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The home at 103 Summerhill Ave., in Toronto. Mshati Productions
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This week: The real estate market shows a promising sign, and controversial reverse mortgages explode in Canada. Plus, collapsing appliance stores leave customers in the lurch, and one property worth a look.
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Home sales up 5.5% in May, showing signs of strength
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A realtor’s sign outside a home for sale on Kingswood Road in Toronto, in May. Fred Lum/The Globe and Mail
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While homeowners cry foul over depressed prices, some buyers are using the market slump to score a little more bang for their buck. National home sales jumped 5.5 per cent in May,
the largest increase since November, 2024, when interest rate cuts brought buyers off the sidelines. Purchases were up 10 per cent in Toronto and 8.8 per cent in Ontario since April, according to the Canadian Real Estate Association.
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It’s a promising sign for the slow market but, as Rachelle Younglai reports,
Canada is nowhere near a full bounce-back. The 38,000 sales made in May is still 5.6 per cent lower than that month’s 10-year average, with interest rate uncertainty keeping some potential buyers in a holding pattern. Still, last month’s jump shows homeowners might be coming around to the new normal, and accepting that their properties are not worth what they were a few years ago, CREA’s senior economist Shaun Cathcart told Rachelle. So, if you’re looking to buy, now might be a better time to seal the deal.
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Appliance and furniture stores are collapsing, and homeowners are paying the price
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Cathy Proctor stands where her custom 36-inch stove was supposed to go, before her supplier began insolvency proceedings and left her out $15,000. Todd Korol/The Globe and Mail
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That’s what happened to Cathy Proctor, her sisters and brother-in-law, who ordered $30,000 worth of custom kitchen appliances to renovate a rural home near Calgary into a co-operative living space. But months before their dream of growing old together was set to begin, supplier Coast Wholesale Appliances began insolvency proceedings. Now, they have no appliances and, so far, no recourse to get their $15,000 deposit back.
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As Mariya Postelnyak and Zarif Sinha report, the fallout has spotlighted how weak Ontario and Alberta’s consumer protections are in comparison to B.C.’s. “Everybody just deposits on these big items, they have no rights, really. They just get in the back of the line,” Proctor said. But, as experts point out, there are ways to protect yourself. Read the full story
before you take the plunge on a new appliance.
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This week’s lowest fixed and variable mortgage rates in Canada
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Canada’s reverse mortgage market has quietly grown to almost $11-billion
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Thinking about taking out a reverse mortgage? You’re hardly alone, as more and more older homeowners turn to the controversial financial product to access their equity. Canadians now owe around $10.9-billion in reverse mortgages, a figure which has risen sharply by an annual average of 20.9 per cent since 2016.
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The arrangement allows seniors to access funds without selling or downsizing, and to keep ownership of their homes, while the lender registers a mortgage against the home’s title. As Hanif Bayat writes, plenty of criticism of reverse mortgages is based on misconceptions. But there are also very real concerns to worry about, like the relatively high interest rates and the fact they can erode inheritances left to children.
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So before you take out a reverse mortgage, tap the brakes, read Hanif’s full analysis and take a closer look about what is fact and what is fiction.
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‘Barkitecture’ isn’t just for the doghouse anymore
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Interior designer Kayla Daniels says dog spas, like this one she designed for her rescue dogs Laffy and Taffy, are becoming more popular among her clients. Kayla Daniels/Supplied
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More and more pet-owners are designing their homes with their furry friends in mind as ‘barkitecture’ helps make life a little less ruff for family members of all species. It’s part of the growing pet wellness trend that’s adding luxury to our four-legged friends’ liv |