Friday, 9 September 2016

Waterloo in the News

Article CourtesyThe Globe and Mail

Startup city: The high-tech fever reshaping Kitchener-Waterloo

Waterloo’s next wave


As BlackBerry fades to a shadow of its former self, a new generation of entrepreneurs is rising out of the Waterloo region. At its centre is an indispensable institution, talented inventors and a dedicated group of community leaders co-operating to support the hub’s ambition to become a world-class technology centre

On a sticky August Saturday in 2008, Steven Woods got a call on his cellphone. The Saskatchewan-native had just moved from Silicon Valley to Waterloo, Ont., to serve as Google Inc.’s site director for an outpost of engineering excellence in the mid-sized Canadian city. He was surprised to get a call while he was unpacking boxes in his new house, on a phone he’d received that day. On the line was Iain Klugman, the CEO of a local organization called Communitech, a private not-for-profit company devoted to supporting startups, inviting him out for dinner. Still reeling from the stresses of the move, Mr. Woods suggested they talk Monday and figure something out. Mr. Klugman was in more of a hurry, and suggested the next night, a Sunday.
The following night, Mr. Woods arrived at a local restaurant to find a group of people with a mission. “I get there, it was Iain, Tom Jenkins from OpenText, David Johnston from the University of Waterloo [now Canada’s Governor General], and a couple others,” says Mr. Woods. “And it was like, ‘Welcome, here’s a glass of wine. Okay: What are you doing for us?’ Seriously, within five minutes the conversation was ‘we need to talk about what Google is doing for us in town.’”
Mr. Klugman makes no apologies for his cajoling, and his efforts have been paying off. Waterloo, long considered little more than the home of BlackBerry, has become one of Canada’s technology hot spots, attracting some of the biggest rainmakers in the business.
Canada has its share of startup hubs where an entrepreneur can set up shop: Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, and, to a degree, Calgary and Halifax. The Kitchener-Waterloo region is among the smallest by population, with about 550,000 people. But the Southern Ontario centres are among the most successful.
“Internationally, their reputation is off the charts. I’m not sure Canadians understand that,” says Mr. Woods, who has a PhD and a master’s from the University of Waterloo. In just the past five years, 1,845 new technology startups have formed in the area many call KW, raising at least $650-million in investment.
If technology and innovation are the future of the Canadian economy, then the group of dreamers, toilers, coders and entrepreneurs who live 100 kilometres away from Canada’s biggest city think they have the inside track.
“We believe there’s this future where Waterloo is one of the top cities for technology in the world,” says Ted Livingston, CEO of chat app Kik, Canada’s largest homegrown social media company, headquartered in Waterloo. “Right now, for those of us inside, that’s already true.”

‘One of the best places in the world to build a technology company’

The names Research In Motion and BlackBerry will always define Waterloo, and former co-chief executives Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie still make their presence felt in the city: Mr. Lazaridis’s Perimeter Institute is harnessing theoretical physics to discover the next generation of technological breakthroughs; Mr. Balsillie is still an active investor in the area.
But this isn’t a story about how Waterloo has been defined by BlackBerry. This is about a generation that grew up alongside BlackBerry and seeks to forge a new identity for the city. At the centre are an indispensable institution, the University of Waterloo, a bunch of young people starting companies, and a dedicated group of community leaders eager to support the region’s ambition to become a world-class technology centre.
Leading this rebirth is Communitech. Founded in 1997 by local tech leaders including Mr. Balsillie, Communitech is funded by all three levels of government, by member companies and by corporate partners. It operates as a hybrid economic development agency, marketing board and business support network.
A compact, tanned man with perpetual silver stubble, Mr. Klugman got his MBA at Wilfrid Laurier University, and his start in marketing at Nortel in the 1990s. Prior to joining Communitech in 2004 he worked in communications for the CBC and the Ontario government.
His job at Communitech is to help the community punch above its weight when it comes to providing support for startups.
“We feel that we have to try harder and work harder because we don’t have a lot of natural assets to work with – we don’t have an ocean or mountains or a beach,” Mr. Klugman says with a shake of his head. But what the region lacks in breathtaking scenery it makes up for with the talent of its residents. “We invented the smartphone here,” he adds, “we invented the foundation for search with Open Text, we invented the touchscreen display here, we were at the forefront of wearables here.”

Attempting to keep track of the startups setting up shop in town is one of many tasks Mr. Klugman performs. In 2010 some 155 startups registered with Communitech; that figure doubled the following year, and topped 500 in 2014. Some of those new ventures – Miovision, ClearPath Robotics, Aeryon Labs and Thalmic Labs, among others – have attracted a lot of buzz and investment. There have been stumbles, too, notably Communitech’s Hyperdrive accelerator that failed to take off.
If things were moving any faster, Mr. Klugman fears, a scarcity of talent might force companies to pump the brakes. “The first thing somebody does when they do a startup is they want to raise some money and hire three people. So you’re talking about 1,500 people immediately,” he says.
Indeed, a 2013 PriceWaterhouseCoopers survey attributes more than 20,000 jobs to the region’s innovation ecosystem.
Communitech’s efforts have included startup mentoring and peer-to-peer networking, and its latest plan is to give entrepreneurs a head start on building a sales strategy. It does all this by hosting events, encouraging executives of established firms to participate in its education sessions, luring venture capitalists and lobbying various levels of government. And fledgling firms needed the help because, says Mr. Livingston, “It’s a massive disadvantage in partnerships and funding and press not to be in Silicon Valley.”
But that’s changing. “Waterloo right now, I have to believe, is one of the best places in the world to build a technology company,” says Dave Caputo, CEO and co-founder of Sandvine Inc. which mixes hardware and software to optimize the flow of data over some of the world’s biggest telecom networks. And he would know: He’s done it twice in the past 20 years – first with PixStream, a video conferencing company, which he and his co-executives sold to Cisco Systems in 2001, and now Sandvine.
“I assumed that Communitech-like organizations were everywhere, but I’ve come to learn that they are relatively rare,” says Mr. Caputo.
For decades, global tech companies set up shop in Waterloo even if it was just to recruit and ship out talent. Intel, Electronic Arts, Google and SAP moved in alongside local enterprise tech companies such as OpenText, Descartes and Desire2Learn. Waterloo engineers can be found in large numbers in many of the biggest companies in the capital of global tech, Silicon Valley. But now, local players say, people with those skills have reason to stay.
“Let me say what’s changed here: It is now an absolute career alternative of students graduating from Wilfrid Laurier University and University of Waterloo to say, ‘I am gonna start off as an entrepreneur,’” Mr. Caputo says. “There was significantly less of that when I graduated university. The idea was, if you wanted to be in technology … go make your mistakes with some big technology company, and then eventually you might want to start a tech company.”

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Monday, 5 September 2016

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Edmonton unprepared for coming real-estate crash, author says

'People have been lulled into the idea that house prices always go up'

CBC News Posted: Sep 05, 2016 10:21 AM MT Last Updated: Sep 05, 2016 10:21 AM MT
Edmontonians are unprepared for a coming real-estate crash, warns the author of When the Bubble Bursts: Surviving the Canadian Real Estate Crash."
Hilliard MacBeth, an Edmonton-based portfolio manager, says Edmonton has so far escaped the brunt of the recession caused by the drop in oil prices, unlike other parts of the province. The city also largely escaped the impact of the 2009 downturn following the American housing crash.
Because its real-estate market has been strong for almost 20 years, Edmontonians may believe the city is recession-proof, MacBeth said.
"People have been lulled into the idea that house prices always go up," he said Monday during an interview on CBC's Edmonton AM.
Even now, while driving through one of the city's mature neighbourhoods Monday, he couldn't help but notice builders, tearing down old houses to erect new "skinny" homes they hope to sell after they're built.

Bargains sure to be had

The true test, he said, is to drive around the outskirts of the city and look for bargains in all the new houses being built.
"I'm sure there are," he said.
Given forecasts that the current recession will be twice as bad as the average of the last four, Edmonton will eventually feel the housing crash, he warns.
MacBeth said if this recession can be compared to a baseball game, "we're in second or third inning."
The latest numbers from the Realtors Association of Edmonton show that the median home price in August fell about two per cent from last year, while sales are also down two per cent.
The city will likely spend a couple of years at the bottom before taking a couple of more years to climb out, he said.
MacBeth points to the housing market curve between 1979 and 1998 when — adjusted for inflation — house prices dropped in value over the 19-year period.
He advises prospective homeowners should instead rent a home for a few years. Renting is currently a bargain in Edmonton, he said.
Costs are coming down rapidly for one- and two-bedroom apartments and renting offers an opportunity to save money for mortgages which will be smaller if his prediction is correct, he said.
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Friday, 2 September 2016

26% slump in Vancouver real estate sales called a return to 'historically normal' levels

26% slump in Vancouver real estate sales called a return to 'historically normal' levels


Despite dropping sales, prices are still creeping up, according to the August statistics

courtesy CBC News Posted: Sep 02, 2016 7:24 AM PT
Real estate prices are no longer skyrocketing and sales are slumping in Metro Vancouver's red hot real estate market for the second straight month, statistics released Friday morning confirm.
The number of properties sold in August dropped nearly 26 per cent compared to the previous year, according to figures released by the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver.
But according to the industry association, the decline in sales represents a return to "typical levels" and it's too early to say if the recently introduced tax on foreign buyers is responsible for the slump.
"The record-breaking sales we saw earlier this year were replaced by more historically normal activity throughout July and August," said president Dan Morrison.
From a historical perspective, last month's sales were 3.5 per cent below the 10-year sales average for the month, he noted in a statement.
"The steam has definitely come out of the market," he said. "The trend we are seeing for several months is we are getting back to a normal Vancouver market."
"A typical month in Vancouver we will see sales of 3,000 or 4,000 per month. This past spring we were seeing sales of over 5,000 per month and that is just off the charts,"
"I've been doing this for 25 years and I've never seen anything like this past spring."

Foreign buyers taxed

Morrison said that while the market has shown a downturn since last month's introduction of the 15 per cent tax on foreign buyers, it is too early to say what the long-term effect of the tax will be on the market.
The tax was introduced in August by the provincial government to cool foreign speculation that was being blamed for double-digital increases in property values.
"Sales have been trending downward in Metro Vancouver for a few months. The new foreign buyer tax appears to have added to this trend by reducing foreign buyer activity and causing some uncertainty amongst local home buyers and sellers.
 "It'll take some months before we can really understand the impact of the new tax," he added. "We'll be interested to see the government's next round of foreign buyer data."
He noted that while Vancouver's sales are dropping, in Victoria where the tax is not applied, sales have spiked 19 per cent compared with August of last year. 
"That tells you that the buyers are looking at other options, and we fully expected that to happen."

Prices still creeping up

Morrison noted that despite the decline in sales, sellers in Vancouver are still considered to have the upper hand in the market because of the limited number of homes for sale.
"The sales-to-active listings ratio for August 2016 is 29.3 per cent. This is indicative of a seller's market."
And that means despite declining sales, prices have flattened out, but not fallen significantly in recent months.
"There are still more buyers in the market than there are sellers, surprisingly, so we are still seeing pressure on prices."
The benchmark price benchmark price for all residential properties in Metro Vancouver is currently $933,100, which is a 31.4 per cent increase compared with August 2015 and a 4.9 per cent increase over the past three months.
Real estate sales graph Vancouver 2016
Real estate prices in Metro Vancouver have leveled off following sharp increases over the past year, but have yet to show a decline, according to the August numbers. (Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver)

Digging into the details

The monthly report also provided the following breakdown of sales by property type:
  • Sales of detached properties in August reached 715, a big drop 44.6 per cent from the 1,290 detached sales in August 2015.
  • The benchmark price for detached properties rose 35.8 per cent from August 2015 to $1,577,300, representing a 4.2 per cent increase over the last three months.
  • Sales of apartment properties hit 1,343 in August, a 10.1 per cent decline compared to the 1,494 in August 2015.
  • The benchmark price of an apartment property increased 26.9 per cent from August last year to $514,300, representing a 6.1 per cent increase over the last three months.
  • Attached property sales in August totaled 431, a drop of 25.4 per cent compared to the 578 in August 2015.
  • The benchmark price of an attached home increased 31.1 per cent from August 2015 to $677,600, a 7.1 per cent increase over the last three months.