5 Unbelievable Facts About the Vancouver Real Estate Market

The Vancouver real estate market is incredibly overvalued. Why investors want to avoid it, Canadian Western Bank (TSX:CWB), and Genworth MI Canada Inc. (TSX:MIC).

| More on:
The Motley Fool

Although the Toronto real estate market seems to dominate the headlines, values in Vancouver have consistently dwarfed those in Toronto over the last few years. And like with Toronto, the market is split between people who are bullish and folks who are bearish.

Vancouver real estate bulls believe that the city is the best in Canada, and deserves the premium. They point to the warm climate, the influx of capital from Asia, and the competition for desirable neighborhoods as evidence the market is in great shape.

Bears look at things like the inflated price-to-household income levels, the widespread use of secondary suites in order for homeowners to make ends meet, and the multi-million values for push-down properties that are sitting on pricey land as evidence that the market is overvalued, and is due for a correction.

Like with Toronto, I think it’s obvious that the Vancouver real estate market is overvalued, and is primed for a fall. The issue becomes timing. Just how long can the party last?

Here are five facts about the Vancouver market that should concern every homeowner in the region.

1. 14.1%

Over the last year, the value of Vancouver homes are on fire. Compared to May 2014, the value of the average Vancouver detached home is up 14.1%. Apartments and attached homes also did well, increasing 4.6% and 6.4% respectively year over year.

Considering Vancouver already has the most expensive real estate in the country, it begs the question — just how expensive can it get?

2. $1.9 million

The average price of a detached house in Vancouver has now surpassed $1.9 million. That makes Vancouver among the richest markets in the world, on pace with places like Hong Kong or New York City. And according to a projection from a local credit union, the average detached house could cost up to $4.4 million in 2030.

3. 173% in 10 years

According to data from Vancity, the same credit union that predicted the $4.4 million average price by 2030, the value of Vancouver’s real estate has gone up 173% since 2005. To put that in perspective, the TSX Composite is only up 37.8% during the same time period.

4. 48 times

One common metric to determine real estate affordability is to look at a market’s price-to-rent ratio. The higher the ratio, the more overpriced the market is.

Vancouver’s price-to-rent ratio is an eye-popping 48 times, which is by far the highest in Canada. Or, to look at it another way, someone buying a typical Vancouver property can only expect a cash flow of 2.1% per year. That’s not even covering the interest on the mortgage, never mind other expenses.

5. 12.3 times

The median household in Vancouver made just shy of $73,400, according to the most recent statistics available. The average price for all types of real estate has recently broken through $900,000. That puts the average piece of real estate at 12.3 times the income of the average family. There’s no way that’s sustainable.

How will it affect your portfolio?

There really isn’t a company that’s overly exposed to Vancouver real estate, unlike Home Capital Group and its almost singular focus on the Toronto market.

One stock investors should avoid is Canadian Western Bank (TSX:CWB), which has 33% of its loans outstanding in British Columbia. Canadian Western Bank isn’t the perfect proxy on the Vancouver market, but it also has exposure to Alberta, as well as many commercial loans to the energy sector. That combination isn’t attractive in today’s world.

The other stock investors should avoid if they’re bearish on real estate in general is Genworth MI Canada Inc. (TSX:MIC), Canada’s largest privately held mortgage insurer. Even if the bubble only bursts regionally, investors will still avoid the stock, afraid that a nationwide decline is just around the corner.

For years, rumors from mortgage brokers have said that Genworth is more lax than CMHC in approving loans. If this is true, I wouldn’t want to hold Genworth during a time when real estate values are declining.

And finally, if you’re a believer that a housing bust is imminent, you’ll want to avoid holding Canada’s largest banks. They’re likely to survive any prolonged slump in housing, but profits won’t be great during those lean years.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Fool contributor Nelson Smith has no position in any stocks mentioned.

More on Bank Stocks

Dice engraved with the words buy and sell
Bank Stocks

Is BNS a Buy, Sell, or Hold?

Bank of Nova Scotia (TSX:BNS) stock looks like an intriguing high-yield bank stock to pursue this month.

Read more »

grow money, wealth build
Bank Stocks

EQB Stock Has a Real Chance of Turning $500 Into $1,000 by 2030

EQB is an undervalued dividend paying TSX bank stock that should more than double in market cap by the end…

Read more »

A plant grows from coins.
Bank Stocks

Should You Buy TD Stock for Its 5.2% Dividend Yield?

TD Bank stock trades 27% from all-time highs, offering shareholders a tasty dividend yield of 5.2%. Is TD Bank stock…

Read more »

edit Businessman using calculator next to laptop
Bank Stocks

Best Stock to Buy Now: Is TD Bank Stock a Buy?

TD (TSX:TD) stock remains one of the biggest banks in Canada, and that's unlikely to change. But there are still…

Read more »

stock analysis
Dividend Stocks

Meta Is Now a Dividend Stock, but This TSX Stock Is a Better Buy

Social media giant Meta is now a dividend payer but a TSX stock is a better buy for its 156-year…

Read more »

Man making notes on graphs and charts
Bank Stocks

TD Bank: Should You Buy the Dip?

TD is down about 8% in 2024. Is the stock now oversold?

Read more »

edit Four girl friends withdrawing money from credit card at ATM
Bank Stocks

2 Top TSX Bank Stocks to Buy if There’s Another Stock Market SellOff

Here are two of the most attractive Canadian bank stocks you can consider buying if there is another stock market…

Read more »

Mature financial advisor showing report to young couple for their investment
Bank Stocks

Why Goeasy Stock Rose 4.4% on Monday

Operating results out of goeasy have continued strong, and this, combined with the stock's low valuation, is gaining investors' interest.

Read more »