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 61: Variable vs Fixed (Explained) + The Land-Claim Mortgage Crisis
The Canadian Mortgage Show
50 minutes
1 week ago
Episode 61: Variable vs Fixed (Explained) + The Land-Claim Mortgage Crisis
Send us a text Rates fell 0.25—but fixed didn’t budge. Richmond’s land-title fight spooked lenders. Condo sales tanking in the GTA. CRA pays a $4.99M refund automatically(?!). BC Hydro bans new crypto-mining hookups. We break down what actually affects your mortgage today, how variable vs fixed really works, and the real-world fallout if lenders refuse renewals on contested land. In this episode: • Variable vs Fixed: why only one moved after the cut • Adjustable vs fixed-payment variables (a...
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...