
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This week on The Vancouver Life Real Estate Podcast, the question hanging over the entire country’s housing market finally takes center stage: How long will this downturn last?
BMO Capital Markets has drawn a striking parallel between today’s Canadian correction and the U.S. housing crash of 2007 — a comparison that has rattled even the most seasoned market watchers. Senior Economist Robert Kavcic doesn’t mince words: Canada’s housing bubble is now in the slow-motion phase of its deflation. Prices, he notes, have been falling for more than three years despite record population growth — a pattern eerily reminiscent of the U.S. trajectory nearly two decades ago.
The difference this time? Canada’s decline is unfolding more gradually, and that could make recovery slower, too. BMO’s data suggest it could take another five years before prices claw their way back to prior peaks, placing today’s correction somewhere between the U.S. Great Recession cycle and Ontario’s prolonged 1990s slump — a potential 12-year arc from top to trough and back again. The bank calls the last decade’s explosive price growth a “perfect storm” unlikely to repeat: cheap credit, pandemic migration, millennial peak demand, and speculative fervor all hitting at once. Those conditions, they argue, are gone for good.
Meanwhile, Canada’s rental market is flashing its own warning signs. Asking rents have fallen for a full year straight — down 3.2% nationally and more than 5% in B.C. and Alberta — with two-thirds of all purpose-built projects now dangling incentives just to fill units. Institutional landlords may weather the storm, but smaller investors are bailing out, adding even more supply to a fragile market.
The slowdown is visible upstream, too. Architecture billings — a leading indicator of future construction — have fallen for 18 consecutive months across North America, the longest slide on record. In B.C., developers are pausing or cancelling projects, from downtown high-rises to suburban townhomes. The stalled Tsawwassen Town Centre redevelopment has become a case study in the friction between city councils, community character, local residents and development economics.
And yet, amid the austerity, Vancouver’s City Council just took an unprecedented step: approving a 0% property-tax increase for 2026. After years of back-to-back hikes totalling more than 30%, Mayor Ken Sim’s administration says the city will instead “find efficiencies” to ease the strain on families and small businesses. Supporters call it relief. Critics call it unsustainable.
But not all the headlines are grim. In False Creek, a shimmering symbol of Vancouver’s high-end resilience emerged: the Tesoro Penthouse, a 5,000-square-foot full-floor residence with panoramic views, listed for $1,5,500,000 just sold for a record-breaking price — the most expensive sale ever recorded in the area. The transaction, closed by The Vancouver Life team, stands as a reminder that even in a cooling market, the city’s top tier still commands global attention.
From the deep freeze of development to the fragile thaw in rentals, this episode dissects what these parallel shifts mean for Canada’s broader housing future — and whether patience, not policy, will be the only real cure for a market learning how to land.
_________________________________
Contact Us To Book Your Private Consultation:
📆 https://calendly.com/thevancouverlife
Dan Wurtele, PREC, REIA
604.809.0834
Ryan Dash PREC
778.898.0089
[email protected]
www.thevancouverlife.com
By The Vancouver Life Real Estate Podcast5
22 ratings
This week on The Vancouver Life Real Estate Podcast, the question hanging over the entire country’s housing market finally takes center stage: How long will this downturn last?
BMO Capital Markets has drawn a striking parallel between today’s Canadian correction and the U.S. housing crash of 2007 — a comparison that has rattled even the most seasoned market watchers. Senior Economist Robert Kavcic doesn’t mince words: Canada’s housing bubble is now in the slow-motion phase of its deflation. Prices, he notes, have been falling for more than three years despite record population growth — a pattern eerily reminiscent of the U.S. trajectory nearly two decades ago.
The difference this time? Canada’s decline is unfolding more gradually, and that could make recovery slower, too. BMO’s data suggest it could take another five years before prices claw their way back to prior peaks, placing today’s correction somewhere between the U.S. Great Recession cycle and Ontario’s prolonged 1990s slump — a potential 12-year arc from top to trough and back again. The bank calls the last decade’s explosive price growth a “perfect storm” unlikely to repeat: cheap credit, pandemic migration, millennial peak demand, and speculative fervor all hitting at once. Those conditions, they argue, are gone for good.
Meanwhile, Canada’s rental market is flashing its own warning signs. Asking rents have fallen for a full year straight — down 3.2% nationally and more than 5% in B.C. and Alberta — with two-thirds of all purpose-built projects now dangling incentives just to fill units. Institutional landlords may weather the storm, but smaller investors are bailing out, adding even more supply to a fragile market.
The slowdown is visible upstream, too. Architecture billings — a leading indicator of future construction — have fallen for 18 consecutive months across North America, the longest slide on record. In B.C., developers are pausing or cancelling projects, from downtown high-rises to suburban townhomes. The stalled Tsawwassen Town Centre redevelopment has become a case study in the friction between city councils, community character, local residents and development economics.
And yet, amid the austerity, Vancouver’s City Council just took an unprecedented step: approving a 0% property-tax increase for 2026. After years of back-to-back hikes totalling more than 30%, Mayor Ken Sim’s administration says the city will instead “find efficiencies” to ease the strain on families and small businesses. Supporters call it relief. Critics call it unsustainable.
But not all the headlines are grim. In False Creek, a shimmering symbol of Vancouver’s high-end resilience emerged: the Tesoro Penthouse, a 5,000-square-foot full-floor residence with panoramic views, listed for $1,5,500,000 just sold for a record-breaking price — the most expensive sale ever recorded in the area. The transaction, closed by The Vancouver Life team, stands as a reminder that even in a cooling market, the city’s top tier still commands global attention.
From the deep freeze of development to the fragile thaw in rentals, this episode dissects what these parallel shifts mean for Canada’s broader housing future — and whether patience, not policy, will be the only real cure for a market learning how to land.
_________________________________
Contact Us To Book Your Private Consultation:
📆 https://calendly.com/thevancouverlife
Dan Wurtele, PREC, REIA
604.809.0834
Ryan Dash PREC
778.898.0089
[email protected]
www.thevancouverlife.com

112 Listeners

15 Listeners

11 Listeners

83 Listeners

577 Listeners

412 Listeners

0 Listeners

78 Listeners

2 Listeners

27 Listeners

14 Listeners

30 Listeners

12 Listeners

60 Listeners

0 Listeners