Send us a text In this episode of The Canadian Mortgage Show, Alex Pang and Alex Shanks break down a packed week of news that directly affects Canadian homeowners, buyers, and investors. We start with the new federal budget: a $78B deficit, capital spending framed as “generational investments,” and big ticket items like $25B for housing, $30B for defense, and $115B for infrastructure—but almost no direct bailout for housing. What does that mean for interest rates, jobs, and home prices over t...
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Send us a text In this episode of The Canadian Mortgage Show, Alex Pang and Alex Shanks break down a packed week of news that directly affects Canadian homeowners, buyers, and investors. We start with the new federal budget: a $78B deficit, capital spending framed as “generational investments,” and big ticket items like $25B for housing, $30B for defense, and $115B for infrastructure—but almost no direct bailout for housing. What does that mean for interest rates, jobs, and home prices over t...
Episode 58: Canada Housing Check: Prices, Rates, Incentives & Real Case Studies
The Canadian Mortgage Show
56 minutes
1 month ago
Episode 58: Canada Housing Check: Prices, Rates, Incentives & Real Case Studies
Send us a text Canada’s housing story is shifting fast. We open on why thousands of new condos are sitting unsold in the Lower Mainland and what that means for pricing power, then dig into a surprising stat: in Ottawa, monthly ownership costs can now beat renting (yes, really). We also tackle what’s next for mortgage rates, why many landlords are dangling incentives, and how to use a refinance-then-buy strategy to upgrade in today’s buyer’s market—without blowing up your cash flow. Finally, w...
The Canadian Mortgage Show
Send us a text In this episode of The Canadian Mortgage Show, Alex Pang and Alex Shanks break down a packed week of news that directly affects Canadian homeowners, buyers, and investors. We start with the new federal budget: a $78B deficit, capital spending framed as “generational investments,” and big ticket items like $25B for housing, $30B for defense, and $115B for infrastructure—but almost no direct bailout for housing. What does that mean for interest rates, jobs, and home prices over t...