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Home ownership remains a millennial measure of success: Don Pittis

Owning a home may be hard for young people. Of course, it's always been hard. Getting a foot on the home ownership ladder may be a financial decision, but it is much more than that.

Owning a home remains a way for young people to put down roots and save

The Vancouver skyline is constantly changing as high prices encourage new development, but it leaves millennials wondering whether to buy or rent. (Andy Clark/Reuters)

Despite the latestfrighteningnews about soaring Canadian house prices, there are good reasons for millennials to pursuehome ownership.

For many, the hardest question is whether it remains possible at all.But for some under-35s, the issue is whether the financial risks of home ownershipoutweigh the benefits.

As Jacqueline Hansen reported yesterdaybased on data from the Bank of Montreal, more than half of Canadian millennials already own their own piece of real estate.

Not only that, but of the 49 per cent who don't own already, a large majorityof them a whopping 64 per cent are saving with the intentof buying.

Affordability falls

So despite areport from RBC just before Christmas that Canadian home ownership is less affordable than it has been in eight years, under-35s are still in the market.

Are they crazy?To find out I asked one.

As well as being a CBC business reporter, Hansen is a millennial who recently bought a condo in Toronto's pricey market.

"Buying was the only way I could find a place that I was proud of, that I could feel good coming home to," Hansen says.
CBC reporter Jacqueline Hansen, as well as reporting on millennials, is one herself. She recently decided to buy a condo in Toronto's pricey market. (CBC)

Like many other young people, the CBC reporter didn't jump into it. Just like the people she interviewed for her own report, when she moved to Torontoshe lived in what she describes as small and unpleasant rental bachelor apartments while taking a series of short-term contract jobs.

Getting a mortgage when you're engaged in contract work is much more difficult.

Thefinance minister says people must learn to live with"job churn,"but it appears many mortgage lenders did not get the memo.

It was only after settling into a full-time job that Hansentook the plunge.

Putting down roots

Temporary or part-time work makes ithard to know whetheryou'll stay or move someplace with better opportunities.

"Now that I own a place, I feel that I have roots here," Hansen says.

A dissatisfaction with rented accommodation is more than justa millennial affectation, according to real estate specialistTsurSomerville, it's part of the Canadian market reality.

Relative to other parts of the world an exception being the city of Montreala high level of home ownership is "the cultural norm" in Canada, says Somerville, professor at the Sauder School of Business at the University of British Columbia.

"Because we are a relatively highhome-ownership society, if you want to remain a renter, your choices end up being somewhat limited," says Somerville.
Condo developments such as this one in Hamilton are available to buy in many different price ranges, but in the Canadian market rental properties don't provide as much choice. (Vernon Shaw)

Our cultural preference for ownership means most ofthenicest homes and the nicest neighbourhoods are places where people own, not rent.

Unlike places such asSouth Korea or parts of Europe where it's assumed people will stay in a single rented flat for decades, in Canadait'smuch harder to find a place where renters can be confident they will be able to stay and settle into a neighbourhood.

Hansen is confident thatif she could rent a place as nice asher current home, it would cost more than paying for her condo. She bought about a year ago and every time prices rise the deal gets better.

Market uncertainty

Somerville says the real estate boom we've seen in Toronto adds an extra challenge for young buyers.

As prices shoot higher, buyersmust decide whether to move quickly while they can afford it.Alternatively, they must worry about whatwillhappen if interest rates suddenly rise or prices tumble.

Average home prices are roughly twice the price relative to incomes as they were in 1984. But mortgagerates then weredouble digit. The secret then as it is now is not to get in over your head.

Scraping together a down paymentwasn't easy a generation ago either. And whileToronto and Vancouver single-family homes may beoutside the reach of first-time buyers, the price of condos makes entering the property market, with the idea of moving up in future, as attainable as it has ever been.
Coal Harbour condo towers in Vancouver where single family homes are well out of the price range of most first time buyers. (David Horemans/CBC)

Just as it was for their parents, home ownership for millennials isa mark of success. It'sa sign that you've got a steady income, that you are ready to settle in for a while and put down roots, that you've put student debts and parental influence behind you.

But does it pay?

From a strictly financial point of view, Somerville's research shows that buying a home is no guarantee you will be better off.

"In the long run, over most markets, you can do as well renting as you can owning," he says. "If you are a disciplined saver, you don't come out any better."

That caveat about "disciplined" makes a big difference. For many people, getting a mortgage and paying it down serves as abig forced-savings plan.

"Like for people like myself," says Somerville. "If I was renting I would never have saved as much asI have throughhome equity,becauseI'm not that disciplined."

Follow Don on twitter @don_pittis

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