BCBusiness

June 2017 Fed Up With House Prices?

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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here," observes Stang, who has recently been doing prepurchase research on 35-foot cruisers at Malibu Marine Kelowna Ltd. "It's almost a sin to have a lake like this and not utilize it." At Malibu Marine, owner Ron Pfob says he believes the attraction to boats is part of an image people have of how they should be living: "It's a lifestyle thing." Spending on luxuries like boats raises the question of debt, something that news stories constantly warn Canadians are awash in. This March, Statistics Canada pegged average credit- market debt at $167 for every $100 of disposable household income, adjusted for social transfers. But Environics Analytics' Miron, whose com- pany's analysis also looks at household liabili- ties, says those numbers can be misleading. He emphasizes that 80 cents of every dollar owed in the country is for mortgages, 15 cents is for secured lines of credit, and only "ve cents is due to consumer spending on credit cards. "Funda- mentally, all the debt is pinned back up against real estate," Miron says. "That's good debt. One day, hopefully, they'll be able to cash out." (Sure, as long as Canada doesn't experience a giant pop in its bubbly housing market.) Of course, that's only true for those who can get into the real estate market, which doesn't include the many frustrated millennials in the Lower Main- land. For them, there's the cold comfort of not hav- ing to pay $15,000 for roof repairs or $20,000 for drain-tile jobs. And the fact that their investments are earning steady returns year after year. But it's still tough for them to adjust. Graham Bodel says he has to remind people to look closely at their "nancial picture before jumping into irrational decisions about buying real estate. "If you're going to tie your happiness to something that is completely impossible, it's time to step back," he cautions. Justin Jacobsen is resigned to eventually pull- ing his money out of his investments and sinking it into a single-family house or townhouse, even though the returns will be less. "It would be a very aggressive risk," the investment analyst says. "I'd really have to liquidate a huge amount of my "nancial holdings." But even Jacobsen admits that some choices are not just about money: "It's a huge emotional decision." ■ JUNE 2017 BCBUSINESS 37 "I have seen peo- ple recently, not in a big way, but some come close to paying off their mortgage, and then they've used their home-equity line of credit to buy a cottage. It is a danger point" ++ G R A H A M B O D E L , C H A LTO N FE E - O N LY A DV I S O R S SOURCE: ENVIRONICS ANALYTICS, WEALTHSCAPES 2016 BY AVERAGE VALUE OF EMPLOYER- BASED PENSION PL AN, 2015 BY AVERAGE HOUSEHOLD INCOME, 2016 BY AVERAGE TOTAL HOUSEHOLD ASSE TS, 2015 BY AVERAGE RECRE ATIONAL SPENDING, 2016 P E R S O N A L F I N A N C E $ 4, 65 5 , 898 $ 24 5 ,16 4 Oak Bay $ 2 , 331, 9 21

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