Canadian Mortgage Trends News announced today (Mar 25 th ) that: As many as 150,000 Canadian borrowers will have trouble refinancing their mortgages over the next two years as they face a combination of declining home values and higher interest rates, according to the country’s top banking regulator. The report went on to say, Interest rates have recently fallen, but they’re still much higher than when many people signed up for ultra-low-rate loans during the height of a housing boom in the early years of the pandemic. This isn’t a minor housing issue, it’s a pressure point that exposes how fragile the broader system can become under stress. If even a portion of those borrowers are unable to refinance, you will see increased forced selling and downward pressure on home prices. That doesn’t remain isolated to those households, it feeds into lower comparable sales, which in turn influences property assessments over time. The impact is gradual, but it’s real. Where this bec...
New data from the Association for Mineral Exploration (AME) finds that the NDP government’s mineral permitting system is falling behind and putting investment, jobs, and economic growth at risk. According to AME, the Mineral Claims Consultation Framework (MCCF), introduced in March 2025 to streamline permitting, is now doing the opposite. The median wait time for mineral claims has climbed to 143 days, well beyond the government’s own 90–120 day service standard, with only 14.8% of applications processed on time. “Today’s data proves this government isn’t speeding up permitting, it’s slowing it down,” said Gavin Dew, Critic for Jobs, Economic Development, Innovation and AI. “Projects are being delayed during crucial week stages, investment is being driven away, and British Columbia is missing a generational opportunity in critical minerals.” AME also warns that a growing backlog is overwhelming the system, with some claims sitting for up to a year and others delayed mo...