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March 2016 The Most Influential Women in B.C.

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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BCBUSINESS.CA MARCH 2016 BCBUSINESS 15 25% Big Wheels N u m e r o l o g y by Melissa Edwards How B.C. residents want to address the issue of unaffordability Weekly, a national publication for real estate investors, found that 79 per cent of its readers did not think flipping in the current market makes sense. And the statistics would appear to back them up: in July 2015, according to a Landcor study, nine out of the 166 sales of detached houses in Vancouver were sold twice in the previous 12 months (Landcor defined a flip as a sale and resale in less than a year). According to Lloyd Kinney, owner of MLK Properties, which invests in residential real estate throughout the Lower Mainland, all the good bets in the region are gone—save for the odd condo flip, where it's still possible to add value by spending $30,000 to renovate a unit and sell it for $50,000 more. From 2002 until the recession in 2008-09, it was quite the opposite story: there was a solid supply of postwar houses, he says, and rel- atively affordable prices. In the years since, the inventory of homes that would make for a quick profit has fallen dramati- cally and the costs of get- ting into the market have escalated enormously. That's why our host is focusing most of his dis- cussion down south. "I'll tell you what Canadians want," says Fernandez, stopping to scan the front two rows. "Most Canadians want to invest in the Sunbelt states." Then he tells us to write down another of his many mantras: "You never fall in love with the property—you fall in love with the math." For this audience, however—facing a Canadian dollar broaching 70 cents U.S.— the math on investing in the Sunbelt makes about as much sense these days as buying into Canada's most extreme housing market. • B.C.'s share of Canada's BMW X5 SUV sales Approximate annual sales for car dealerships in B.C. represents about 17% of all retail sales in the province A speculation tax to reduce house flipping An extra transfer tax on buyers from outside Canada Limits on what types/number of properties can be purchased by buyers from outside Canada A vacancy tax on unoccupied dwellings PAIR OF FLIPPERS Tarek and Christina El Moussa, husband and wife renovation team and hosts of HGTV's Flip or Flop 69% 79% 72% 82% SOURCE: JUNE 2015 INSIGHTS WEST POLL 3 $11 Billion 17% WHICH B.C.'s share of Canada's total car sales 10% That's how many consecutive years new car sales have hit record highs in B.C. And with this month's auto show at the Vancouver Convention Centre expected to break 100,000 in attendance, 2016 is looking to keep up. "There was the biggest implosion in our industry globally in 2008," says Blair Qualey, president and CEO of the New Car Dealers Association of B.C. "Now we have some of the lowest prices in a generation and crazy interest rates, and people are taking advantage." But it's not just bargain seekers driving the local market: sales of supercars in B.C. are more than 40 per cent higher than the Canadian average. "The Vancouver market does tend to be skewed toward the luxury end," says Qualey. "You just have to go out on the street and see how many are around now, whether it's a Lamborghini, a Bentley or a Ferrari."

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