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June 26, 2026 | Canada’s Big Short Moment

Steve Saretsky

Steve Saretsky is a Vancouver residential Realtor and author behind one of Vancouver’s most popular real estate blogs, Vancity Condo Guide. Steve is widely considered a thought leader in the industry with regular appearances on BNN, CBC, CKNW, CTV and as a contributor to BC Business Magazine. Steve provides advisory services to banks, hedge funds, developers, and various types of investors.

from The Loonie Hour

The Great condo bailout has arrived, and there’s a lot happening under the hood you need to know.

Last week we learned that Mark Carney, in partnership with David Eby, announced the new Canada-British Columbia Partnership on Condo Conversion. They will leverage “innovative financing tools” to convert more than 2,200 vacant condo units into affordable homes.

“Looking out at condos that have been built, that are unoccupied, that are going to sit there potentially for another couple of years; we are going to go and use the right financing mechanisms and convert those into affordable housing so people can move in and use those,” said Carney.

Adding,

“Developers are stuck. They don’t want to sell at a loss.”

“It is a way to clear off on the books this overhang.”

WTF?

So what do we make of this, besides the obvious moral hazard.

Well, first off, the pre-sale market is on life support. New condo sales are virtually non-existent. After hitting 19,000 sales during the height of the bull market, they dropped to just 2900 last year, and are on track for even fewer this year.

It’s no different in the GTA. New condo sales are running at 40 year lows! And that’s why Doug Ford got his bailout last month. The Ontario plan is a $1.3B public-private fund through the Building Ontario Fund and High Art Capital (the former cannabis guys) to purchase blocks of unsold GTA condo inventory and convert them into roughly 2200 long-term rental units. Once the fund was set up, they partnered with the feds to remove the HST, immediately saving themselves 13% with the stroke of a pen.

The Government is ok with the political backlash because we they know have a really big problem on our hands.

Let’s not forget David Eby got elected campaigning against the Real Estate industry. Now he’s bailing them out!

This is our Big Short Moment.

This is a bailout for developers, but also the banks! Yes, we believe the former banker, Mark Carney, got the tap on the shoulder.

The Banks have massive exposure to the development industry, and that exposure has grown tremendously in recent years.

Source: Ben Rabidoux, Edge Analytics

Why do you think some of the banks have been offering blanket appraisals?

Banks have been offering mortgages to pre-sale buyers using stale appraisals (in some cases, appraisals that are two years old). This is done to maintain the illusion that values have not dropped during the construction period, allowing pre sale buyers to obtain full financing based on the pre-sale purchase price.

Here’s how it works. Imagine a scenario where you bought a pre sale condo for $1M. Construction is nearly complete so you need to get a mortgage and close on the property. However, the market is down and that condo is only worth $800k today. In theory, the banks should only be lending up to 80% loan to value on that $800k value. However, using stale appraisals, they are lending 80% of $1M, which is 100% LTV!

Why would banks do this? Because they are the construction lender on the project and they need these buyers to close otherwise they have an even bigger problem.

The problem is prices have not risen during construction. They’ve fallen, and they’ve fallen a lot.

Cue the inventory loan. This is when banks lend to the developer against the value of their unsold condos. As the developer sells off these units, the loan slowly gets repaid.

The banks have a lot of exposure here too.

Source: Ben Rabidoux, Edge Analytics

Like we said, the banks might have had a say in this “developer bailout.”

We find it rather ironic timing that OSFI, the banking regulator, simultaneously lowered the Domestic Stability Buffer for Canada’s big banks from 3.5% to 3.0% of risk-weighted assets, effective June 19, 2026.

In simple terms, it gives the banks more capital flexibility, which can make it easier to absorb bad loans or keep lending while credit losses rise.

Is it a coincidence this is all happening in the midst of a condo bailout? We think not.

There is a crisis brewing. The pre-sale market is completely broken and we’re not through the worst of it yet. More condo projects will be completing soon. More buyers will walk from deposits, and developers will continue accumulating unsold supply.

There’s 4500 vacant and unsold units in Metro Vancouver, and that number is set to rise.

And so, the Eby government, in partnership with the Carney government, are going to take about a third off the units offline, and warehouse them into a rent to own program. I’m not at the leisure of disclosing the name of this rent to own company, but here’s how it works.

This rent-to-own program is marketed as a bridge to homeownership for people who can’t qualify for a mortgage today (red flag). The government buys the home, the resident pays a 2.5% down payment and moves in. The resident still doesn’t own the home but makes monthly rent payments while also paying an additional equity payment on top.

The resident is not just paying rent, they are paying rent plus an equity contribution for a contractual term of 5 years. In 5 years they need to qualify for a mortgage on a purchase price that was contractually agreed upon from the start. The company currently models 5% annual appreciation on their website (red flag).

So if mortgage rates move higher, income doesn’t rise, or the property falls in value, the buyer can end up paying more each month without ever making it to full ownership.

The government is selling this as a feel good story. We are helping people with no down payment get access to the housing ladder. Where have we seen this before?

The reality is, these people are just the exit liquidity for the developers and the bankers, they just hope you’re not smart enough to figure it out.

If we really wanted affordable housing we’d let these unsold condos keep falling in price, or have the government pick them off in bankruptcy.

It’s funny, I was chatting with a large commercial lender this week. They do a good share of inventory loans for new condos. His words, not mine,

“If you want lower prices, speed up the court system. There’s a backlog of insolvencies just waiting to be processed.”

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June 26th, 2026

Posted In: Steve Saretsky Blog

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