Monday Morning Quarterback: Mandatory Cooling Off Periods!

Development

12 minute read

August 29, 2022

Somebody asked me last week, “What’s this ‘Monday morning quarterback’ thing all about?”

I guess I never stopped to consider that some readers aren’t familiar with the term, and thus don’t really ‘get’ these blog titles.

Years ago, before the advent of Thursday night football, the inclusion of late-season and playoff games on Saturday, and off-site games in London and/or Mexico on random Tuesdays, all National Football League games were played on Sunday.

The term “Monday morning quarterback” was coined to describe somebody who makes predictions or comments on Monday, after the games have been played on Sunday.

You can see how this goes, right?

That guy in your office on Monday morning says, “You picked the Bills?  Are you nuts?  They lost 48-24 yesterday, how did you not see that coming?”

That’s a Monday Morning Quarterback for ya.

I once heard “Randall the Handle” on the Fan 590 tell a caller, “Don’t you ever call me the day after the games have been played and tell me who I should have taken.”

I believe it was sports radio legend, Bob McCown, who said, “I have a 100% record in picking the winner of games after they’ve been played.”

For the record, I don’t like sports gambling.  I’m not a huge fan of gambling in general, unless it’s entirely for entertainment purposes, like spending $300 on a Leafs’ game or going to a concert, but I fear most people subconsciously see gambling as a great way to make a few bucks.

Unfortunately, I’m so rational and logical that it renders me “boring” at times.  And I combine a level of honesty and outspokenness that often label me a “downer.”

When it comes to gambling, I never met an adult male who said, “I lose much more than I win, and I’m definitely not better than the casinos and the sports book.  I play knowing, full well, that I’m going to lose.”

In the history of mankind, there has never been a single man who said this, even though it’s true for 99.999% of the jocular, in-denial, adult male population.

I’m in the minority of Canadians who don’t like that the federal government legalized sports gambling.  I mean, I suppose I’m indifferent towards it, but now every other commercial on television is Wayne Gretzky, or Georges St. Pierre, or “Jesse” from Breaking Bad telling us why and how we should bet on the third quarter of a college basketball game, that we know nothing about, all the while, padding the pockets of sports books, and taking money from the bank accounts of Canadians.

It’s just the last thing society needs.

Society cries poor at every opportunity.  Real estate is too expensive.  The minimum wage is too low.  Every union is fighting for higher wages.  Taxes are too high.  Inflation has driven up the cost of everything.

But meanwhile, why don’t we make it easier for people to lose money gambling?  Oh, wait, you don’t lose, I forgot.

Do you know who I respect?  Those billionaires who play poker for buttons.

In today’s Monday Morning Quarterback, I want to look at some news that is about five weeks old, and which comes from another jurisdiction.

Here’s an article that ran last month:

“B.C. Announces 3-Day Cooling Period For Home Sales To Reduce Risk To Buyers”
July 21st, 2022
CBC News

From the article:

 

British Columbia has announced a mandatory three-day period to allow homebuyers time to arrange an inspection and take other important steps like securing financing in the province’s high-pressure real estate market.

Finance Minister Selina Robinson says the consumer protection policy, effective Jan. 1, is aimed at providing people with peace of mind as unconditional offers are common and could later end up costing buyers thousands of dollars in repairs.

Robinson says the policy, the first of its kind in Canada, includes a cancellation fee of 0.25 per cent of the purchase price, or $250 for every $100,000, for those who back out of a deal, balancing the needs of both buyers and sellers.

Buyers will still be able to make offers conditional on home inspections or financing at any time, the province said in a statement.

Robinson says the homebuyer protection period is based on consultations with the B.C. Financial Services Authority and the experiences of buyers who jumped into deals they later regretted.

Elaine Spilos, a homebuyer who joined Robinson at a news conference Thursday, says she contacted the finance minister after she and her husband were assured by their Realtor that the “exceptional” home they purchased had already been inspected and built to code.

Spilos says the retired couple endured a “very painful experience” three weeks after their purchase when a sewer backed up, with similar damage nine months later.

Alright, let’s dissect this…

As it stands right now in the Province of Ontario, a buyer can submit an offer with conditions, if that buyer so chooses.  The four most common conditions would be securing financing, obtaining a home inspection, review of the contract by a lawyer, or reviewing the status certificate in a condominium.  In a down market, we might see a condition on the sale of a buyer’s property and in the development world, we might see a condition on applications or zoning amendments.  There is no end to possible conditions in real estate.

These conditions can be for any length of time, and could have provisions for extensions as well.

A typical financing condition in Toronto is five business days.

A typical status certificate condition in Toronto is two business days to review, after ten business days to receive the documents (that’s in the Condominium Act).

And when it comes to home inspections, a buyer could ask for five business days, or to make the offer more competitive, the buyer could ask for only 24 hours and simply get the property inspected the next morning.

In a red-hot market, many, if not most buyers, will attempt to submit unconditional offers to make their offer more competitive.

I have written countless blogs about this over the years, and I’ve gone as far as to take shots at the one agent, out of twelve, who submits a conditional offer in competition on a property in those red-hot markets, where that conditional offer has a 0.00% of being successful.

Those markets are tough, no doubt about it.

But is it dangerous to waive all conditions and make an unconditional offer?

That’s a trick question since there’s no real answer.

Many people would say “no,” others would automatically say, “yes,” and others would argue “it depends.”

In a hot market, any reputable, high-end listing agent will have already conducted a pre-listing home inspection and have it prominently displayed on the dining room table for buyers to review.  There are some people who always argue, “The listing agent could be in cahoots with the home inspector, so this isn’t the same thing as having the buyer do their own inspection.”  I’ve written about this many times as well, so suffice it to say, those buyers should put their tin-foil hat back on and go back to digging the fallout shelter under their basement…

Also in any hot market, a good listing agent will get a copy of a condominium’s status certificate well in advance of the property being listed, and have those documents available for the buyer, the buyer’s agent, and the buyer’s lawyer to review.

Financing is a sticky one, since we all know that a lender can pull a firm commitment at any time before closing, so “arranging satisfactory financing” is never a sure thing.  But banks don’t do pre-approvals for high ratio mortgages, and if you’re working with a good mortgage broker, they can give you a firm purchase number without getting a commitment or approval from a bank.  There’s always a leap of faith with financing, and remember that a bank isn’t going to do an appraisal in those five business days per your condition, so you’re really just buying an extra bit of peace of mind with that condition, and not much certainty.

All told, there are ways to get out ahead of the need for a condition, whether the market is red-hot or ice-cold.

An unconditional offer gives a buyer bargaining power and often huge leverage in the event that the market is cold.

Now, let’s look at the points from the CBC article above:

British Columbia has announced a mandatory three-day period to allow homebuyers time to arrange an inspection and take other important steps like securing financing in the province’s high-pressure real estate market.

Who decided on three days here?

Banks insist on five days for financing, so who is this helping?

Are these business days or calendar days?

Finance Minister Selina Robinson says the consumer protection policy, effective Jan. 1, is aimed at providing people with peace of mind as unconditional offers are common and could later end up costing buyers thousands of dollars in repairs.

Unconditional offers are common, but it’s up to the buyer.

I believe in allowing choice in a free market, but Ms. Robinson clearly doesn’t agree.

The idea that the unconditional offer is what “ends up costing buyers thousands of dollars in repairs” leads us to conclude that this legislation is more about home inspections than financing, but I would also add that many of these down-the-line repairs would never have been identified in advance.  More on that in a moment…

Robinson says the policy, the first of its kind in Canada, includes a cancellation fee of 0.25 per cent of the purchase price, or $250 for every $100,000, for those who back out of a deal, balancing the needs of both buyers and sellers.

On a $2,000,000 purchase, the cancellation fee is $5,000.

Yes, I chose $2 Million and not $300,000, but that’s because Vancouver is the most expensive city in Canada and it’s located in British Columbia.  But for argument’s sake, a $650,000 house purchase would come with a $1,625 cancellation fee.

The choice of words here, “backing out of the deal,” seems to be putting a level of blame on the buyer.  Is that fair?  If the seller had provided a pre-inspection that the buyer could rely on, and use to make an informed decision, would we be having this conversation?

There are all kinds of implications of this cancellation fee, but let’s shelve that for now.

Robinson says the homebuyer protection period is based on consultations with the B.C. Financial Services Authority and the experiences of buyers who jumped into deals they later regretted.

Once again, we’re bringing all of society down to the lowest common denominator.

Somebody out there bought a house that he or she regretted later, and now everybody is going to have reactive legislation thrust upon them.

There is no cure for naivety, stupidity, or luck.  Yes, many people made bad decisions, and yes, some people relied upon poor advice.  But how long until there’s a full refund for people who didn’t know that the Cleveland Browns could cover the 7.5 point spread against the Cincinnati Bengals, and lost next month’s mortgage payment to a legal online sports book?

What if somebody “bid” on a house, that he or she had never seen in person, through an online auction website where there’s no identification of agents or buyers on the other end of the bids, and then regretted it?

“She Bought A House On A Fledgling Auction Site. Now She Faces Over $100K In Repairs”

I have yet to dedicate a full blog post to the perils of using an online auction site to buy real estate because I think those perils should be quite obvious.  A site that has no affiliation with organized real estate offers zero protection, zero accountability, and there’s no reason to assume that the other “bidders” aren’t the sellers themselves, or their friends/family, or a Russian bot.

But who’s “fault” is this?

Is it the auction site, the home inspector, or the individual who made the decision to buy the home, sight-unseen, from across the country, through an auction site?

This is where I have a problem with society in 2022.  It’s always somebody else’s fault.

So now, the government in British Columbia has discussed “regretful purchases” with a bunch of sour home-buyers, and has decided to shake up the whole real estate home buying/selling process as a result.

Elaine Spilos, a homebuyer who joined Robinson at a news conference Thursday, says she contacted the finance minister after she and her husband were assured by their Realtor that the “exceptional” home they purchased had already been inspected and built to code.

Spilos says the retired couple endured a “very painful experience” three weeks after their purchase when a sewer backed up, with similar damage nine months later.

Elaine is to Ms. Robinson what that down-on-his-luck farmer, or that returning-from-war soldier, or that small-business-owner is to any politician campaigning anywhere during any election.

A face and a name.  Perfect.

A sewer backed up in their home and nine months later, there was damage.

I bought my home in 2018.  I did a full inspection, but after I had unconditionally purchased it.

In February of 2020, my entire basement flooded.

At no point did I think, “Why wasn’t this caught during the home inspection?”

There is no section in the home inspection called “Future Issues.”

Marty McFly and Emmett “Doc” Brown are not home inspectors from the future.

And yet, whenever something goes wrong in a home, half the home-owners say, “Oh, crap,” and half of them say, “Should this have been noted in the inspection?”

In 2021, a client of mine called me and said that a pipe burst in his basement (thankfully an unfinished one…) and asked me exactly what I wrote above: “Should this have been noted in the inspection?”

I honestly wrote him back and said, “Should what have been noted in the inspection?”

He said, “The damage to the pipe.  Should the inspector have identified this.”

The problem with this conversation was that they bought in 2016.  Five years had passed since they did a home inspection and there’s no logical reason to think that a home inspector could see that far into the future.

The article above says that Ms. Spilos’ agent said the home was exceptional and had been inspected and built to code, but the article doesn’t say if there was an inspection, or if they read through it, or if they called the inspector to discuss.  This is what real estate articles do: they skip over the facts to get to the complaints.

It’s possible that Ms. Spilos hired a shitty real estate agent, but maybe we need a cooling off period for that too?

I don’t see anything in that CBC article above that tells me this new legislation is a good idea.

Not only that, I have a few questions of my own…

1) What’s the difference between a “conditional offer” and an unconditional offer with a “cooling off period?”

What happens if I make an offer conditional for three business days?

Is that the same as buying unconditionally with a three-day cooling off period?

Have they sorted this out yet?  Because it’s going to be a logistical nightmare and there’s room for issues.

2) What happens if the buyer “backs out” during a true “conditional period?”

Further to the point above, is a “conditional offer” the same thing as an offer in a “cooling off period?”

Does the 0.25% cancellation fee apply?

If it does, then this is truly a laughable piece of legislation, since now we’re penalizing buyers for doing the right thing – making conditional offers, in good faith, checking their boxes, and deciding whether or not to move forward.

Imagine making an offer that’s conditional for five business days on financing, submitting your Agreement of Purchase & Sale to the lender along with your taxes, personal identification, net worth statement, et al, then finding out that you do not qualify to purchase the property, and having to pay a 0.25% cancellation fee.

What a joke.

3) Is there a possibility for an escape clause?

With every conditional offer, there’s the option for the seller to insist on an “escape clause.”

If a buyer submits an offer on a house with a ten-day condition, the seller can insist on the escape clause so that they can review other offers, potentially with better terms or conditions.

In this case, with all offers having a 3-day cooling-off period, it’s not like the seller can include the escape clause in order to accept a better, unconditional offer on the second day of that ten-day conditional period, but the seller still can benefit in other ways from an escape clause.

So if a property is sold with a 3-day cooling-off period, is that the end of the seller’s option to insist on an escape clause – something that has always been their right?

4) Why is this cooling-off period after a deal has been written, rather than before?

In red-hot markets, we often lament that properties “sell within hours of hitting the market.”

We often don’t like the fact that an “offer date” is set for one week from today, but a “bully offer” can be accepted ahead of time.

So then why not insist on a three-day pre-listing period for buyers instead of this three-day cooling off period?

Why not make this five days or seven days?

Let’s say a property is listed on Monday, August 29th.

New legislation from the B.C. government stipulates that offers on this property may not be presented, reviewed, or considered before Friday, September 2nd.

That gives buyers four days to do their diligence, whether it’s a home inspection or arranging financing.

This is one day longer than the current proposal, which is more helpful to buyers, but it’s not stretching into the following week, which may be helpful to sellers.

Even if we wanted this to be seven days, or even seven business days, meaning that offers can’t be reviewed until September 8th (thanks to Labour Day), it still doesn’t screw up the timing of the sale for the seller, and it gives the buyer way longer!

This is a win-win.

So why not adopt this instead?

In the end, this was all poorly planned and rushed.

Let’s not forget that this legislation was announced in April with no information whatsoever:

“B.C. Passes ‘Cooling Off’ Period For Home Buyers With No Idea How It Will Work”

From the article:

It’s effectively one large IOU note for Premier John Horgan’s cabinet to, in the months ahead, set all the rules it wants, when it wants, how it wants by regulation.

“It was really frustrating,” said BC Liberal finance critic Mike Bernier, who posed dozens of unanswered questions about the cooling-off period in the house.

“Why do we have a blank piece of paper for legislation? It’s typical of the NDP government right now, to present a one-page thing on the floor and say we’ll figure it out in our minds later.”

That’s so like government!  Any government, and any party.  They all do it.

Real estate has become an increasingly politicized topic, especially in election season.

Here’s an article that ran last week:

“The Housing Crisis Is A Municipal Election Priority. Ask Candidates For Their Views”

Municipal elections are being held in both British Columbia and Ontario in October.

We will be selecting new city councilors and new mayors.

Oh, and this just in: the housing industry has released its “five-point plan” to address supply and affordability in Ontario.

Their five points, which you can read by clicking the link above, include the words:

-approval times
-red tape
-delay
-development fees
-taxes
-government
-new lands
-future growth
-land availability
-infrastructure
-transportation
-politics
-planning
-local
-decision-making

From this list of words, one might conclude that housing affordability starts and ends with the municipal government.

And in British Columbia, the provincial government just enacted legislation to complicate and delay the purchase-and-sale process, not to mention, costing potential buyers money with “cancellation fees.”

The intersection of politics and real estate has been a growing concern for many years, but with the B.C. government’s latest “bright idea,” it seems like we’ve only just begun.

I swear, I’d rather bet that Tom Brady is still playing football at age-50 than try to wager on anything the government does from here on out in order to “help” the market.  Especially in an election year…

Written By David Fleming

David Fleming is the author of Toronto Realty Blog, founded in 2007. He combined his passion for writing and real estate to create a space for honest information and two-way communication in a complex and dynamic market. David is a licensed Broker and the Broker of Record for Bosley – Toronto Realty Group

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11 Comments

  1. Appraiser

    at 8:42 am

    A classic example of attempting to re-invent the wheel by making it less round.

  2. Papa

    at 10:18 am

    Clown world.. Please Daddy govt protect me from my bad decisions.

  3. Alexander

    at 10:34 am

    How about 0.25% fee payable by sellers to municipalities so buyers could not use this back out clause? 😉 I am sure Councillors would like extra cash in city coffers. Let’s make rules and contracts more and more complicated, so it will look like Goldman Sachs derivatives contracts before 2008 and then wonder why the housing market is a mess.

  4. Vancouver Keith

    at 11:30 am

    We have become a society where “the market” is failing so many people so spectacularly, almost everyone is screaming at the government to address the unfairness of the world. I would point out one of Keith’s laws of policy – When government makes a law to create fairness for part of society, it usually creates an equal and opposite unfairness for another part of society. A free lunch in economics or government action is very rare. This rule is simple pandering to the frustration spawned by a market which has favored one side of the transaction in unprecedented ways, and should have been dealt with by the federal government not legislating a flood of liquidity in a moronic attempt to make something more affordable by giving buyers more money.

    The real estate industry is taking dead aim at municipalities, no surprise as the “easy apples” of development (greenfield and brownfield) are nearly completely history in the largest markets. That leaves the evil elite single family homeowner, whose vastly powerful neighborhood lobbying blocks the hero of the working class development industry from building huge tracts of affordable housing at current land, development and construction costs. Please.

    Cheap money, and upzoning creates expensive land. That is a secular factor. As for those powerful NIMBY’s, where I live municipal elections are fast approaching, and the current Vancouver council has faced 245 redevelopment applications in their time in office. 244 were approved by council, one was sent back to staff and the developer and was subsequently approved. It’s not exactly a track record of deny, and as for delay you can look up the approval times in the Lower Mainland – they vary widely but the unaffordability for local incomes remains solidly in place.

  5. Condodweller

    at 12:00 pm

    I’m trying to decide if David is naive, writing this in bad faith, or if it’s simply his bias shining through again.

    “In a red-hot market, many, if not most buyers, will attempt to submit unconditional offers to make their offer more competitive.”

    Seriously? After having my arm twisted by my agent to over-bid on a house without putting in a condition and often without an inspection a buyer will “attempt to submit unconditional offers”? Point proved in the very next sentence:

    “I have written countless blogs about this over the years, and I’ve gone as far as to take shots at the one agent, out of twelve, who submits a conditional offer in competition on a property in those red-hot markets, where that conditional offer has a 0.00% of being successful.””

    “Unconditional offers are common, but it’s up to the buyer.” Up to the buyer? Sure it is. Just like Santa is real.

    As the name implies the “cooling off period” is designed to allow buyers who have “willingly, and of their free will and sound judgment” decided to over-bid on the emotionally charged purchase of their dream home by $300,000 with no conditions, without any influence by their agent of course, when they wake up the next night in a cold sweat wondering what the hell they had just done, assuming they are able to sleep, to back out of the deal with a reasonable “penalty”.

    While I don’t like the idea of having to pay anything I guess it balances things out a little so sellers don’t cry foul when buyers simply walk away. I mean the whole idea of being allowed to walk away during a cooling-off period implies that a bad decision was made in a heat of the moment situation where the person wasn’t allowed to properly and rationally think through the consequences on a significant purchase.

    1. This is easy. The two are not mutually exclusive. Clearly, this is designed to protect those who don’t put conditions in the offer but it would make sense that it still applies to a conditional offer. Within 3 days anyone can walk away after the penalty is paid. Past the 3 days the conditions of the offer, if it has them, apply. This isn’t difficult, is it?

    2. Refer to #1

    3. Refer to #1

    4. Because that’s the only way it makes sense. You don’t need to cool off when you haven’t done anything yet. The whole idea of an offer night is to get people to commit ever larger sums of money to buy a property without having sufficient time to properly consider it.

    Apologies if these questions were meant to be sarcastic. They didn’t seem to be.

    I agree on the inspection front that many have unrealistic expectations but again, there’s probably room for improvement. I’m on record for saying that I would make inspectors carry E&O insurance and make them responsible for obviously missed items that a layperson would have no reason for recognizing.

    While I don’t expect an inspector to be clairvoyant I would expect to see useful comments based on the current age/state of things like “the roof is ~30 years old and while I didn’t find any evidence of leaks, don’t be shocked if it leaks a week after you take possession.

    1. Dan

      at 4:44 pm

      Respectfully disagree.
      I think the point made in number4 about a mandatory pre-listing period might be the simpler solution.
      People can get their ducks in a row ahead of time if they are interested in the property. 5 business days seems like a reasonable target where buyers can line up financing, review or arrange for an inspection etc.
      Buyers will always have the option to add in a condition if they want additional time to consider.

      1. Condodweller

        at 11:40 pm

        Mandatory 5 days would eliminate bully offers which would make things easier on people to be sure. I still think that by definition a cooling off period is for after the deal is done.

  6. Ace Goodheart

    at 2:43 pm

    I’m on the fence about this one.

    The most recent house we bought, was purchased with a conditional offer. I just did not trust banks to actually appraise the house at the agreed upon price, and so put conditional on financing into the offer, which the seller accepted. We then waited for the bank appraisal, and when I had a firm commitment, we waived the condition.

    It is interesting because during this period of time, we “offered” on other houses, but the sellers would not even consider our “conditional on financing” offers. A seller actually sold one house for $200K less than our offer, to someone who went firm.

    We then heard from our realtor later that the house was relisted as the person who went firm could not close. We could close. We are just cautious people. So they would have had 200K more and a closed deal, if they had went with our conditional offer…..

    But anyway.

    I would not make an offer on a house where the seller did not do a pre sale home inspection . The inspection should be on the coffee table, and should be emailed to me through my realtor before I even go to look at the place. That is just sloppy. I would not buy from someone who did that.

    I did my own title inspections on teranet, which you can do for a small fee (you don’t have to be a lawyer, anyone can do it), just to see what weird stuff was on the titles. I found one house with an easement over the driveway in favour of the neighbours. Another had a land locked parking space in the backyard, which they were accessing by driving across land that did not belong to them and that they had no right to drive across. I found one where most of the backyard was actually a city owned ravine, and they had just fenced it in (they did not own it, the City did).

    Weird stuff you find when you do your own title search and look at the survey and “subject to” stuff registered on the title.

    I started doing that after a real estate lawyer “forgot” to do a property tax search on a property and I got stuck with a $20K property tax bill from the previous owner, that the lawyer then told me to try to claim through the title insurance.

    1. Sirgruper

      at 11:09 pm

      The inspection David is talking about is concerning the building and it’s systems from a licensed home inspector. David, any expert hired by one side will often skew their report to favour their client. I’d certainly prefer ordering my own report.

      Good for you if you can read a parcel register as it’s not that easy depending on the title. 99%+ can not. As for the lawyer ordering a tax certificate, if title insured, it is not a mandatory search but almost all lawyers will ask for the tax bill and proof of payment from the Vendor’s solicitor and if unpaid will require the lawyer to pay same by undertaking using closing proceeds. We’re you using a column law firm out of interest?

      1. Ace Goodheart

        at 12:45 pm

        The parcel registers are pretty simple. The only thing you are interested in is whatever comes after the designation “S/T” which means “subject to”. You search the instrument number of anything “S/T” in the legal description, and you find all the weird stuff registered on the title.

        If you are looking for right of ways around the subject lands, you search the titles of the abutting properties, and look for that same designation “S/T” in the legal description. When you find it, just pull up the instrument referred to, and voila, you have an electronic copy of the right of way or easement.

        What is a column law firm?

  7. Ken Davenport

    at 11:05 am

    BC’s cooling off period will have all kinds of unintended consequences. Here’s three:

    a) a reneging buyer can legally advise the seller of their withdrawal decision by registered mail which may be registered in the final minutes of the cooling off period. If the buyer is especially malicious they may leave the seller unaware of the withdrawal decision until the mail arrives. Since Canada Post’s delivery standards are 3 business days within province, ten days or more could pass between the date an offer is accepted and the seller learns about the rescission;

    b) according to Mike Stewart ( https://www.mikestewart.ca/first-time-home-buyers-tips-9-contract-of-purchase-and-sale-deposit) the common practise in Vancouver is for buyers to provide deposits only AFTER conditions are removed. Since the renege fee is supposed to come from the deposit, this practise will probably need to end;

    c) auctions are exempt from the cooling off requirement. This should spur some sellers in especially hot markets to try auctions and avoid the cooling off problem entirely. Since CREA intends to pilot their new auction option later this year, with a full rollout in 2023, many GVA buyers may soon find themselves in worse position than they are today.

    Unfortunately the new cooling off rules as currently written leaves far too much scope for unscrupulous realtors and unethical buyers to play games. I expect BC listing agents will need to get creative to protect their sellers. Get out the popcorn – this should get interesting.

Pick5 is a weekly series comparing and analyzing five residential properties based on price, style, location, and neighbourhood.

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