Quick Hits!

Stories!

6 minute read

August 18, 2023

A few of these stories, observations, and opinions have been in my mental queue for quite some time now.

In fact, a colleague beat me to the punch about one of them, so I figured I’d get them out there before they become old news.

In lieu of dedicating an entire blog post to some items that might not deserve it, please enjoy the following Quick Hits

 


 

Can’t We Just Pay People To Sell These Damn Things?

That must be what some developers are thinking out there as the market for pre-construction properties declines.

Sure, developers always pay people, notably agents, to sell their properties.  But how much?

Oh boy…

A typical buyer-broker commission in the industry is 2.5% but it can often be 2.25%, 2%, or even $1 in some cases for “mere postings” where the commission is negotiated with the seller.

In the pre-construction world, we often see 3% or 4% commissions, and I’ve always argued that this demonstrates how developers expect buyer agents to put their own wallets and best interests before that of their buyer-clients.

But what if that commission were higher?

What if it were a whopping 5%?

Don’t you think there are some buyer-agents out there that would push their buyer-clients into pre-construction rather than resale?

What if the commission were 6%?

What if it were higher?

And what if a commission was offered that was the equivalent of what some people make from their occupation in an entire year?

Somebody sent me this screen-shot from Tik Tok, so I have no idea who the guy with the beard is, but look at the ad:

That’s insane.

10% with an asterisk, but it’s still likely 10% at some level.

And 10% of properties starting at $949,990.

We’re talking about paying agents $95,000 commissions to sell houses.

How is this possible?

Is it likely that the developer simply increased the asking prices of these units by 7-10% and then started offering unheard-of commissions?

In an unrelated story, I hear Thorold is nice this time of year…

 


 

One Solution To Housing Woes: Fewer People!

Toronto has a housing crisis.

Have you heard?

It’s also, potentially or not, depending on your political view, being exacerbated by rampant immigration of both permanent residents and non-permanent residents or “NPR’s,” and has led to some unfortunate souls sleeping on the street in front of shelters.

So what’s the solution?

Oh, I don’t have an answer, in case you’re wondering.  I wasn’t going to volunteer one but rather I’m genuinely asking.

A colleague of mine sent me a “PUBLIC NOTICE” from 1944 and mused, “Here’s one solution that will never be offered.”

It’s true.

And while it’s very difficult to view history through the lens of today (even though people do this constantly and attempt to apply moralities of 2023 to actions and individuals from hundreds of years ago…), I figured I would share the public notice just for discussion purposes…

Wow.

Can you imagine?

On the one hand, good for them!

On the other hand, how dare they!

Imagine a municipality coming right out and saying, “We will not assume any responsibility”?  It’s crazy by today’s standards!

But in ALL CAPS at the bottom of the notice reads:

DO NOT COME TO TORONTO

Yikes.

I don’t know that this is an answer in 2023.  Then again, I don’t know that it’s not either…

 


 

You Haven’t Made It In Real Estate Until You’ve Been Defaced!

When I got into the real estate business in 2004, I can’t tell you how many times I said, “I’ll never be ‘one of those guys’ who has his face on a goddam park bench!”

No way.  No how.

Wasn’t gonna do it.

The billboard guys.  The bus shelter guys.  The side of the bus guys.

But what about the garbage bins?  Are they the same thing?

I moved down to the St. Lawrence Market area in 2006 and I decided that this would be my “farm area.”

Everything was cheaper back then, so sending out admail thirty times per year to 12,000 condos seemed like a viable business plan.

But it wasn’t complete.  Nope.

In order for that to work, you’d have to get your name and your face out there.

And that’s when I put my face on city garbage bins.

Holy shit, it sounds so weird to say now.  This is such a distant memory, and yet it seems surreal.  I did that.  Yes, me.

The cost was nominal as this was before Astral Media was given a monopoly by the City of Toronto and basically quadrupled prices (circa 2008 maybe?), although as a taxpayer, I’d be more than okay with that.  So I picked up five garbage on Front Street East and King Street East and up went my name, image, and likeness!

One Saturday night, my friends and I were out drinking at the local watering hole and after stumbling out of the bar, a buddy stopped to tie his shoe and crouched down.  He paused in his crouch, and as if he were slowly turning toward the Alien or Velociraptor from a horror movie, he came face-to-face with…

me.

My stupid real estate face plastered on a garbage bin.

He literally yet out a scream, then some profanities, then laughter the likes of which I’ve never heard.

Then they all laughed at me.

Then they started telling random people, “Hey, yo, this is him!  That guy there is also this guy, right here.”

I was mortified.

But deservedly so, I guess.  I never planned to be the bus shelter guy or the park bench guy.  I didn’t like it, but it worked.  I sold a ton of condos down in my neighbourhood and that continued well after I got rid of those garbage bins.

That’s just a distant memory now.

But I will say that everybody who has an outdoor advertisement or a sign has had theirs defaced.

Some of us get off lightly: perhaps a mustache drawn in black marker?

Others aren’t so lucky.  Use your imagination.

One of my colleagues recently posted this on our company chat:

Honestly, you have to applaud the artist.

This isn’t a black Sharpie, folks.  This is two cans of spraypaint, one pink, one purple, and it took effort and planning.

I think my colleague should frame this.

The ‘culprit’ did this to hurt my colleague, so why not turn a negative into a positive?  Everybody needs at least one piece of eclectic art in their home, so why not turn this defacement into a trophy?

And sometimes, you just have to see the humour in it.

That’s what an agent out in New Brunswick did when somebody defaced his “FOR SALE” sign.

Here’s turning a negative into a positive for ya:

 


 

Crash Course In Photoshop?

One of my favourite things to see on MLS (and by “favourite” I mean an opportunity to laugh at the shortcomings of others), is when a property listed for sale has a backyard that’s obviously so ugly and awful that the seller, listing agent, or a really bad assistant essentially paints it green.

Paints?

Yeah, like maybe in Microsoft Paint that comes with Windows.

Or imagine cropping a small square of grass from an image found on the Internet and then pasting that small square twenty times on the photo of backyard.  Just try to picture how stupid that looks, and yet, people do it.

Wait…I remember one of these!

This was 2020 or thereabouts, um, ah, here:

suppose one might think this is just fresh sod laid out in identical-looking pieces?

Or it’s a copy-and-paste in Paint.  Yes…

But what about photoshopping someone into a photo on MLS?

A friend of mine found this advertisement on Facebook Marketplace.  It’s for a rental on Bay Street and for some odd reason, there’s a lady photoshopped in the picture of the lobby:

Wait….what?

Why?

What does this woman photoshopped into the picture of the lobby have to do with the unit up for lease?

Maybe I’m just old and dead inside, but is this about sex?  It has to be, right?  Since the dawn of time, advertisers have placed women in ads for cars, cigarettes, or airplanes simply to appeal to their simplest senses.

But then, when we see the second photo in the advertisement, I get really confused…

This makes even less sense.

That woman seems to be floating in the air, or at the very least, has to be ten feet away from the black chair that she’s supposed to be sitting on.

And why is she wearing a mask?

I don’t want to get into “all that,” but, um, like, isn’t the pandemic over?

In any event, this mask-wearing woman floating in an air-chair is superimposed in this photo and I can’t figure out why.

Ah, well.

This unit is for lease on Facebook Marketplace.

It’s not like they listed it for sale on MLS with the same photos…

…er…

…um…

 


 

Well, that’s it for me, folks!

I hope you enjoyed these quick little snippets.

Enjoy the weekend, and I’ll see you back here on Monday!

Written By David Fleming

David Fleming is the author of Toronto Realty Blog, founded in 2007. He combined his passion for writing and real estate to create a space for honest information and two-way communication in a complex and dynamic market. David is a licensed Broker and the Broker of Record for Bosley – Toronto Realty Group

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8 Comments

  1. R

    at 9:04 am

    How does an agent ever have the best interest of the buyer in mind when it’s the seller that pays them?

    2.5%, 4%, 10% ? Isn’t it just a matter of degrees how much they put their own wallet in front of the buyers best interest?

    It’s a pretty crazy business model for the buyer if you think about it. The higher the price, worse it is for the so called client, but better for their agent agent who supposedly has their best interest in mind.

    What incentive is their for a buyer agent to actually get a better price or not collide with a seller to have the buyer pay more?

    Is there another industry that has the seller paying the person who reps the buyer?

    1. Derek

      at 10:18 am

      Insurance brokers;
      Mortgage brokers;

    2. Nobody

      at 10:24 am

      Would you screw over your client for an extra 2k on a pretty much guaranteed 20k commission? Never.

      For an extra 80k? In a reasonably slow real estate market?

      That is the level that will definitely get some agent thinking.

      1. R

        at 12:14 pm

        Ok. So where’s the line? What’s the number? 2k no, but 2.5? 5? It’s pretty fuzzy.

        How does the client even know they are getting screwed when it’s their agent telling them “it’s a good deal”…”it’s the market”..?

  2. Nobody

    at 10:27 am

    As to photoshop – I see so many places with fake furniture staging.

    Even in REALLY expensive places. Like $10MM houses with faked staging.

    Incredibly disappointing but obviously not going to affect a sale. If it’s a great house in your target location and price range then you’ll buy it despite stupid games by the agent. Which leads more agents to cut corners rather than actually pay for staging furniture and professional photos.

  3. Ace Goodheart

    at 2:09 pm

    RE: “DO NOT COME TO TORONTO” – they are renaming Saunders Street as this was deemed to be offensive to the unhoused. All references to former acting Mayor Saunders as being a good person or a nice guy are being removed from the history books and he will henceforth be known only as “that villiain!” (exclamation mark is mandatory).

    Any attempt to disagree with this is a cancel culture offence!

    You have been warned.

    1. Izzy Bedibida

      at 5:42 pm

      I couldn’t agree more. The TDSB is probably working on something similar into their curriculum documents. YRDSB will be following suite, and I will be forced to integrate this into my Architectural Design Unit.

  4. Ace Goodheart

    at 1:26 pm

    Looks like more effort in Toronto to solve the housing crisis.

    A special Toronto only sales tax, applicable to home sales. Some say it could be as much as 6%.

    Double land transfer tax going up again.

    Much higher property tax.

    A new tax on parking.

    A soecial tax on renovations (if you want to live in a house with a new kitchen, you have to pay. After all, the unhoused have no kitchens).

    All of this intended to make houses cheaper.

    After all, if you tax something, therefore increasing its price, it becomes cheaper and more affordable.

    Simple math. Item + tax = more expensive….and therefore it costs less!

Pick5 is a weekly series comparing and analyzing five residential properties based on price, style, location, and neighbourhood.

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