“saying that reits financialize housing is naïve. it’s also unfortunately political,” said robert moore of dexter realty.
in most cases, moore said, the eventual owners and operators of most of the hundreds of new rental towers being proposed for metro vancouver — including within the drastically upzoned broadway corridor and around skytrain stations — will indeed be reits, pension funds, insurance companies and other well-capitalized financial institutions.
these kind of organizations, which are usually multinational, typically move in after real-estate speculators and developers spend years buying up land for rental apartment blocks and then getting them off the ground.
“and that’s a good thing. it means stability and balance, something housing markets need. canadians are invested in many of these organizations through their rsps and mutual funds,” moore said.
vancouver east ndp mp jenny kwan attacked the corporate “profiteers” that “financialize” purpose-built rental housing.
like it or not, it’s just the way things actually get built in our mixed economy.
indeed, although moore didn’t mention it, quadreal property group, the fast-growing real estate arm of the b.c. government’s public pension fund, is heavily involved in financing rental towers.
they include the mammoth oakridge park housing and rental project, which includes a small proportion of below-market units. quadreal’s assets are worth $85 billion.