Big Property Company Tells Investors Its Business Strategy Focuses on ‘Essential Workers’ in Provinces Where There’s ‘No Rent Controls’
"One of Western Canada’s biggest rental companies says it is building up a tenant base of “essential workers” in Alberta and Saskatchewan specifically because the two provinces do not have rent control."
>snip<
“They were the renters by necessity, not the renter by choice,” Jogia explains in the video. “They ultimately were a group of residents that were making $15 to $50 an hour, but could afford to pay rent probably higher than what mom and pop (landlords) were charging them.”
>snip<
"Dr. David Hulchanski is a housing and community development professor at the University of Toronto. He says Avenue Living’s expansion on the prairies is part of the broader trend of housing financialization that has grown across Canada and around the world, turning property into a “hyper-commodity” over the last 25 years.
As a Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT), Avenue Living uses pools of wealthy investor money to buy properties from local “mom and pop” landlords and raise rents to generate returns for those investors, Hulchanski explained to PressProgress.
“We’re talking about big money. A firm like Avenue Living can’t do what they’re doing without having a lot of money.”
“You go back 20 or 30 years, or just before Avenue Living came to those little towns, a bunch of individual people owned flatland, right? Now you’re going to have these pools of investment funds owning it. They care about the return on their investment, not anything else.”
“There’s almost nothing good in this for renters,” Hulchanski adds."
Press Progress
While the subject is open to "the chicken or the egg" debate, there is no disputing that housing costs, for renters and purchasers alike, have grown considerably in recent years. Even the most cursory of investigations into today's investment sector will put real estate investment near the top of the pile for projected returns, and chief among those are the REITs, or Real Estate Investment Trusts, actively managed pools of rental properties both residential and commercial. It doesn't take a crystal ball to see once again, that profit becomes the chief concern over people as the bottom line in the fictionalization of housing is to maximize rental income. This in turn, places limits on renters' ability to save money for a purchase of their own, purchases that continually grow out of reach. Housing prices are skyrocketing around the world, incomes are not.
"One of Western Canada’s biggest rental companies says it is building up a tenant base of “essential workers” in Alberta and Saskatchewan specifically because the two provinces do not have rent control."
>snip<
“They were the renters by necessity, not the renter by choice,” Jogia explains in the video. “They ultimately were a group of residents that were making $15 to $50 an hour, but could afford to pay rent probably higher than what mom and pop (landlords) were charging them.”
>snip<
"Dr. David Hulchanski is a housing and community development professor at the University of Toronto. He says Avenue Living’s expansion on the prairies is part of the broader trend of housing financialization that has grown across Canada and around the world, turning property into a “hyper-commodity” over the last 25 years.
As a Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT), Avenue Living uses pools of wealthy investor money to buy properties from local “mom and pop” landlords and raise rents to generate returns for those investors, Hulchanski explained to PressProgress.
“We’re talking about big money. A firm like Avenue Living can’t do what they’re doing without having a lot of money.”
“You go back 20 or 30 years, or just before Avenue Living came to those little towns, a bunch of individual people owned flatland, right? Now you’re going to have these pools of investment funds owning it. They care about the return on their investment, not anything else.”
“There’s almost nothing good in this for renters,” Hulchanski adds."
Press Progress
While the subject is open to "the chicken or the egg" debate, there is no disputing that housing costs, for renters and purchasers alike, have grown considerably in recent years. Even the most cursory of investigations into today's investment sector will put real estate investment near the top of the pile for projected returns, and chief among those are the REITs, or Real Estate Investment Trusts, actively managed pools of rental properties both residential and commercial. It doesn't take a crystal ball to see once again, that profit becomes the chief concern over people as the bottom line in the fictionalization of housing is to maximize rental income. This in turn, places limits on renters' ability to save money for a purchase of their own, purchases that continually grow out of reach. Housing prices are skyrocketing around the world, incomes are not.