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Housing's on Fire, and the Election’s Just the Gas Can

Lyndsay Malchuk Lyndsay Malchuk, The Market Online
0 Comments| April 25, 2025

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By Lyndsay Malchuk | Contributors CornerPodcast

The Contributors Corner, where Michael Succurro from Spark Financial and I shed a spotlight on topics that could impact your portfolios and build a bridge between unsuspected sectors.

If you’re a Canadian hoping to own a home—or just curious whether that dream’s already torched—you might want to look past the usual campaign slogans and into the tangled mess of real estate economics unraveling across the country.

Let’s not sugarcoat this: Home prices have decoupled from reality. The average house in Canada is now north of $700,000, and if you’re eyeing anything in Toronto or Vancouver, you’d better be prepared to shell out well over a million. But here’s the kicker: wages didn’t get the memo. And in places like Vancouver, renters are now entering bidding wars just for a roof over their heads.

The great Canadian housing crunch isn’t just a social issue anymore. It’s a full-blown capital markets story—and with the federal election looming, housing is the matchstick both major parties are playing with.

Voters are being hit with polar visions of the fix. The Conservatives are going full throttle on deregulation—cutting red tape, pressuring municipalities, and sweet-talking private developers to bring supply online faster. The Liberals are running a different playbook: national programs, rent-to-own incentives, and social housing as the new frontier.

But here’s the million-dollar question for voters—and investors: Can either side realistically cool the market without first solving the bottlenecks choking the system?

Because unless we unlock supply and skilled labour now, no policy promise matters. CMHC says we’ll need 3.5 million new homes by 2030. Not want—need. That’s a big number, and we’re nowhere close. Permits take years, labour is scarce, and the cost of materials is still punching homeowners in the gut.

Builders are bailing mid-project, converting unsold units into rentals. Courts are so jammed it’s practically impossible to enforce contracts when buyers walk away. It’s chaos behind the drywall—and this election could determine whether we deal with it or delay until the next crash.

Foreign investment’s still being treated like the villain in a bad movie, but it’s far from the root of the problem. Yes, nobody liked the optics of an offshore buyer scooping up entire condo floors. But turning off the tap of global capital didn’t flood the market with affordable homes—it just dried up another funding source. The ban was political red meat, not structural reform.

Meanwhile, campaign promises around mortgage rules sound like lifelines—but could become anchors. Longer amortizations, easier borrowing, loosened stress tests… they all sound great until you realize we’ve been here before. Lowering the bar for entry without upping supply only drives prices higher.

And Canada’s still clinging to outdated mortgage structures. Five-year terms dominate, locking borrowers into cyclical shocks. South of the border? Thirty-year fixed rates are the norm. That’s why American homeowners who locked in during Covid aren’t sweating today’s rates—while Canadians brace for a financial gut-punch on renewal.

The housing crisis is also splintering by region. Affordability isn’t just dying in Toronto and Vancouver anymore—it’s flatlining in suburbs, exurbs, and rural communities. And don’t even start on the lack of Indigenous housing infrastructure or the gaps facing Atlantic Canada and the North. Campaign platforms talk a big game, but none of it sticks unless policy adapts to Canada’s diverse, decentralized housing landscape.

That’s the heart of this election. Not just “Who’s going to win?” but “What kind of housing future are we actually voting for?” Will it be a nation that builds fast and frees up markets? Or one that doubles down on subsidies and strategies that look great in headlines but flop on the ground?

Whether you’re a homeowner, investor, renter, or real estate junkie, this isn’t just about party politics—it’s about portfolio impact. And what comes next could determine whether Gen Z ever owns a home or if Canada doubles down on becoming a nation of permanent renters.

Housing isn’t just an issue anymore. It’s the issue. And your vote? It might just be the only affordable investment left in this market.

This episode is a must-listen for anyone tracking the intersection of real estate, investing, and the upcoming federal election.

�� Listen now to find out why housing is the ballot-box issue of 2025—and how the outcome could reshape not just policy, but the very foundation of wealth creation in Canada.

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The material provided in this article is for information only and should not be treated as investment advice. For full disclaimer information, please click here



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