With this Vancouver real estate cycle coming to an end, and home sales across Greater Vancouver sliding to an 18 Year low in July, liquidity is evaporating rather quickly. This spells trouble for housing speculators, or housing flippers, which up until recently, have made out like bandits. When times are good and credit is easily available a rising market lifts all boats. Increased volume and quick turnover creates a welcoming environment for house flipping, which is generally dependent on a liquid market in order to extract profits and pay off any short term loans. However, when the credit tides rollout, only then can you see who’s been swimming naked. With sales falling and total loans across Vancouver dropping 18% in 2017, market liquidity is drying up. As a result, house flipping activity (which is considered a house bough and re-sold within 24 months) has dropped, falling to its lowest monthly total since January 2015. It was the fewest house flips for the month of July since 2012. 



All of BC Now Subject to Aboriginal Title Claims
There is a lot happening right now: inflation surprised higher, the Bank of Canada faces pressure ahead of its next
