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BobTheSubgenius

(12,242 posts)
4. Housing prices largely reflect consumer confidence.
Fri Apr 24, 2026, 12:56 PM
Yesterday

More people now think that the current (or previous, depending on POV) market prices are unsustainable, often because a dip in income or employment levels has occurred, are coming, or are suspected to be.

The same thing is happening here - Vancouver BC - after nothing but prince increases for years. The average cost of a single-family home here is now BARELY under $2 million. How is that sustainable? Anecdotally, I got a very good deal on the townhouse my wife and I now live in the summer of 2022. Starting with the market value instead of actual purchase price, and following the upward trend of this complex, I made a paper profit of about $60-80K over the next couple of years.

With the latest "correction," this place is now barely above my purchase price. People that are seemingly unable to grasp the market dynamics are still asking almost what the peak prices were, and are usually getting ZERO walkthroughs, or even any interest at all during open houses. A 90 day listing will come onto the market and then expire without even a nibble.

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