Housing bust challenges retirement plans

The housing bubble and unaffordable pricing have thwarted the launch plans of new households over the past decade.

The National Association of Realtors (NAR) reported the typical age of first-time buyers climbed to an all-time high of 40 years in 2025, down from around 28 years old in 1991. The share of first-time buyers dropped to a record low of 21%.

Aging baby boomers (now ages 62 to 80) own the majority of the higher-end homes, and all boomers will be 65+ in 3.7 years. By 2030, nearly 25% of Canada’s population will be over 65, up from close to 20% in a 2024 Statistics Canada report.

During the 2019-2022 FOMO (fear-of-missing-out) frenzy, some elders mortgaged their homes to give downpayments to children and grandchildren and co-signed on loans with family members.

Borrowers who secured mortgages in 2020–21 at rates under 2% are now seeing renewal offers in the 4–5% range. Equifax Canada has noted that non-mortgage delinquencies have reached levels not seen since 2009.

As of the first quarter of 2026, non-performing mortgage loans in Canada reached approximately $7.2 billion — an increase of about 150% since 2022. These are “Stage 3” loans, meaning they are more than 90 days overdue and considered in default. (source: JDL Realty).

The Office of the Superintendent of Canadian Financial Institutions (OFSI) predicts that rising residential mortgage arrears and defaults are the number one threat to Canada’s financial system (OFSI 2026-27 annual risk outlook report, April 2026).

Far from ‘free money’, the housing bubble and now bust have consequential impacts for all of us. Bubbles give, and then the busts take back.

Three-quarters of those age 55+ surveyed in an online Angus Reid Forum indicated that supporting family is cutting into their retirement savings, according to research from Bloom collected last September. At the same time, falling home prices and weak sales are thwarting downsize plans. See, ‘Not the right time’: Retirees delay downsizing plans as housing market slumps.

The kids are moved out and all that extra space in the house just isn’t worth the upkeep.

It’s an opportunity to move somewhere a little more practical, maybe a condo or bungalow, and bank the savings.

For many, that was the ideal retirement plan. But for now, it may not be a realistic one…

“Probably the biggest challenge that we’re seeing right now is really just the fact that home prices are off so much from their 2022 highs,” said Ben McCabe, founder and CEO of Bloom Finance, a Canadian fintech company that helps homeowners access home equity in retirement.

While economic forecasts predict a rebound later this year, a sizable chunk of would-be buyers want to be sure the market is at its lowest before they make their move. For sellers, these circumstances have delayed their plans.

Marco Pedri, a broker with Shoreline Realty, said many retirees he works with have been “cautious if now’s the right time” to move to a smaller living space.

“One of the biggest risks some seniors or older individuals need to consider is that the equity might have shrunk due to the prices of these homes and what they could likely sell the property for in today’s market,” he said.

“What we’re seeing is if a lot of these seniors don’t necessarily need to downsize, then … maybe now’s not the right time to sell.”

How long can they wait? As people get older, the urge or need to downsize maintenance and overhead naturally grows. The question is, who can/will buy and at what price?

Pedri said he expects an eventual uptick of seniors looking to “rightsize” their living arrangements to better fit their reality, especially with many not having the “luxury” of waiting for the market to pick up. He said some may simply feel maintenance of the property has become too much for their lifestyle to delay the move any longer.

The demographic train is chugging and will not change course for several years to come. Those who hold off listing this summer may well find lower prices and less demand next.

A wild card is how much governments and central banks step in with more ‘free money’ in the next recession, and how much that can revive demand.  With property taxes, insurance, utilities and under-employment on the rise, an urge for more efficient housing is unlikely to recede.

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Oil spikes rhyme through time

History does rhyme.

The OPEC oil embargo began in October 1973, when Arab members of OPEC announced an embargo against the United States, Canada, Japan, and Western European nations in retaliation for their support of Israel during the Yom Kippur War.

The embargo lasted until March 1974, and its effects were long-reaching:

Oil prices quadrupled almost overnight, from about $3 per barrel to nearly $12.

Long gas station lineups became a defining image of the era in North America.

To curb demand, speed limits were lowered, daylight saving time was extended, and energy conservation became a national priority in many countries.

It triggered a broader economic recession and fundamentally changed how Western nations thought about energy security.

There was a second oil shock in 1979, triggered by the Iranian Revolution, which caused another dramatic spike in oil prices and is sometimes conflated with the 1973 crisis.

Together, the two events reshaped global energy policy, spurred investment in fuel-efficient cars, and accelerated interest in alternative energy sources, which ultimately helped reduce oil demand and prices.

Similar effects are happening now. See, the U.S. president has inadvertently increased the appeal of renewable energy and EVs worldwide.The surge in the average price of gas from less than $3.00 US a gallon in January to $4.46 US is a heavy tax on already stressed consumers and businesses (below since 2021, via The Daily Shot).

At the same time, fears about how long inflationary pressures may last have caused a rise in Treasury yields (and therefore an increase in fixed borrowing rates) in most major economies (shown below since April 24), along with expectations that central banks will stay on hold before raising policy rates in 2027. We shall see.Since the late 1970s, the US Fed has not raised its policy rates during an oil price spike while unemployment was rising (Rosenberg Research), because these conditions worked to curb growth and inflation without central bank tightening. The economic downturn then led central banks to ease monetary policy, and Treasury yields to fall as the economy slumped.

While a handful of companies led another sharp rebound in stock markets since the end of March, participation has been slim: equity market breadth (the number of companies making new 52-week highs) has been among its lowest levels on record (shown below since 1985). Eventually, the weight of the world is likely to exert more force than a frothy few.

In January 1973, the Dow Jones Industrial Average peaked at an all-time high of around 1,050 before falling sharply — by late 1974 it had dropped about 45%, bottoming out around 577 in December 1974. This crash was driven by the OPEC oil embargo, stagflation (high inflation + low growth), and the Watergate political crisis, undermining confidence.

Although the stock market recovered through the mid-to-late 1970s, it never convincingly broke back above that 1973 high during the decade. It wasn’t until 1982–1983 that the market finally broke decisively above that 1973 peak and began the great bull market of the 1980s, which began from single-digit price-to-earnings multiples and rich dividend yields.

So in short, if you had invested at the 1973 peak, you essentially waited nearly 10 years to get back to even — and given inflation over that period, you actually lost significant purchasing power in real terms. It’s often cited as one of the most difficult extended periods in U.S. stock market history. That said, those who were able to deploy cash into dividend-paying equities during the 1973-74 bear market benefited for years to come. Those who live to see it will discover whether this cycle rhymes.

DDB offers a worthwhile review of economic impacts in the segment below.

We are breaking down the latest Federal Reserve split, Jamie Dimon’s private credit warning, and why the K-shaped economy is masking a hidden middle-class recession. Kitco News Anchor Jeremy Szafron sits down with Fed insider Danielle DiMartino Booth, CEO of QI Research, to expose the real data behind the Wall Street headlines. From the largest Fed committee dissent since 1992 to major private credit write-downs and hidden job losses in the labor market, DiMartino Booth explains why the central bank may be “too late” to the easing process. The discussion also covers commercial real estate stress, the freezing housing market, how AI is impacting temporary employment, and what Tether’s $20 billion physical gold hoard signals for the U.S. dollar and global capital flows. Here is a direct video link.

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The housing crisis nobody wants to talk about

This discussion covers some impactful US and Canadian housing trends and assessments.

This episode dives into the real state of the U.S. housing market, uncovering early warning signs that many buyers and investors are overlooking. From rising foreclosure risks and FHA loan pressure to affordability challenges and shifting inventory trends, we break down what the latest housing data is really showing. Housing analyst Melody Wright shares insights from past market cycles and explains why today’s conditions may signal deeper changes ahead. If you’re watching real estate trends, planning to buy, or investing in property, this conversation offers a grounded perspective on where the market could be heading. Here is a direct video link.

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