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Nothing new...In Reply to: Re: Not understanding the question. posted by Gc on May 13, 2010 at 7:17 PM Condos and townhomes have always, in my experience, had more volatile values than SFR's in a given area, I'll let the other posters speculate the reasons. It would seem the more a condo is like an apartment unit (and I included conversions here, too) and the fewer rooms, the more volatile the price. The more similar the units are to comparable detached SFR's, the less apparent this trend. I liken the phenomenon to concentrated orange juice futures prices; wide fluctuations. It's great if you bought a trainload before a big freeze, but nasty to inventory if the shipment begins to melt while the market sees a glut of the stuff. And really ugly when the juice starts fermenting. That would be the same as owning a third-floor bachelor unit in the middle of a vast complex of interior-entry rental condos, with 60% vacancy and a geological problem.
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