“This is unprecedented,” said Goodman, who has been selling rental apartment buildings for 18 years.
This means that in Goodman's 18 years of working in the real estate rental market, he has never seen this happen.
Goodman also noted that most of the potential sellers are families that live in Vancouver, and that have held rental property for years. Goodman now says, that most families want to get out of the market, even though the Vancouver rents are at historic highs and the city's vacancy rate is the lowest in Canada.
“We have 18 active listings now worth more than $250 million,” he said.
Not only is this amount of listings very high right now, Goodman is also expecting two receive at least 24 more within weeks.
Some of Goodmans current listings include a four-building portfolio in the South Granville area, this has a total of 114 suites that the longtime owners have listed for the first time.
Goodman thinks that the reason there is this many apartments being put onto the market is that because of the new caps that stop rent increases at 2.5 per cent this year. This is combined with soaring property taxes, based on assessments that are now often higher than the buildings could sell for.
For example, BC Assessment has valued an aging 16-suite, walk-up apartment building on Bute Street in Vancouver at more than $10.9 million, with the land alone assessed at $10.3 million.
Goodman has it listed at a discounted price of $9.25 million.
The owner of a 44-suite building on Balmoral Street put it up for sale this month after annual property taxes hit $50,000, based on a spike in its assessed value to just under $19 million resulting from an $850,000 increase in assessed land value from a year earlier.
Because BC Assessment values land at its highest possible use, property taxes for Metro Vancouver landlords have increased as much as 25% in the past year. But Goodman said landlords are restricted in how much they can raise rents and even in how extensively they can renovate their buildings. This really affects how landlords usually do their work, with these very hard to work with rental restrictions.
He added that some of the older rental apartment buildings – the average age in Vancouver is 61 years – have a majority of long-term tenants who are paying rates well below market value.
Under Vancouver’s new Tenant Relocation and Protection Policy, if a landlord evicts a tenant to make way for substantial renovations, a person who has lived in the apartment for more than 20 years is entitled to a full year of rent, paid for by the landlord. Someone who has rented an apartment for between one and five years is now entitled to four months’ rent.
Goodman said some of the older buildings are “falling apart and unsafe,” but landlords can’t afford to fix them because of the penalties for “renovictions.”
The recent spike in apartment listings marks a sharp reversal from earlier this year.
In 2019’s second quarter, Metro Vancouver rental apartment building sales fell 66.7% to just 13 compared with the same period a year earlier. The dollar value of sales was $152 million, down a staggering 73.9% from 2018’s second quarter, according to the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver’s commercial division.
Goodman said the current rush of listings, which other agents are also experiencing, represents a “changing of the guard” in the Metro rental market.
“We are seeing more institutional buyers like REITs [real estate investment trusts] and pension funds.”
But Goodman added that they are looking mostly at new buildings or large portfolios. There is still a local appetite for one-off, older buildings, but he said sellers might have to discount prices.
Goodman added that foreign buyers have expressed interest in Vancouver buildings but are put off by B.C.’s 20% foreign-homebuyer tax, which applies to rental apartment buildings.
“The taxes are just crazy. Some owners have simply had enough.”
If you would like to learn more about why there are so many apartment buildings being put on the market, or if you are thinking about buying or selling your properties, please contact Matt Gul, who is a top luxury real estate agent situated in West Vancouver, who can help you with all of your needs. To contact Matt Gul please call him at 778.888.8888 or email him at matt@mattgul.com
Summarized by: Onur Gul on instagram at @onurguldrone