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This Week’s Top Stories Include How Canada’s Immigration Stimulus Backfired for GDP Growth, Surging Insolvencies, & Toronto ...
Canada’s blowout job report in June looks like a headfake after last month’s erosion. Statistics Canada (Stat Can) data shows ...
Canada’s big bet on lofty immigration targets was meant to boost GDP. But it flopped—OECD data shows Canada’s growth lagged ...
Canadian consumers have become world-renowned for their ability to juggle astronomical amounts of debt. Those days are coming ...
Canada's GDP is driven more by real estate's theoretical rents, Toronto new home sales crash, and steel tariffs boost new ...
Greater Toronto real estate took one step forward and two steps back last month. TRREB data shows home sales climbed in July, ...
Toronto real estate saw more unusual activity—new home prices increased despite historically weak sales and record inventory ...
The Bank of Canada held rates at its July meeting—a widely expected move in response to market uncertainty and rising ...
Canadian steel tariffs might save jobs but it's causing a bigger drag on the economy—especially in real estate, hitting steel ...
Cracks are forming under the surface of Canada’s job market. The country’s job vacancy rate has plunged to an 8-year low, and well below the pre-pandemic rate. The problem looks even more serious when ...
Over 1 in 10 dollars of Canadian GDP growth came from imputed rents—a theoretical amount homeowners would pay if they rented their own home.
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