What The 1990s Real Estate Crisis Can Teach Us About Today's Canadian Real Estate Market

What The 1990s Real Estate Crisis Can Teach Us About Today’s Canadian Real Estate Market

GUEST SUBMISSION: Picture a time characterized by aggressive lending practices, substantial value adjustments, a severe liquidity shortage and high borrowing rates, except it’s not the 1990s – it’s 2024.

What was considered a historically turbulent time for Canada’s commercial real estate industry has quickly gained traction as a blueprint for what we are seeing today and what we can anticipate in the months ahead. Yesterday’s rapidly rising interest rate environment, coupled with today’s substantial losses in loan portfolios begs the question – could this time be different?

While there are several indicators to suggest a similar storyline is at play, I’m here to tell you the good news – this version isn’t set to last as long or be nearly as catastrophic.

Compared to 30 years ago, many of these factors are now met by modern-day supply shortages bred from record-high immigration and steady employment rates that continue to fuel Canada’s ownership and rental markets.

I can’t help but reflect on earlier days in my career, with thousands of defaulted units in my portfolio at CMHC, many being residential defaults including single-family mortgages.

Today, we’re witnessing the concentration of defaults confined to densified condominium and large-scale projects, and are holding our collective breath for what’s to come in the office sector.

Comments

  • disposable Temporary Email | Sep 28,2024

    Nice post. I learn something totally new and challenging on websites

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