
bond yields


Why Canadian fixed mortgage rates are rising again
After briefly dipping below 4%, most five-year fixed mortgage rates at Canada’s major banks are back above the 4% mark, and could stay elevated for the foreseeable future, experts say.

Markets see additional Bank of Canada rate cuts as economy slows, survey shows
Markets are widely expecting two additional quarter-point cuts from the Bank of Canada this year, according to the Bank’s first-quarter Market Participants Survey.

Mortgage Digest: Why fixed rates could drop further despite rising bond yields
Canadian bond yields have swung sharply in recent weeks, adding uncertainty to the outlook for fixed mortgage rates.

Trump retreats from global tariff plan, but Canada gets no relief
In a stunning about-face, U.S. President Donald Trump announced a 90-day suspension of his sweeping new “reciprocal” tariffs on most nations—but not on Canada.

Tariffs, tech, and Tesla: What’s driving the current market chaos
What a week we saw in the markets. Weeks like this are only rivalled by a few moments in history—the COVID-19 meltdown in 2020, the Global Financial Crisis in 2008, and the tech wreck in 2001.

Three big banks cut mortgage rates this week, one drops 5-year fixed to 3.99%
Following dramatic swings in the bond market—and broader economic uncertainty sparked by President Donald Trump’s tariff threats—three of Canada’s big banks have slashed their fixed mortgage rates this week.

Mortgage Digest: 5 big banks cut fixed mortgage rates following bond yield drop
Mortgage providers nationwide have been gradually lowering their fixed mortgage rates, including five of the country’s Big 6 banks.

U.S. inflation hits 3%, Fed rate cut likely delayed until December
U.S. headline inflation rose for the third straight month, raising the likelihood that the next Fed rate cut won’t happen until later this year.

Fixed vs. variable: Why variable-rate mortgages are making a comeback
After the Bank of Canada’s latest rate reduction 5-year variable mortgage rates are now on par with their fixed-rate counterparts, raising the question: Is now the time to go variable?