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by hypoxia 1537 days ago
Open auctions will help.

In the last year, we've ended up #2 in 6 bidding wars (as disclosed by the listing agents) in one particular area of the GTA. In each case we reached our absolute max and wouldn't have paid any more.

Several times we lost by $100-200k, and once by $250k. These overpayments set new price benchmarks for the area which became sticky. To continue to be competitive, we had to make hard sacrifices to increase our budget throughout the year.

The fact that houses continued to move at the prices determined by these over-payments indicates there are some buyers at the higher prices. However, the market is very thin and the pace of price growth in this speculative market would've been slowed with open bidding.

Beyond the blind bidding issue, I don't know why people focus on foreign and large corporate buyers. Yes, they're scary because they represent potentially large sources of demand. But are they actually buying a large percentage of the homes? No. It's the smaller investors who speculatively bought 40% of homes last fall.

But we should definitely protect mom and pop investors, such as our housing minister wink

Real solution? Reduce the incentive for speculation among these groups by treating all gains on non-primary residences as income.