| > The central bank defines an investor as a buyer who took out a mortgage to buy the property while maintaining a mortgage on another home. In the US, a lot has been made about large investment companies buying up houses, but this is something different entirely: > This category represents homebuyers with multiple mortgaged properties. This means investors are homebuyers who either: > * purchase an investment property while maintaining their primary residence, or > * purchase a new residence to live in while converting their existing residence into an investment property Specifically, "investors" excludes anyone who didn't use a mortgage to purchase (e.g., all-cash buyers, any buyer with alternative financing). AFAICT, it would even exclude someone with a paid-off house who bought a new investment property with a mortgage. [1]: https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2022/01/staff-analytical-note-20... |
Those people are not investors by any useful English-language definition, but would be counted as such by this method. This is exactly the situation we were in when we bought our current home, and anecdotally, is not uncommon when people are moving in together from previously separate, owned properties. Sellers prefer zero sales contingencies over one sale contingency and prefer one over two.