Top headlines: Toronto’s downtown office vacancy hits record with more supply

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Top story

Toronto’s downtown office vacancy hits record with more supply

The vacancy rate for downtown Toronto office buildings reached a record high at the end of last year as a flood of largely empty space from newly completed projects hit the market.

The downtown office vacancy rate in Canada’s financial capital rose to 17.4 per cent as nearly 58,100 square metres of new space came to market during the fourth quarter, according to data released Tuesday by brokerage CBRE Group Inc.

The poor performance of the Toronto market helped push Canada’s national downtown vacancy rate to its own record last quarter, hitting 19.4 per cent, the data show.

Toronto was home to one of North America’s biggest office building booms before the COVID-19 pandemic ushered in a major shift toward remote work that may weigh on demand over the long term. Because office towers take many years to construct, Toronto’s still working through office projects that began before the pandemic.

With the city accounting for nearly half of all new office construction nationwide, Canada’s net-absorption rate, or the pace that office space gets leased when it becomes available, would have been positive without the impact from Toronto’s new supply, the data show. Instead, that rate was negative in the period.

Bloomberg


4:32 p.m.

Market close: TSX moves down more than 100 points, while U.S. markets mixed

 

Weakness in financial stocks weighed on Canada’s main stock index, which lost more than 100 points, while U.S. markets were mixed.

The S&P/TSX composite index closed down 103.93 points at 20,970.98.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average was down 157.85 points at 37,525.16. The S&P 500 index was down 7.04 points at 4,756.50, while the Nasdaq composite was up 13.94 points at 14,857.71.

The Canadian dollar traded for 74.68 cents U.S. compared with 74.78 cents U.S. on Monday.

The February crude oil contract was up US$1.47 at US$72.24 per barrel and the February natural gas contract was up 21 cents at US$3.19 per mmBTU.

The February gold contract was down 50 cents at US$2,033 an ounce and the March copper contract was down five cents at US$3.76 a pound.