
Hosted by The Vancouver Life Real Estate Podcast · EN

This week’s Canadian real estate story is no longer just about home prices — it’s about financial pressure, shifting behaviour, and whether sophisticated investors are quietly positioning for the next cycle. National home prices are now down more than 25% from peak levels — the largest decline in Canadian history — yet affordability still feels out of reach for many Canadians. Why? Because falling prices alone don’t solve weakening finances. This episode explores the growing cracks in Canada’s financial foundation. Credit card net loss rates have climbed to their highest level in a decade, consumer insolvencies are approaching levels last seen during the 2009 financial crisis, and British Columbia just recorded its highest number of insolvencies ever for the month of March. Searches for “bankruptcy” have also hit all-time highs, underscoring mounting financial stress across the country. The pressure extends far beyond households. In Vancouver, prominent developer Westbank’s Joyce 2 rental tower has entered receivership despite being substantially complete and leasing units. Once considered nearly risk-free, purpose-built rental housing is now showing signs of distress as projects financed during the low-rate era collide with today’s much higher borrowing costs and weaker economics. With more than $109 million reportedly owed and financing costs surging, the story highlights just how difficult development has become — even for institutional-quality projects in prime locations. Meanwhile, Canada’s labour market is softening. The country lost 18,000 jobs in April, unemployment climbed to 6.9%, and full-time employment is experiencing one of its sharpest declines since the pandemic. Combined with rising debt loads, many Canadians are finding it increasingly difficult to qualify for — or feel comfortable taking on — homeownership. Younger Canadians are adapting accordingly. More adults aged 25 to 39 are living at home than ever before, while homeownership rates among Millennials lag behind previous generations. In cities like Vancouver, the traditional starter home has effectively disappeared, pushing many would-be buyers to rent longer instead. And renting is becoming increasingly attractive. Vancouver is seeing some of the largest rent declines in Canada, with average asking rents trending lower year-over-year. For many, renting now offers greater flexibility and lower monthly costs than buying into an uncertain market. Yet amid the pessimism, one development stands out: Montreal-based Jesta Group has launched a $500 million plan to acquire more than 1,000 condo units in Toronto. Institutional investors rarely buy aggressively when sentiment is strong — they buy when fear is elevated, inventory is high, and developers are under pressure. The move suggests some major players may see today’s weakness as tomorrow’s opportunity. The big question: are we nearing the beginning of recovery — or simply entering the next phase of Canada’s housing reset? _________________________________ Contact Us To Book Your Private Consultation:📆 https://calendly.com/thevancouverlifeDan Wurtele, PREC, REIA604.809.0834dan@thevancouverlife.comRyan Dash PREC778.898.0089 ryan@thevancouverlife.com www.thevancouverlife.com

Canada’s housing market is undergoing a profound shift — one that increasingly reflects the broader vulnerabilities developing within the Canadian economy itself. What was once viewed as a seemingly unstoppable engine of national growth is now revealing the risks of a country that has become deeply dependent on real estate activity to drive wealth creation, economic stability, and consumer confidence.Through the first four months of 2026, home sales across the Lower Mainland are down 10% compared to last year, despite 2025 already being the slowest market this century. Prices have now fallen to nearly five-year lows, inventory remains elevated, and foreclosure activity continues climbing at an increasingly concerning pace. Yet beneath the headline market statistics lies a much larger story — one about productivity, capital allocation, wealth inequality, and the growing fragility of Canada’s economic model.At the same time, investment into productive sectors such as machinery, equipment, innovation, and business development has steadily weakened. Canadian workers now receive dramatically less capital investment than their American counterparts, while productivity growth continues to stagnate. The result is an economy increasingly reliant on debt expansion and rising asset values rather than true economic output.The consequences of that imbalance are becoming more visible. Wealth inequality continues widening as higher-income households with greater exposure to financial markets benefit from rising stock portfolios, while middle-class Canadians — whose wealth is often concentrated in housing — face softer home values, higher debt burdens, and worsening affordability challenges. The top 20% of Canadians now control nearly two-thirds of the nation’s wealth, highlighting a growing divide between those benefiting from capital appreciation and those being left behind.Nowhere is the strain more evident than in the pre-sale housing market. New project launches have collapsed far below historical norms, major towers have largely disappeared from the pipeline, and developers are increasingly unable or unwilling to bring large-scale projects to market amid weak demand, financing pressure, and uncertain economic conditions. Low-rise wood-frame projects and townhomes are among the few developments still attempting to move forward.Outside of real estate, additional warning signs are emerging throughout the broader economy. Business closures are accelerating nationwide, with tens of thousands of companies shutting down in a single month. While new businesses continue to open, the growing instability signals weakening confidence, softer employment conditions, and mounting pressure on both commercial and residential real estate demand moving forward.The broader message is clear: Canada’s challenge is no longer simply about home prices. It is about productivity, economic diversification, and whether the country can rebalance itself away from an overreliance on housing-driven growth. Temporary policy measures, buyer incentives, and debt expansion may provide short-term relief, but they do little to address the structural issues beneath the surface. Long-term stability will require faster housing delivery, streamlined development processes, stronger business investment, and a renewed focus on productive economic growth rather than asset inflation alone._________________________________ Contact Us To Book Your Private Consultation:📆 https://calendly.com/thevancouverlifeDan Wurtele, PREC, REIA604.809.0834dan@thevancouverlife.comRyan Dash PREC778.898.0089 ryan@thevancouverlife.com www.thevancouverlife.com

In a market defined by uncertainty, this episode captures a pivotal moment for Canadian real estate—where economic pressure, policy intervention, and shifting demand are colliding in real time.At the center of the conversation is a clear and somewhat unsettling trend: stress is beginning to surface in the housing system. Mortgage arrears have now risen for three consecutive months, reaching levels not seen in years, while consumer insolvencies in British Columbia have doubled from post-pandemic lows and are now sitting at historic highs. While still modest in absolute terms, the rate of change is what demands attention—signaling that financial strain is building beneath the surface as households face higher borrowing costs and tighter budgets.Layered on top of this is a critical message from the Bank of Canada: stability in interest rates should not be mistaken for relief. The central bank is navigating a narrow path, warning that rates could move in either direction depending on inflation pressures and global economic risks. More importantly, it has acknowledged a fundamental shift—housing is no longer a driver of economic growth, but a drag on it. This marks a significant departure from the narrative that has defined the past decade.The underlying causes extend beyond interest rates alone. Slowing population growth, weakened investor demand, and declining affordability are all converging at once. Nowhere is this more evident than in the oversupply of small, investor-oriented condos in major markets—units that once thrived in a low-rate environment but are now struggling to attract both investors and end users. In response, governments are beginning to step in. The latest Spring Economic Update introduces a series of initiatives aimed at improving housing affordability and supply—from reducing regulatory barriers and expanding mortgage insurance options for multi-unit housing, to accelerating billions in low-cost construction financing. While promising in theory, the effectiveness of these measures remains an open question, particularly as rental markets begin to soften under the weight of record supply.Taken together, the episode paints a picture of a housing market in transition—moving away from the speculative, demand-driven surge of the past decade toward a more constrained, policy-influenced future. For buyers, investors, and developers alike, the message is nuanced but decisive: this is no longer a market that will be shaped by interest rates alone.It is a market being redefined by fundamentals.NEW HOMES COMING TO MARKET:EDWYNhttps://www.lightwellhomes.ca/edwynCOLDICUTThttps://7609coldicutt.com/ _________________________________ Contact Us To Book Your Private Consultation:📆 https://calendly.com/thevancouverlifeDan Wurtele, PREC, REIA604.809.0834dan@thevancouverlife.comRyan Dash PREC778.898.0089 ryan@thevancouverlife.com www.thevancouverlife.com

veryone is asking the same question right now: how long will this last? Because the housing market doesn’t just feel slow—it feels stuck. Prices in many Canadian markets are still down meaningfully from their peak, sales activity is hovering near multi-decade lows, and key indicators like the sales-to-new-listings ratio remain in soft territory. But what makes this cycle different is that inventory hasn’t exploded in the way most people would expect during a downturn, and underlying demand hasn’t disappeared. Instead, it’s been suppressed. On a per-capita basis, housing demand is sitting near levels we haven’t seen in decades, not because people don’t want to buy, but because they can’t. Higher interest rates have pushed mortgage payments up dramatically, affordability hasn't improved enough, and household balance sheets are under pressure.We’re seeing rising insolvencies, increasing mortgage delinquencies, and a sharp drop in consumer confidence. When you combine those factors, you don’t get a traditional crash it looks more like a freeze. Buyers step back, sellers hold firm, and transaction volumes collapse. At the same time, the supply story is more nuanced than the headlines suggest. In the short term, there is pressure.Vacancy rates have increased in several major markets, rents have softened, and a large pipeline of units that began construction during the peak is now completing. But beneath that, future supply is being quietly constrained. Housing starts are trending lower, building permits have fallen sharply, and developers are delaying or cancelling projects due to financing challenges and weak pre-sale absorption. In many segments, particularly ground-oriented housing, new supply is approaching multi-decade lows.This creates a disconnect between today’s conditions and tomorrow’s reality. While the market works through elevated inventory and weak sales in the near term, it is simultaneously setting up a future supply shortage. But before that imbalance becomes evident, there is still pressure to work through. A significant portion of Canadian mortgages will reset over the next few years at higher rates, which is likely to introduce incremental forced selling and continue to weigh on pricing. We are already starting to see transactions occurring below previous purchase prices, gradually resetting market expectations. This is typically the final phase of a downturn. Housing markets don’t bottom when the data looks strong—they bottom when the data stops deteriorating.That inflection point is usually driven by stabilization in interest rates, a recovery in consumer confidence, and the release of pent-up demand. Because current sales levels are unsustainably low relative to population growth, it’s not a question of if demand returns, but when. When it does, it won’t be entering a market with abundant supply. It will be entering a market where construction slowed, listings declined, and new inventory failed to keep pace. That’s why housing recoveries tend to feel abrupt rather than gradual. The shift isn’t always obvious in real time, but once it begins, momentum could build quickly._________________________________ Contact Us To Book Your Private Consultation:📆 https://calendly.com/thevancouverlifeDan Wurtele, PREC, REIA604.809.0834dan@thevancouverlife.comRyan Dash PREC778.898.0089 ryan@thevancouverlife.com www.thevancouverlife.com

In a market defined by hesitation, policy is beginning to take center stage—and in this episode, the conversation cuts straight to the core of what may become one of the most consequential turning points in Canadian real estate: the era of housing bailouts.Across both Vancouver and Toronto, governments are no longer operating on the sidelines. They are stepping in—decisively—to stabilize a development sector under mounting pressure. As outlined, Metro Vancouver is now actively considering meaningful reductions to Development Cost Charges (DCCs). The implications are significant. Whether through rolling back rates or freezing future increases, the goal is clear: restore feasibility, revive construction, and ultimately bring relief to buyers through lower end prices.But policy alone does not emerge in a vacuum—it responds to stress. And that stress is becoming increasingly visible.The episode highlights a growing wave of project insolvencies, including two major developments in the Fraser Valley totaling 680 homes that will now never be built. Behind those numbers lies a deeper economic ripple: approximately 1,500 jobs erased, millions of labor hours lost, and an estimated $75 million in wages removed from the local economy. This is not just a housing story—it’s a full-scale economic contraction unfolding in real time, affecting everyone from tradespeople and architects to future homeowners and investors.And yet, amid the disruption, there are early signs that intervention may be working.Ontario’s recent HST rebate—offering up to $130,000 in savings on new homes—has triggered an immediate surge in demand. Builders report sales volumes increasing as much as tenfold in some cases, with projects that once struggled now regaining momentum almost overnight. The critical question, however, is whether this represents a sustainable recovery or simply a short-term spike fueled by incentive-driven urgency.This hesitation is mirrored in the commercial real estate sector, where transaction volumes and dollar values have both declined significantly, with land sales—often the clearest indicator of future development confidence—falling nearly 50%.Meanwhile, national housing data paints a picture of stagnation. Sales remain flat, prices are trending downward, and inventory—while slightly elevated—is still below long-term averages. In British Columbia specifically, sales volumes sit 35% below the 10-year average, reinforcing just how subdued this market has become.Yet within this complexity lies opportunity.For buyers and investors willing to act strategically, this environment presents a rare alignment: soft pricing, rising incentives, and increasing government support. The advice is clear—focus on projects with strong completion certainty, layer developer incentives with government rebates, and position ahead of further policy shifts that may drive the next wave of demand.Because while the headlines focus on slowdown, the underlying story is far more nuanced.This is not simply a downturn—it is a recalibration. A market being reshaped by policy, constrained by economics, and ultimately setting the stage for those who can read between the lines and move before the momentum returns._________________________________ Contact Us To Book Your Private Consultation:📆 https://calendly.com/thevancouverlifeDan Wurtele, PREC, REIA604.809.0834dan@thevancouverlife.comRyan Dash PREC778.898.0089 ryan@thevancouverlife.com www.thevancouverlife.com

Canada’s rental market—often the earliest signal of stress or recovery in real estate—is undergoing a meaningful and potentially structural shift. In this episode, insights from frontline operator Keaton Bessey reveal a market that is not simply cooling, but recalibrating under the weight of supply, policy, and changing demand dynamics.After more than two years of consecutive rent declines in Metro Vancouver, the data points to a clear trend: this is no short-term correction. Rents began falling in early 2024 and have continued to slide, with expectations of further year-over-year declines through 2026. While this may appear to improve affordability on the surface, the reality is more complex. Lower rents are not being driven by rising incomes or increased prosperity, but rather by weakening demand, population stagnation, and a surge of new supply entering the market. As Bessey aptly frames it, affordability is improving “for all the wrong reasons.”At the core of this shift is an unprecedented wave of construction. Nearly 16% of Metro Vancouver’s existing rental stock is currently under development, with tens of thousands of purpose-built rental units and investor-owned condos set to complete over the next several years. This influx is already reshaping landlord and tenant behavior. Investors—once a dominant force—have largely stepped back, while existing owners are being forced to accept market rents that often fall short of their financial expectations.For many landlords, the decision is no longer about maximizing returns, but minimizing losses. Some are holding properties with negative cash flow, unwilling or unable to sell at current prices. Others are exiting the rental market altogether, particularly owners of lower-quality or “accidental” rental units such as basement suites, which are increasingly becoming economically unviable. The result is a subtle but important transformation: while supply is rising, the overall quality of rental stock is improving as weaker assets are removed from circulation.Institutional players, meanwhile, are facing a different set of challenges. Highly leveraged purpose-built rental projects—many financed under aggressive lending programs—are struggling to achieve lease-up targets. Incentives like free rent have become widespread, but often fail to solve the underlying issue: rents are simply too high relative to market demand. In some cases, even newly completed buildings are facing distress, with low occupancy and insufficient income to service debt.Looking ahead, the trajectory of the rental market will hinge on two critical forces: population growth and supply absorption. With immigration currently subdued and construction pipelines still active, downward pressure on rents is likely to persist in the near term. However, Vancouver’s enduring global appeal—its geography, lifestyle, and economic positioning—continues to act as a long-term stabilizer.The conclusion is clear: Vancouver’s rental market is not collapsing, but evolving. What emerges on the other side will likely be a more professionalized, quality-driven, and institutionally influenced landscape—one that reflects not just the realities of today’s market, but the foundations of tomorrow’s recovery._________________________________ Contact Us To Book Your Private Consultation:📆 https://calendly.com/thevancouverlifeDan Wurtele, PREC, REIA604.809.0834dan@thevancouverlife.comRyan Dash PREC778.898.0089 ryan@thevancouverlife.com www.thevancouverlife.com

Canada’s housing market is once again at a critical inflection point—where early signs of stabilization are colliding head-on with mounting economic pressure and unprecedented government intervention. In this episode, the spotlight turns to a pivotal question: is the recent uptick in home prices the beginning of a recovery, or simply a temporary pause before deeper challenges emerge?For the first time in 12 months, Vancouver home prices have ticked higher. On the surface, this signals a potential shift in momentum. But beneath that headline lies a far more complex story. Inventory levels remain elevated—sitting nearly 40% above long-term averages—while sales activity continues to trail historical norms. The result is a market that appears to be stabilizing on the surface, yet remains fundamentally imbalanced.At the same time, governments are stepping in with increasing urgency. In what can only be described as a coordinated effort to revive the pre-construction sector, a fourth major stimulus measure has been introduced in as many weeks. The latest initiative—an $8.8 billion infrastructure investment—effectively shifts development costs away from builders and onto taxpayers, reducing upfront costs and potentially lowering new home prices by as much as 20%. Combined with recent tax rebates, these measures could put substantial savings back into buyers’ pockets. Yet the broader implication is clear: such aggressive intervention typically signals a market under strain, not one operating from a position of strength.Meanwhile, financial stress is quietly building within the system. Mortgage arrears have climbed to their highest level in nearly a decade, with multiple consecutive months of increases—a trend not seen since the early days of the pandemic. As a record number of mortgages reset in 2026 at higher rates, the risk of further strain is rising. This is already beginning to surface in the form of increasing foreclosure activity, which has accelerated sharply in recent months.Yet despite these headwinds, pockets of resilience remain. Sales activity has shown modest improvement month-over-month, and the sales-to-active listings ratio has edged higher, suggesting that demand, while subdued, has not disappeared entirely. Even broader economic data offers mixed signals, with GDP growth exceeding expectations in early 2026 despite weakening employment trends.Taken together, the current landscape reveals a market caught between opposing forces. On one side, government stimulus, improving affordability, and modest demand are attempting to stabilize conditions. On the other, rising inventory, increasing financial distress, and inflation-driven rate risks continue to weigh heavily on the outlook.The central question now is not whether the market is changing—it clearly is—but in which direction it will ultimately break. Whether this recent price increase marks the beginning of a new cycle or simply a temporary reprieve will depend on how these competing forces resolve in the months ahead.For now, one thing is certain: the next phase of Canada’s housing market will be shaped not by a single trend, but by the tension between policy support and economic reality—and that balance has rarely been more uncertain._________________________________ Contact Us To Book Your Private Consultation:📆 https://calendly.com/thevancouverlifeDan Wurtele, PREC, REIA604.809.0834dan@thevancouverlife.comRyan Dash PREC778.898.0089 ryan@thevancouverlife.com www.thevancouverlife.com

Canada’s housing market is entering a phase defined not by a single trend, but by a collision of forces—policy intervention, economic pressure, and shifting investor behavior—all unfolding at once. In this episode, the focus turns to a pivotal question: can government stimulus reignite a market that is increasingly showing signs of structural fatigue?Over the past several weeks, policymakers have moved aggressively to support housing demand. A series of new measures—now the third announced in a single month—signal a clear shift toward stimulus. Most notably, expanded tax relief on newly built homes now extends beyond first-time buyers to include all purchasers, with rebates reaching as high as $130,000 on qualifying properties. These interventions are designed to stabilize a weakening pre-sale market and provide relief to developers facing mounting financial strain.Yet while policy is attempting to pull the market forward, underlying fundamentals are moving in the opposite direction. Rental markets, long considered a pillar of investor demand, are softening rapidly. In Vancouver, rents have declined materially year-over-year, driven by a rare combination of out-migration and a record wave of new rental supply. With fewer tenants and more units available, downward pressure on rents is expected to persist—undermining the very investment case that once fueled condominium development.At the same time, distress within the development sector is intensifying. Foreclosures are no longer isolated events but are becoming increasingly routine, with large-scale projects now entering insolvency proceedings. The ripple effects extend beyond developers themselves, impacting lenders, investors, and even new financial models such as fractional real estate platforms, which are now facing significant losses as projects stall or collapse.Perhaps most striking is the state of the pre-sale market—the traditional engine of new housing supply in Canada’s largest cities. Recent data reveals an almost complete standstill. New project launches have fallen dramatically compared to peak years, with sales absorption rates at critically low levels. Developers, unable to secure sufficient pre-sales to justify construction financing, are choosing to delay or cancel projects altogether. The consequence is clear: a shrinking pipeline of future housing supply.Layered onto these dynamics is a growing level of geopolitical and regulatory complexity. Discussions around land rights, resource control, and international investment are beginning to intersect with housing in unexpected ways, adding another dimension of uncertainty to an already fragile environment.Taken together, the picture that emerges is one of a market at an inflection point. Government intervention is accelerating, but it is being deployed into a landscape shaped by declining rents, weakening demand, and a development sector under significant stress.The central tension is clear: stimulus can support demand in the short term, but it cannot easily resolve the deeper structural challenges now facing Canada’s housing system.As these forces continue to unfold, the path forward remains uncertain—but one thing is increasingly evident: the next phase of the housing cycle will be defined not by a single catalyst, but by how these competing pressures ultimately resolve._________________________________ Contact Us To Book Your Private Consultation:📆 https://calendly.com/thevancouverlifeDan Wurtele, PREC, REIA604.809.0834dan@thevancouverlife.comRyan Dash PREC778.898.0089 ryan@thevancouverlife.com www.thevancouverlife.com

Canada’s housing market is entering a phase defined not by a single trend, but by a collision of powerful and often opposing forces. In this episode, a rapidly shifting landscape is unpacked—one where governments are beginning to intervene with stimulative measures just as macroeconomic headwinds intensify, creating a market caught between support and suppression.On one side of the equation, policymakers are stepping in to stabilize a development sector that has been under mounting pressure for nearly two years. In Ontario, a joint initiative between private capital and government-backed funds has committed $1.3 billion to acquire over 2,200 unsold condominium units, converting them into long-term rental housing. While this move provides immediate relief to developers struggling with unsold inventory, it also introduces complex ripple effects: taxpayer-supported intervention, an influx of rental supply into an already softening market, and a further reduction in ownership opportunities for end users. In parallel, the federal government has advanced a meaningful affordability measure by introducing a GST rebate for first-time buyers on new homes up to $1 million, with partial relief extending to $1.5 million. Together, these actions signal a clear shift—governments are once again pulling levers to stimulate housing demand and support construction.Yet these policy efforts are unfolding against a backdrop of increasingly challenging economic realities. Most notably, Canada’s population growth has turned negative on a year-over-year basis for the first time in its history. This unprecedented shift strikes at the core of the country’s housing model, which has long relied on strong immigration-driven demand. A shrinking population means fewer renters, fewer new households, and ultimately less pressure on both rents and home prices—particularly in markets like Toronto and Vancouver that have depended heavily on demographic growth.At the same time, the labour market is showing clear signs of strain. Canada has lost over 100,000 jobs in just two months, with unemployment rising to 6.7% and youth unemployment reaching levels not seen in over a decade. Economic uncertainty, compounded by global trade tensions and geopolitical instability, is weighing on consumer confidence and delaying major financial decisions—including home purchases.Adding further complexity is the evolving outlook for interest rates. While the Bank of Canada has held rates steady, the global environment has shifted rapidly. Escalating conflict in the Middle East has driven oil prices higher, raising the specter of renewed inflation. Markets are now pricing in the possibility of multiple rate hikes before the end of 2026, a sharp reversal from earlier expectations of stability or even cuts. This creates a difficult balancing act for policymakers: support a slowing economy while containing inflationary pressures.Taken together, the current environment is defined by contradiction. Government stimulus is attempting to reignite momentum, while demographic shifts, job losses, and inflation risks apply downward pressure. In a cycle where clarity is scarce and volatility is rising, understanding the interplay between policy, economics, and sentiment has never been more critical._________________________________ Contact Us To Book Your Private Consultation:📆 https://calendly.com/thevancouverlifeDan Wurtele, PREC, REIA604.809.0834dan@thevancouverlife.comRyan Dash PREC778.898.0089 ryan@thevancouverlife.com www.thevancouverlife.com

In an environment where uncertainty increasingly shapes economic behavior, the forces influencing Canada’s housing market have rarely been more complex—or more consequential. In this episode, attention turns to the global and domestic economic pressures now driving real estate decisions across the country through a conversation with Doug Porter, Chief Economist at BMO Financial Group.With more than three decades of experience analyzing global economies and financial markets, Porter has long been a prominent voice in Canadian economic commentary. As author of the widely followed “Talking Points” and co-writer of BMO’s flagship publication Focus, his analysis frequently shapes how investors, businesses, and policymakers interpret shifts in the broader economy. The discussion provides insight into the current economic landscape and what it may mean for homeowners, buyers, and investors navigating one of the most uncertain housing environments in recent memory.The conversation begins with the rapidly evolving geopolitical landscape. Escalating tensions in the Middle East have pushed oil prices above the $90–$100 range in recent trading sessions, raising concerns about a renewed inflationary cycle. Porter examines whether current market conditions are drifting toward the stagflation scenario previously modeled by BMO analysts. Oil shocks historically ripple through inflation, bond yields, and mortgage markets, and the potential implications for both fixed and variable mortgage rates are explored in detail.Attention then turns to what was once described as the “mortgage renewal cliff,” a period that will see the largest volume of mortgages renewing in Canadian history throughout 2026. While Canada’s financial system appears structurally resilient, questions remain about the financial health of households themselves. Rising balances on lines of credit and credit cards, combined with a declining savings rate, suggest that many Canadians may already be reallocating income toward higher housing costs and everyday expenses. Porter shares his perspective on household balance sheets and whether these pressures could translate into broader economic risks.Beyond short-term financial strain, the discussion explores a deeper structural issue within the Canadian economy: its heavy reliance on housing and population growth as primary drivers of expansion. As productivity growth lags and demographic momentum begins to slow, questions emerge about the long-term sustainability of housing demand relative to incomes. Porter outlines what genuine economic tailwinds might look like over the next decade—from expanded trade and energy exports to renewed investment in manufacturing and productivity-enhancing sectors—and why those developments could be critical for Canada’s long-term growth trajectory.Taken together, the conversation offers a high-level examination of the economic forces shaping Canadian real estate at a pivotal moment. With geopolitical tensions, financial pressures, and structural economic shifts unfolding simultaneously, housing sits squarely at the intersection of global economics and personal financial decision-making.Understanding those forces may ultimately determine whether market participants are reacting to events—or anticipating the next phase of Canada’s housing cycle._________________________________ Contact Us To Book Your Private Consultation:📆 https://calendly.com/thevancouverlifeDan Wurtele, PREC, REIA604.809.0834dan@thevancouverlife.comRyan Dash PREC778.898.0089 ryan@thevancouverlife.com www.thevancouverlife.com