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			<title>Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011® : Canadian Summary</title><description><![CDATA[<br /> <br /> While  Canada&#39;s real estate markets largely avoided the recession&#39;s impact,  Canadian respondents to the Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011&reg; survey  remain worried about economic forces that could stunt the country&#39;s  growth. Interviewees cited the discouraging market forecast for their  southern neighbour as the chief reason for their concerns. A sputtering  US economy and weak greenback could impinge on Canada&#39;s growth,  especially for industrial markets that service US Midwest manufacturing  centres, and hotel investments.<br /> <br /> However &quot;relieved&quot; property  owners and financial institutions who responded to the survey couldn&#39;t  help but compare their relatively healthy condition with the US outlook.  &quot;The domestic consumer has been pushing the economy, and jobs levels  bounced back to pre recession levels. It&#39;s been phenomenal compared to  the US,&quot; summed up one interviewee.&nbsp; Canada&#39;s conservative outlook  results in limited domestic investment opportunities<br /> Access to  capital may have improved but investment opportunities remain limited.  Overall, Emerging Trends respondents expect a reasonable balance in debt  market capital availability and an oversupply of equity capital which  may result in pent-up investors seeking market-bottom plays and  foreclosed assets in the US. Foreign investors also struggle with  finding good acquisition opportunities on Canadian soil. The same can&#39;t  be said for insurers and pension funds. They continue to command  ownership of Canada&#39;s trophy commercial assets: downtown office space  and regional malls.<br /> <br /> <span style="font-weight: bold;"><br /> </span>]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 08 Nov 2010 10:12 PST</pubDate><guid>http://www.soltanihomes.com/news/18/24/24/news-release/24</guid><link>http://www.soltanihomes.com/news/18/24/24/news-release</link></item><item>
			<title>BC Real Estate Market</title><description><![CDATA[Market Conditions Beginning to Improve<br /> Vancouver, BC &ndash; October 13, 2010. The British Columbia Real Estate Association (BCREA)<br /> reports that Multiple Listing Service&reg; (MLS&reg;) residential sales in the province declined 36 per<br /> cent to 5,511 units in September compared to the same month last year. On a seasonally adjusted<br /> basis, MLS&reg; residential unit sales in the province increased 2 per cent in September from<br /> August 2010. The average MLS&reg; residential price climbed 4 per cent to $493,846 in September<br /> compared to the same month last year.<br /> &ldquo;BC home sales increased for the second<br /> consecutive month in September,&rdquo; said<br /> Cameron Muir, BCREA Chief Economist.<br /> &ldquo;However, consumer demand is still<br /> noticeably lower than last fall&rsquo;s frenetic pace.&rdquo;<br /> &ldquo;Market conditions have improved, with the<br /> months of supply declining from 11.1 in June<br /> to 8.9 in September,&rdquo; added Muir. A balanced<br /> market typically exhibits five to seven months<br /> of supply.<br /> &ldquo;The current downward pressure on mortgage<br /> rates is expected to bolster housing demand this fall as consumers take advantage of a second<br /> opportunity to secure near record low interest rates,&rdquo; noted Muir.<br /> Year-to-date, BC residential sales dollar volume increased 2 per cent to $29.6 billion, compared<br /> to the same period last year. Residential unit sales declined 7 per cent to 59,228 year-to-date,<br /> while the average MLS&reg; residential price climbed 9 per cent to $500,539 over the same period.]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 01 Nov 2010 16:32 PST</pubDate><guid>http://www.soltanihomes.com/news/18/30/30/news-release/23</guid><link>http://www.soltanihomes.com/news/18/30/30/news-release</link></item><item>
			<title>Real estate renovated</title><description><![CDATA[<div>  <div>  <p> <span class="npTxtSerif npTxtStrong">Garry Marr, Financial Post</span><span class="npTxtDim"> &middot; Friday, Oct. 29, 2010</span> </p>  <div class="npGroup">  <div class="npWidth1-2 npLeft">  <p> It&rsquo;s  akin to a land rush. But instead of land up for grabs, it&rsquo;s the right  to sell land that is about to attract prospective real estate agents  from far and wide. </p>  <p> And why not? Total sales activity  through the Canadian Real Estate Association&rsquo;s Multiple Listing Service  was $150-billion in 2009. Even at a modest 4% commission &mdash; I sure didn&rsquo;t  get a rate that low last time I sold my house &mdash; that&rsquo;s $6-billion worth  of fees for the taking. </p>  <p> The only problem until this month  was that CREA had built a wall around the MLS system, restricting how  real estate could be bought and sold. In March, the group, which  represents about 100 boards across the country, reversed course and  changed its bylaws to allow all types of buying and selling models  through the MLS. </p>  <p> The move brought change almost immediately  with agents jumping into the field with offers to list property on the  MLS for a flat fee and let the consumer do everything from showing  houses to negotiating themselves. But CREA still reserved the right to  change its rules and put in new restrictions. </p>  <p> This month  everything changed again. The group approved a 10-year agreement which  the Competition Bureau, setting changes to the MLS in stone, and  ensuring a slew of new business models are likely to become available to  consumers. </p>  <p> The flood gates are about to open and home  buyers are going to being facing business models that incorporate  everything from hourly rates to retainers to the good-old fashioned  commission structure the real estate industry maintains has worked so  well for years. </p>  <p> One-man real estate show Tyler Ross, the  broker of record at Toronto-based Synergy Real Estate Consulting Ltd.,  is an example of the new wave. Armed with two technical support guys,  he&rsquo;s raring to go with a model that offers a flat fee based on an hourly  rate. </p>  <p> &ldquo;We can say &lsquo;Pay us what you would a lawyer, an  accountant or any other professional service&rsquo; and when it comes time to  get a commission, we&rsquo;ll wave it,&rdquo; Mr. Ross says. &ldquo;We couldn&rsquo;t do this  before March.&rdquo; </p>  <p> His next step and the one everybody is now  eyeing is the buy side of the transaction. Offering a flat fee on the  listing side via the MLS is one thing, but how are you going to get  agents to come visit the property if you offer no commission? Even  private for sale by owner sites are prone to offering fees to the  buyer&rsquo;s agent. </p>  <p> The typical commission for the buyer&rsquo;s agent  is about 2.5% of the value of the property &mdash; a rate most assume is not  going anywhere. But even that is coming under attack. </p>  <p> Lawrence  Dale, the lawyer who helped start failed discounter Realtysellers in  2001 and has battled CREA for years, announced this week he&rsquo;s back in  business. </p>  <p> His new company, Realtysellers Real Estate Inc., is  offering to post your home for sale for free on the MLS &mdash; with no  service. Go for the full-service model and the commission is 0.5%. How  can he do it? </p>  <p> &ldquo;That&rsquo;s still $2,000 [on a $400,000] home,  four times what you pay your lawyer,&rdquo; Mr. Dale says, referring to a  typical real estate transaction. </p>  <p> While no fee is obviously  tough to compete against, Mr. Dale&rsquo;s real challenge to the industry is  his offer to rebate the 2.5% commission he would get as a buyer&rsquo;s agent.  He is willing to give back up to 75% of his commission to the customer. </p>  <p> He&rsquo;s  not going to be alone. &ldquo;There are going to be people who get into this  because they couldn&rsquo;t cut it as full-service agent,&rdquo; says Mr. Dale, in a  gentle shot at the competitors who want to mine the same real estate  gold as him. He maintains his new company will employ experienced  realtors who just happen to work at a fraction of the price. </p>  <p> Where  does that leave the full-service agent? Up until now, when you started  looking for a house, you usually picked up an agent. That agent would  act for you under the premise that they would get paid, when you  eventually bought a home. What happens if the home you eventually buy is  from a seller offering a commission rate that can now be as low as 1&cent;? </p>  <p> There  is a vehicle already in place called the buyer agency agreement, which  ties a prospective home buyer to an agent for a specified period of a  time. Those agreements, rarely signed these days, can include a  guaranteed minimum payment for your realtor. </p>  <p> &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a  guarantee if the realtor spends the time finding a perspective home  owner a place to live and negotiates the agreement, they&rsquo;ll get paid,&rdquo;  says Phil Soper, chief executive of Royal LePage Real Estate Services.  &ldquo;There is no structure set in stone. Every deal has the ability for a  certain amount of negotiation on the way the agent involved is going to  be paid.&rdquo; </p>  <p> Given the new competition about to enter the  field, even if you do go with a full-service model, something many  people will always want to do, there is no saying you can&rsquo;t use these  discounters to knock your selling fee down and grab a bit of a rebate on  your purchase. </p>  <p> As Mr. Soper and others maintain, the real  estate community was always willing to negotiate fees. Why not take the  industry at its word? </p>  <p> Financial Post </p>  <p> gmarr@nationalpost.com </p>  </div>  </div> <br /> <br /> Read more: <a href="http://www.financialpost.com/Real+estate+renovated/3749307/story.html#ixzz144ywk7r3">http://www.financialpost.com/Real+estate+renovated/3749307/story.html#ixzz144ywk7r3</a> </div>  </div>]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 01 Nov 2010 16:28 PST</pubDate><guid>http://www.soltanihomes.com/news/0/24/24/news-release/22</guid><link>http://www.soltanihomes.com/news/0/24/24/news-release</link></item><item>
			<title>Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver Average Price Graph January 2009 to January 2010</title><description><![CDATA[Please click on this link to view <a href="/File/2010-01_Average-Price_Graph.pdf" target="_blank">Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver Average Price Graph</a> January 2009 to January 2010<br />]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 05 Feb 2010 11:50 PST</pubDate><guid>http://www.soltanihomes.com/news/18/24/24/news-release/19</guid><link>http://www.soltanihomes.com/news/18/24/24/news-release</link></item><item>
			<title>MLS® Listing Facts</title><description><![CDATA[<a target="_blank" href="/File/2010-01_MLS-Listings-Facts.pdf">Please click to preview the MLS&reg; Listing Facts</a><br />]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 05 Feb 2010 11:38 PST</pubDate><guid>http://www.soltanihomes.com/news/18/24/24/news-release/20</guid><link>http://www.soltanihomes.com/news/18/24/24/news-release</link></item><item>
			<title>British Columbia Facts</title><description><![CDATA[<strong>People of British Columbia</strong>   <ul> <li>B.C.&#39;s population was 4.405 million people as of December&nbsp;2008.</li> <li>British Columbia is home to people of many different origins, cultural traditions, languages, ethnicities, and religions.</li> <li>B.C.&#39;s aboriginal people are known as First Nations. There are 197 First Nations bands in the province, such as the Gitxsan, Haida, Nisga&#39;a and Squamish.</li> <li>The top 10 languages spoken are now (according to the 2001 Census): English, Chinese (including Cantonese and Mandarin), Punjabi, German, French, Tagalog, Spanish, Italian, Korean, and Dutch.</li> <li>Each year, over 40,000 immigrants from around the world arrive in B.C.</li> </ul><strong>One Big Province</strong>  <ul><li>B.C.&#39;s total land and freshwater area is 95 million hectares, larger than France and Germany combined. Only 30 countries are larger. British Columbia occupies about 10 per cent of Canada&#39;s land surface.</li></ul><strong>Tourist Haven</strong>  <ul><li>Tourism contributed $13.1 billion to the provincial economy in 2008, up 35 per cent&nbsp; since 2002.</li><li>The most popular categories of tourism activity are outdoor recreation, city activities and visiting attractions and cultural events.</li><li>For more information, visit&nbsp;<a href="http://www.hellobc.com/en-CA/default.htm" target="_blank">Tourism B.C.</a> <br /> </li></ul><strong>We&#39;re Game</strong>  <ul><li>B.C. is hosting the biggest sporting event in the world next year - the&nbsp;<a href="http://www.gov.bc.ca/themes/2010olympics/index.html" target="_blank">2010 Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games</a>&nbsp;in Vancouver and Whistler.</li><li>The Olympic are expected to generate over $4 billion&nbsp;in economic activity.</li><li>Vancouver is B.C.&#39;s biggest city and is home to the NHL Canucks. Other pro sports teams in the city include: B.C. Lions of the Canadian Football League, and a new Major League Soccer Franchise the Whitecaps.</li><li>Over the last eight&nbsp;years, B.C. has developed an international reputation for sport hosting and have attracted, among other events, the:<br />  <br />  <ul><li>2011 Grey Cup Championship</li><li>2010 World Wheelchair Rugby Championships</li><li>2009 World Police &amp; Fire Games (Burnaby)</li><li>2008 North American Indigenous Games (Cowichan)</li><li>2008 World Women&rsquo;s Curling Championships</li><li>2007 FIFA Under 20 World Cup Soccer</li><li>2006 World Junior Hockey Championships (Kamloops, Kelowna, Victoria &amp; Vancouver)</li><li>2005 Grey Cup Championship (Vancouver)</li></ul> </li></ul>  <ul><li>For more information on sports in B.C., visit <a href="http://www.hls.gov.bc.ca/sport/" target="_blank">http://www.hls.gov.bc.ca/sport/</a>.</li></ul>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 15 Jan 2010 14:39 PST</pubDate><guid>http://www.soltanihomes.com/news/18/30/30/news-release/18</guid><link>http://www.soltanihomes.com/news/18/30/30/news-release</link></item><item>
			<title>Selling a home</title><description><![CDATA[If you are getting ready to sell a home in the Lower Mainland take some time to apply some elbow grease and you could pocket serious extra cash.The first thing to do is change it from a home into a house.<br />     The advice is to spruce up and get the home looking as good as possible to make an irresistible package for a prospective buyer.<br />     Whatever its current value, your home can be worth much, much more.With a minimum of effort and expense you can increase the value of your property by as much as five per cent, 15 per cent, perhaps even more.]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 09 Dec 2009 00:00 PST</pubDate><guid>http://www.soltanihomes.com/news/18/24/24/news-release/13</guid><link>http://www.soltanihomes.com/news/18/24/24/news-release</link></item><item>
			<title>Mortgage Checklist</title><description><![CDATA[The purchase of a home is the single largest investment most of us will make in our lifetime. And trying to figure out all the costs involved can be confusing. We&#39;re here to help.<br /> You can fill this form out online and then print it and use it as a guide to possible expenses you should be aware of when purchasing a home.]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 11 Nov 2009 00:00 PST</pubDate><guid>http://www.soltanihomes.com/news/18/24/24/news-release/14</guid><link>http://www.soltanihomes.com/news/18/24/24/news-release</link></item>  </channel>
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