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Canadian Home Prices Have Dropped 25% Since The Peak - But Still Not Enough To Entice Buyers
Description
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?
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