Want to buy property but don't have a down payment? 'Fractional ownership' may be the ticket - Action News
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Want to buy property but don't have a down payment? 'Fractional ownership' may be the ticket

With home prices beyond reach for many Canadians and direct investment in commercial real estate also largely inaccessible, two companies in Canada are offering a way to get in on the action.

2 companies in Canada offer a way to buy a slice of a property as an investment

Jamie Smith stands in front of an apartment building in North Vancouver. She became part-owner of the building through a fractional real estate investing company called Addy. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

With home prices in Canada at stratosphericlevels and a commercial property something fewindividuals can afford to buy, two companies are offering Canadians a way to get in on the action.

It's called fractional ownership, and it allows individuals to buy a share in a single house, apartment building orindustrial park.

Vancouver-based startup Addy and Toronto'sBuyProperlyare part of the emerging "fintech" and "proptech" sectors, which are using technology to disrupt the financial and real estate industries.

Avis Devine, an associate professor of real estate withthe Schulich School of Business at York University, said the industry is "ripe for disruption, because we've operated in the same way for so very long."

She believes fractional ownership could be very appealing to people in Gen Z and younger millennials.

Experts say the fractional ownership concept opens up a new path to participate in real estate by lowering costs but there are also potential problems.

Howdoes it work?

The sales pitch on fractional ownership isthat even if you don't have a down payment for a house or can't finance a strip mall, with a few mouse clicksto sign up and an electronic fund transfer (EFT) to pay for your investment, you could become part-owner of a property.

Addy and BuyProperly essentially crowdfund a property purchase by attracting investors online.

The focus for BuyProperly is selling shares in rental houses in Ontario. Addydeals with properties worth $5million to $50 million, like apartment buildings and industrial parks, with investments in B.C., Alberta and Ontario so far.

Mike Stephenson is the CEO of Addy, a real estate investment company based in Vancouver. He says fractional ownership is for Canadians who want to own real estate but can't buy it on their own. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Both offer a small inventory of investment properties on their web sites and say they are looking for more.

In Australia, India and the U.S., companies are offering different fractional ownership options for example, one American company sells shares in farmland.

Addy and BuyProperlysay they have regulatory approval to sell investments and claim a transaction can be done in less than 10 minutes.

Is it like co-ownership or a REIT?

The fractional ownership model these companies offer is not like co-ownership of a house or building, because investors do not occupy or use the property. Also, the number of shares sold in a fractional investment tends to be much higher.

It is also differentfrom a real estate investment trust (REIT) because instead of investing in the stock of a publicly traded company that has a bundle of income-producing properties, you are investing in asingle property.

What does it cost and how much can I invest?

Each company has a different approach to participation.

With Addy, the basic membership fee is $25 per year, and you can buy a share in a property for as little as one dollar.The company caps the maximum amount any single investor can put into a single property at $1,500.

"We're not built for the rich, we're built for the 99 per cent of Canadians who want to own some real estate," said Addy CEO and co-founder Mike Stephenson.The company currently has 16,000 members, but not all of them have made investments.

At BuyProperly, the minimum investment is $2,500.

"That's where we realized a sweet spot," said Khushboo Jha, CEO and founder of BuyProperly.The investment amount "is not so insignificant it will not move the needle for somebody, and it's not so high that you couldn't make it."

The company doesn't sell memberships. Investors splitthe one-time acquisition costs (like home inspection and legal fees) among themselves and are charged recurring costs for property maintenance and management.BuyProperlyalso charges them an annual fee of 2.5 per cent plus tax and GST/HST on their investment amount.

Khushboo Jha is the CEO and founder of BuyProperly, a Toronto-based company that offers people the chance to buy a share in a rental house as an investment. Jha is standing in front of a $2.2 million rental house in Mississauga, Ont., owned by investors with her company. (Keith Whelan/CBC)

The company has 300 investors to date and no single investor can own more than 50 per cent of a house. Jha says most of their investors want to spread their money out over multiple properties.

How do you make money?

With each company, there are two main ways investors make money.

First, they receive a percentage of rental income relative to their investment.

Then, when a property is sold, appreciation is paid back to investors, who alsogetback their investment principal.BuyProperly also allows investors to sell their stake early to another investor if they want to exit a property before it is sold by the company.

Jamie Smith, a 35-year-old renter in Vancouver, invested with Addy because she feels priced out of her city.

"If you want, like, a park bench here, I don't know if we could afford it," she said.

She recently put a total of$1,500into two Addy properties with her partner, and they plan on doing more.

She found it rewardingto "pick the building I get to put my amount in," adding that fractionalownership wasa "nice" option for someone whodoesn't havea lotto invest.

"It feels like a very empowering process,"said Smith, who found trying to buy a place to live "the exact opposite of that."

Dangers and drawbacks

The fact that real estate in many parts of Canada seems to do nothing but go up in value doesn't mean fractional ownership is risk-free.

"When things are good, it's gonna be to your advantage.But when things are bad, risk is involved," saidLaleh Samarbakhsh, an associate professor of finance at the Ted Rogers School of Management at Ryerson University.

Laleh Samarbakhsh at the Ted Rogers School of Management in Toronto points out that a property owned by a group of fractional investors can go down in value just like any other property. (Sam Nar/CBC)

She points out that a property owned by a group of fractional investors can go down in value just like any other property.She also says that real estate is not always easy to liquidate, which can force owners to wait for a return or accept less money if they need to sell.

She said that aworry for the real estate sector at largeis that as fractional ownership brings in more people, prices couldbecome even moreinflated.

Samarbakhsh acknowledges that fractional ownership can be exciting and attractive,but warns that investment decisions should not bebased ona fear of being left behind.

"You have to be very careful about that," she said.