences have been mostly undesirable of late. European fiscal problems have re-captured some of the market’s attention, with a newfound emphasis on an Ireland sorely in need of a fiscal pot of gold. U.S. economic data has been regularly disappointing and always weak, lending credence to double-dip soothsayers.
In turn, the U.S. Federal Reserve now muses openly about another round of quantitative easing. Japan has beat it to the punch, delivering its own brand of printed money and lower borrowing rates. The likes of Australia have paused when hikes were expected, and a host of other commodity players sit on the sidelines, such as New...
Sometimes it feels good to be surprised, but Tuesday’s anticipated announcement by the Bank of Canada that it is maintaining its target for the overnight rate at 1 percent was a relief. The global economic recovery is entering a new phase, and the Bank of Canada is now expecting weaker-than-projected recovery across the board, especially in the United States. Canada is not an exception in this shift in projections since July’s Monetary Policy Report, as the Bank continues to expect the economic recovery here will also be more gradual.
Corresponding to the overnight right maintaining at 1 percent, the Bank Rate is set at 1 ¼ percent and the deposit rate is set at ¾ percent. Growth rates in Canada are expected to be 3.0 percent in 2010, 2.3 percent in 2011, and 2.6 percent in 2012. Although a portion of this more subdued profile is a result of the more gradual global recovery, it also takes into account a more subdued expectation for Canadian household spending. The projections around household spending come from the decline in housing activity, and as a result, the increased focus on household debt considerations.
Instead of focusing on household and government expenditures, the composition of demand in Canada is expected to shift towards business investment and net exports.
Inflation in Canada has remained slightly below the July projections of the Bank of Canada, but the expectation is that the economy will return to full capacity by the end of 2012 instead of the previously forecasted beginning of that year.
It was a combination of all of these factors that the decision was reached to maintain the target for the overnight rate at 1 percent. This new announcement continues to keep considerable monetary stimulus in place to continue to achieve the 2 percent inflation target during a time when Canada is coping with a significant excess of supply. Given the transition in the global recovery, the weaker U.S. outlook, constraints beginning to moderate growth in emerging-market economies, and Canadian considerations that are expected to slow spending and housing activity in Canada, the Bank would need to carefully consider any further reduction in monetary policy stimulus.
Although this announcement is driven by a weaker global economy, the management of the painful current global reality within the confines of the Canadian economy should create a sigh of relief for the real estate and mortgage industry, as there is not any new pressure being pushed onto the industry after a painful 2nd quarter in 2010.
VANCOUVER, B.C. – November 2, 2009 – Strong demand has led to a steady rise in Greater Vancouver home prices compared to last year.
Over the last 12 months, the MLSLink® Housing Price Index (HPI) benchmark price for all residential properties in Greater Vancouver increased 6.8 per cent to $553,702 from $518,668 in October 2008.
“While home prices have been rising in 2009, they have not eclipsed the peaks reached in early 2008,” Scott Russell, Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV) president said. “We’re coming off several months of unseasonably high sales levels, which has allowed for a gradual increase in home values this year,”
The REBGV reports that residential property sales in Greater Vancouver totalled 3,704 in October 2009, an increase of 4.1 per cent from the 3,559 sales recorded in September 2009, and an increase of 171.6 per cent compared to October 2008 when 1,364 sales were recorded. Looking back two years, last month’s sales increased 22.3 percent compared to October 2007 when 3,028 sales were recorded.
“High confidence and low mortgage rates are continuing to drive the activity we’re seeing in the housing market today,” Russell said.
New listings for detached, attached and apartment properties in Greater Vancouver totalled 4,977 in October 2009. This represents a 2.3 per cent increase compared to October 2008 when 4,867 new units were listed, and a 13.4 per cent decline compared to September 2009 when 5,764 properties were listed on the Multiple Listing Service® (MLS®) in Greater Vancouver.
At 12,084, the total number of property listings on the MLS® decreased 4.1 per cent in October compared to last month and declined 37 per cent from this time last year.
Sales of detached properties increased 201.6 per cent to 1,487 from the 493 detached sales recorded during the same period in 2008. The benchmark price, as calculated by the MLSLink Housing Price Index®, for detached properties increased 7.7 per cent from October 2008 to $749,808.
Sales of apartment properties in October 2009 increased 148.4 per cent to 1,607, compared to 647sales in October 2008. The benchmark price of an apartment property increased 6.3 per cent from October 2008 to $380,975.
Attached property sales in October 2009 are up 172.3 per cent to 610, compared with the 224 sales in October 2008. The benchmark price of an attached unit increased 4.6 per cent between Octobers 2008 and 2009 to $468,798.