Canadian Real Estate Buyers Are About To Lose 25% of Their Buying Power
Canadian real estate buyers lose a huge amount of borrowing power under proposed OSFI rules, this is how those numbers look across Canada.
Canadian real estate buyers lose a huge amount of borrowing power under proposed OSFI rules, this is how those numbers look across Canada.
Canada saw real estate prices in urban centers fall for the third month in a row. This is the first time that’s happened in over 4 years.
Greater Toronto real estate inventory is soaring, but how bad is it? We compare it to the long-term trend, as well as Canada as a whole.
Toronto real estate has a flipping problem, Canadians pick up the pace of acquiring consumer debt, and Montreal real estate isn’t very hot.
Montreal real estate isn’t a booming market, and they aren’t getting Toronto and Vancouver’s foreign buyers.
Canadian real estate is soaring in some regions, and getting even tighter in others. Here’s where is keeping up with change in inventory.
Vancouver real estate may still be hot in the condo segment, but continued lower price growth means the market might be close to mature.
Record piles of debt? Apparently we haven’t seen anything yet, as the Bank of Canada shares data showing this trend is accelerating.
The Toronto real estate market extends it’s losing streak to the condo segment, where the benchmark price fell in 75% of neighborhoods.
Toronto real estate listings look familiar? That’s because over 6% of listings last week, were bought within the past 18 months.