A shortage of land and a growing economy
fuelled a 47-per-cent surge in the value of commercial real estate sales
across British Columbia’s Lower Mainland in 2016, says the head of the
region’s real estate board.
Figures
released Monday by the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver show sales
involving commercial real estate reached nearly $13-billion last year
compared with $8.8-billion in 2015.
The report also measured a 21 per cent
spike in the number of sales involving commercial real estate over the
same one-year period.
“It’s really the confidence in the B.C. and Vancouver economy,” board president Dan Morrison said.
“It’s
no surprise that we see the same thing happen with commercial
properties as has been happening for residential properties.”
Residential
real estate prices have skyrocketed across the Vancouver area in recent
years, prompting the B.C. government to introduce a 15 per cent tax on
foreign buyers last summer on homes purchased by anyone who isn’t a
citizen or a permanent resident of Canada.
Last
week, the government announced it was tweaking the law retroactively so
that foreigners who come to B.C. through the provincial nominee program
won’t have to pay the tax, which also doesn’t apply to commercial
property.
Asked if the foreign buyers
tax has affected commercial real estate sales, Morrison said it is
possible speculators have redirected their investments from residential
to commercial properties, but there is no data to back that up.
“I would attribute it more to the economy than anything else,” Morrison said.
Land sales led last year’s growth in commercial real estate, the report says.
The value of commercial land sales explode to $7.2-billion, an 80 per cent increase over $3.9-billion in 2015, the report says.
“That’s
the thing that’s the most scarce, especially if you’re looking for new
commercial ventures down the road, you want to make sure you’ve tied up
the land because that’s often the most important component,” Morrison
said.
The report says office and retail
sales also hit record numbers, reaching $3.6-billion in 2016, 47 per
cent more than $2.5-billion in 2015.
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