Podcast Library

Streetwise Wealth Podcast

Financing, market strategy, and wealth-building episodes for Canadian real estate investors.

98 episodes 21+ hours 33 expert guests 5 pillars
Mortgage Plus Improvements: How to Finance Property Upgrades Without Draining Capital 6 min Video
EP 100 · May 2026
Mortgage Plus Improvements: How to Finance Property Upgrades Without Draining Capital

Dalia Barsoum explains how real estate investors can scale their portfolios without draining capital by using the Mortgage Plus Improvements product. This financing tool allows investors to roll improvement costs—such as adding an ADU, laneway house, garden suite, or legalizing a basement—directly into a purchase or refinance loan at competitive prime lending rates. Unlike traditional construction loans, this product does not hold back funds for construction liens. Dalia walks through a real-world example involving a $500,000 property with $200,000 in planned renovations, explaining how the lender advances funds in stages based on the as-complete value. She outlines four critical rules: the maximum loan amount is 80% of the as-complete appraised value; payments are interest-only during the improvement phase; the property must be functional with kitchen, bathroom, and bedroom; and permits must be approved before advancing funds for additions. Once work is complete, the loan converts to a standard 30-year mortgage. Investors can also tap into extra equity if the as-completed value exceeds initial estimates.

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Mortgage Plus Improvements: How to Finance Property Upgrades Without Draining Capital 6 min EP 100 Video
EP 100 · 6 min · May 2026
Mortgage Plus Improvements: How to Finance Property Upgrades Without Draining Capital
Dalia Barsoum explains how real estate investors can scale their portfolios without draining capital by using the Mortgage Plus Improvements product. This financing tool allows investors to roll improvement costs—such as adding an ADU, laneway house, garden suite, or legalizing a basement—directly into a purchase or refinance loan at competitive prime lending rates. Unlike traditional construction loans, this product does not hold back funds for construction liens. Dalia walks through a real-world example involving a $500,000 property with $200,000 in planned renovations, explaining how the lender advances funds in stages based on the as-complete value. She outlines four critical rules: the maximum loan amount is 80% of the as-complete appraised value; payments are interest-only during the improvement phase; the property must be functional with kitchen, bathroom, and bedroom; and permits must be approved before advancing funds for additions. Once work is complete, the loan converts to a standard 30-year mortgage. Investors can also tap into extra equity if the as-completed value exceeds initial estimates.
Wealth Foundations Education
The Strategic Break: When Breaking Your Mortgage Makes Financial Sense 8 min EP 099 Video
EP 099 · 8 min · Sep 2025
The Strategic Break: When Breaking Your Mortgage Makes Financial Sense
Dalia Barsoum explains why conventional wisdom about never breaking a mortgage with a penalty isn't always correct. She introduces the "strategic break," a debt restructuring strategy designed for Canadian real estate investors and homeowners experiencing cash flow pressure from variable rates, high-rate renewals, or expensive private mortgages. Using a clear $500,000 mortgage example at 6.5% versus 5.25%, she demonstrates how to calculate the break-even point by dividing the $15,000 penalty cost by the $370 monthly savings to determine it takes 40 months to recoup the fee. She also explains that the most powerful application of this strategy is "graduating your mortgage"—moving from a high-interest private or alternative lender to a major bank at a much lower rate through comprehensive debt restructuring and credit score improvement. The episode emphasizes that you should not assume your current expensive mortgage is your only option, and encourages viewers to get a second opinion from a qualified mortgage advisor.
Wealth Foundations Education
4 Advanced Mortgage Products to Scale Your Canadian Real Estate Portfolio 26 min EP 098 Video
EP 098 · 26 min · May 2026
4 Advanced Mortgage Products to Scale Your Canadian Real Estate Portfolio
Dalia Barsoum shares four strategic mortgage products that help Canadian real estate investors scale beyond the typical plateau. First, the readvanceable mortgage combines a traditional mortgage with a home equity line of credit, automatically growing your available capital as you pay down principal once the loan reaches sixty-five percent of the property value. Second, mortgage plus improvements lets investors roll renovation costs into a single loan at prime rates, preserving cash for projects like adding an accessory dwelling unit or legalizing a basement. Third, the flip or BRRR mortgage offers short-term financing based on after-repair value, enabling speed and low down payments for experienced investors who renovate and sell or refinance. Finally, CMHC MLI Select provides multifamily financing for buildings with five or more units, offering up to ninety-five percent loan-to-value and amortizations up to fifty years, though it requires navigating affordability, energy, and accessibility point requirements along with hidden qualification costs.
Wealth Foundations Education
Property Densification Financing: How to Fund Your Multi-Unit Conversion Under Bill 23 7 min EP 097 Video
EP 097 · 7 min · Jan 2025
Property Densification Financing: How to Fund Your Multi-Unit Conversion Under Bill 23
Dalia Barsoum explains financing strategies for Ontario real estate investors looking to densify residential properties under Bill 23. She emphasizes the importance of ordering an as-is and as-complete appraisal before starting any project to validate future value and projected rental income, ensuring you can refinance upon completion. For properties with four units or fewer, residential financing up to 80% loan-to-value is available, while investors who have maxed out residential capacity can switch to commercial financing based on the property's income rather than personal income. She details construction loan structures, noting that lenders typically offer 75% of the current value and 75% of construction costs—though these can go higher depending on experience and location. These loans are interest-only at prime plus 2-3%, often with interest taken upfront, plus lender and broker fees. Lenders also hold back 10% of draws until occupancy. Dalia recommends combining construction financing with creative strategies like vendor takebacks or investor capital rather than tying up personal lines of credit, and stresses planning for worst-case scenarios to protect your capital.
Wealth Foundations Education
Fixed vs Variable Mortgage 2026: The New Math for Canadian Real Estate 8 min EP 096 Video
EP 096 · 8 min · Apr 2026
Fixed vs Variable Mortgage 2026: The New Math for Canadian Real Estate
The episode tackles the fixed versus variable mortgage debate in 2026. Dalia Barsoum explains that after months of favoring short-term and variable rates, the smart money has shifted back to the 5-year fixed option. Using the Canadian government yield curve, she shows how geopolitical uncertainty—specifically the Iran war—has driven bond yields upward, signaling that borrowing costs will stay higher for longer. She walks through wholesale forecast curves for the prime rate and 4-year swap, then translates them into retail rate projections: the 5-year fixed is sitting near 4.29% today but is forecast to reach 5.39% in five years, while the 5-year variable starts around 3.7% and is projected to climb to 4.65%. Because rates are expected to rise steadily, locking in a 5-year fixed is mathematically projected to be the best financial shield. However, Dalia warns that the biggest influencer in rate choice is your property plan. If you intend to sell, refinance, or undertake major renovations before the term ends, breaking a 5-year fixed mortgage could trigger a massive Interest Rate Differential penalty costing tens of thousands of dollars, making a shorter-term fixed or variable rate the smarter choice.
Market Pulse Market Commentary
5 Strategies to Use Your RRSP, TFSA & LIRA for Real Estate Investing 22 min EP 095 Video
EP 095 · 22 min · Mar 2026
5 Strategies to Use Your RRSP, TFSA & LIRA for Real Estate Investing
Dalia Barsoum explains five legal strategies Canadian investors can use to deploy registered account funds into real estate. She begins with the ultimate house hack, combining the $60,000 Home Buyers' Plan withdrawal with the $40,000 First Home Savings Account for up to $100,000 in tax-free capital per person, noting the CRA's 4-year reset rule for former homeowners. She then covers non-arm's length mortgages, where you lend to yourself from your RRSP or TFSA to become your own bank, unlocking a dual tax benefit while requiring CMHC insurance and an approved trust administrator. For investors with locked-in accounts, arm's length private lending to unrelated borrowers offers 8% to 16% returns without mortgage insurance. Strategy four covers borrowing other people's registered funds for your deals, and strategy five explores passive MIC or fund investing. Dalia concludes with a risk breakdown of direct lending versus funds and clear next steps to implement these strategies.
Wealth Foundations Education
5 Critical Shifts Every Real Estate Investor Must Know in 2026 19 min EP 094 Video
EP 094 · 19 min · Feb 2026
5 Critical Shifts Every Real Estate Investor Must Know in 2026
The era of passive appreciation in Ontario real estate ended in January 2026, giving way to an era of structural reinvention. Dalia Barsoum explains that investors can no longer rely on market appreciation; they must force value through debt restructuring, densification, and precise risk management. She reveals five critical shifts defining the year. First, the mortgage renewal wall is hitting 60% of Canadians who secured low rates in 2020 and 2021, causing payments to jump 15% to 20%. Second, Bill 23 enables densification via garden suites and ADUs without development charges, but investors must match their build strategy to their experience and secure proper financing. Third, Bill 60 aims to speed up evictions, yet lenders still price tenant risk into approvals using current rents and longer timelines. Fourth, the federal cap on international students is softening demand in Waterloo, London, and Windsor, pushing owners to pivot toward young professionals. Finally, rising inventory marks the return of a buyer's market where investors can negotiate prices and insert financing clauses. Success in 2026 requires manufactured wins.
Market Pulse Market Commentary
Buying in a Holding Company? You Still Need Personal Income to Qualify 9 min EP 093 Video
EP 093 · 9 min · Jan 2026
Buying in a Holding Company? You Still Need Personal Income to Qualify
Dalia Barsoum debunks the common misconception that buying a residential rental property through a holding company eliminates the need for personal income qualification. In this episode, she explains that for any residential property—defined as one to four units, and sometimes five or six—Canadian lenders always require the borrower to qualify personally, regardless of whether the title is held personally or corporately. Dalia breaks down how lenders evaluate four main income categories: employees, self-employed individuals, retirees, and other income sources. She highlights the self-employed "tax trap," where aggressive write-offs reduce net income and borrowing power, and contrasts how banks and alternative lenders view business income differently through add-backs and stated income programs. The episode also covers how retirees can use pension and RRIF income, how investment income like dividends can support qualification, and why investors should engage their mortgage broker and accountant before filing taxes. Finally, Dalia shares a critical pro tip: keep your down payment "boring" by minimizing sources and account movement to avoid unnecessary underwriting complications.
Wealth Foundations Education
Buying Property with Partners: The Hidden Financing Traps 8 min EP 092 Video
EP 092 · 8 min · Jan 2026
Buying Property with Partners: The Hidden Financing Traps
In this episode, Dalia Barsoum explains the critical importance of deal structure when financing residential rental properties in Canada. Deal structure refers to how you hold title—whether in your personal name, a holding company, or an operating company—and whether you are buying alone, with a spouse, or with joint venture partners. The structure affects not only your current mortgage approval but your future borrowing capacity. Dalia highlights two major financing traps: the "weakest link" rule, where one partner's poor credit can disqualify the entire group, and the "100% liability" rule, where lenders may attribute 100% of a joint mortgage debt to you while only recognizing your percentage share of the rental income. She also clarifies why operating companies often face lending restrictions compared to holding companies. Using a practical example of a couple buying with partners and later trying to purchase alone, she demonstrates how improper structure can destroy debt-to-income ratios. The episode emphasizes consulting a mortgage broker who specializes in income property financing to validate assumptions and plan for long-term portfolio growth.
Wealth Foundations Education
How Mortgage Lenders Really Read Your Credit Report: Beyond the Score 7 min EP 091 Video
EP 091 · 7 min · Jan 2026
How Mortgage Lenders Really Read Your Credit Report: Beyond the Score
Your credit score is only half the story when applying for a rental property mortgage in Canada. In this episode, Dalia Barsoum breaks down exactly how lenders analyze your credit report, revealing why a high number alone won't guarantee approval. She explains that while banks typically require a minimum score of 650, alternative lenders can work with scores as low as 500 and help you improve over six to twelve months. The real focus, however, is on the content of your report. Dalia details three critical factors: utilization, payment history, and collections. She introduces the 70% utilization rule for credit cards and lines of credit, noting that exceeding this threshold can pressure your score and raise red flags with lenders. She also stresses the severity of missing mortgage payments compared to other late payments, and shares a cautionary tale about a small unpaid utility bill that derailed a client's deal. To stay ahead, she recommends proactively monitoring your credit through a paid Equifax service every quarter or six months, ensuring no surprises surface when it's time to finance your next investment.
Wealth Foundations Education
4 Ways to Consolidate Debt Without Selling Your Home 22 min EP 090 Video
EP 090 · 22 min · Jan 2026
4 Ways to Consolidate Debt Without Selling Your Home
Dalia Barsoum hosts this educational episode from the Streetwise 10 series, focusing on how Canadian homeowners can consolidate high-interest consumer debt without selling their property. She opens by explaining the "minimum payment trap" and reframes debt consolidation around cash flow optimization rather than simply chasing lower interest rates. The core framework is the "Debt Detox," which moves bad consumer debt into good mortgage debt to create financial stability. She details four primary strategies. First is the mortgage refinance, which she breaks into three structural approaches: the add-on method (a parallel mortgage at current rates), blend and extend (a weighted rate and term with your existing lender), and break and roll (switching to a new lender entirely). Second is the HELOC, which keeps the first mortgage intact and offers flexible, interest-only payments on drawn funds, though it carries variable rate risk. Third is the second mortgage, often with private lenders, which she advises treating as a temporary stepping stone with a validated exit strategy. Fourth is loan restructuring for those with limited equity. Finally, she warns against the "reload" pitfall—running up new consumer debt after consolidation—and recommends carving out savings from reduced payments to build wealth rather than fund lifestyle inflation.
Wealth Foundations Education
Private Money for Real Estate Investors: Financing When Banks Say No (Strategy 6/6) 6 min EP 089 Video
EP 089 · 6 min · Dec 2025
Private Money for Real Estate Investors: Financing When Banks Say No (Strategy 6/6)
In this episode, Dalia Barsoum breaks down private money as the sixth proven money strategy for purchasing your first investment property. Private money refers to capital sourced outside of traditional banks and alternative lenders, typically arranged through a mortgage broker or your personal network. These short-term loans—often lasting three months to two years—offer speed and require minimal documentation, but they come at a premium, with interest rates reaching 13% to 14% plus additional lender and broker fees. Dalia explains that private money is best suited for temporary financing on value-add projects like flips or renovation-to-refinance deals, where the property's improved value creates a clear exit. Using it for long-term holds will quickly erode cash flow. She details two common structures: extracting trapped equity from an existing property via a private loan, and layering a private second mortgage behind a bank first to bridge a down payment gap. She also warns against 100% private financing, noting that traditional lenders demand skin in the game, and closing fully private is risky and expensive. The episode concludes with a recap of all six money strategies and a reminder to always have a clear exit strategy before taking on private capital.
Wealth Foundations Education
Vendor Take-Back Mortgage (VTB): How to Buy Real Estate With $0 Down | Money Strategy 5/6 6 min EP 088 Video
EP 088 · 6 min · Dec 2025
Vendor Take-Back Mortgage (VTB): How to Buy Real Estate With $0 Down | Money Strategy 5/6
Dalia Barsoum explains the Vendor Take-Back Mortgage (VTB), a creative seller financing strategy used when traditional banks require too much down payment or say no entirely. In a VTB, the property seller loans the buyer money to complete the purchase, with the mortgage secured in either first or second position depending on negotiation and motivation. Dalia illustrates three structures using a $600,000 example: a gap-fill approach where the buyer contributes 10% and the seller provides a 10% VTB in second position behind a bank first mortgage; a 90% VTB in first position with the buyer putting down 10%; and a zero-down method using a 70% private first mortgage combined with a 30% seller VTB. She emphasizes that terms like interest and balloon payments are fully negotiable. However, she issues a strong warning that a VTB is temporary financing, typically lasting six months to two years, and must be paired with a clear exit strategy such as refinancing or increasing the property's value. Without a plan to pay the seller back at maturity, investors risk default when the seller refuses to renew and no other lender assumes the position.
Wealth Foundations Education
How to Turn Home Equity Into a Down Payment Using a Readvanceable Mortgage | Money Strategy 1/6 6 min EP 087 Video
EP 087 · 6 min · Dec 2025
How to Turn Home Equity Into a Down Payment Using a Readvanceable Mortgage | Money Strategy 1/6
Dalia Barsoum kicks off her six-part money strategies series by tackling the number one reason aspiring investors never buy their first property: the belief that they don't have enough money. In this episode, she reveals how a Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) can transform your existing home equity into a powerful funding source for a down payment. Using a clear $700,000 property example, Dalia breaks down the 80% rule to show exactly how much capital you can unlock—illustrating how a home with a $500,000 mortgage can yield $60,000 in accessible equity. She explains why a HELOC functions like a credit card, where you only pay interest on the specific amount you use rather than the total limit. Dalia then introduces the readvanceable mortgage, a dynamic product where your available credit automatically increases as you pay down your mortgage principal, without requiring requalification. She also addresses the risks, emphasizing the importance of stress-testing your payments at higher interest rates and factoring HELOC carrying costs into your investment property cash flow. The episode concludes with a look at which Canadian lenders offer these flexible products, making this a must-watch for any homeowner ready to become an investor.
Wealth Foundations Education
Fixed vs. Variable Rate Mortgages: 4 Strategic Rules for Canadian Real Estate Investors 11 min EP 086 Video
EP 086 · 11 min · Dec 2025
Fixed vs. Variable Rate Mortgages: 4 Strategic Rules for Canadian Real Estate Investors
In this episode of The Streetwise 10, host Dalia Barsoum tackles the classic investor dilemma: fixed or variable rate mortgage? She argues that searching for the lowest rate or predicting the Bank of Canada's next move is the wrong framework. Instead, she presents four strategic filters to protect your portfolio. First, match your mortgage term to your property strategy because breaking a fixed rate early can trigger massive IRD penalties, while variable penalties are capped at three months' interest. Second, avoid the "top-up myth" by setting up a secured line of credit before locking into a fixed term, since future equity access is never guaranteed. Third, hedge at the portfolio level by fixing rates on stabilized, long-term holds to buffer against market shocks. Fourth, know your product types: adjustable rates raise payments immediately, variable rates risk trigger points at renewal, and hybrid mortgages let you blend terms for granular control. Ultimately, the decision is about risk management and aligning with your goals, not saving a few dollars monthly.
Wealth Foundations Education
How to Use Home Equity to Buy a Rental Property in Canada | Streetwise 10 12 min EP 085 Video
EP 085 · 12 min · Dec 2025
How to Use Home Equity to Buy a Rental Property in Canada | Streetwise 10
Dalia Barsoum explains how Canadian real estate investors can transform underutilized home equity into an active wealth-building tool. She begins by outlining the 80% refinance limit and demonstrates how to calculate accessible equity using a $1.2 million property example. The episode spotlights the readvanceable mortgage, a two-in-one product combining a traditional mortgage with a HELOC that automatically increases your credit limit as you pay down principal. Dalia details which major Canadian lenders offer this product and the two paths to access it. She then breaks down the winning deployment strategy: using your line of credit only for the down payment, closing costs, and renovations while placing a new mortgage on the rental property for the remaining balance. She concludes by addressing three common fears around extra debt, callable loans, and rising interest rates, and stresses the importance of setting up this financing tool proactively when your income and debt ratios are strongest.
Wealth Foundations Education
How to Scale Your Real Estate Portfolio Without Hitting the Financing Wall 11 min EP 084 Video
EP 084 · 11 min · Nov 2025
How to Scale Your Real Estate Portfolio Without Hitting the Financing Wall
Dalia Barsoum explains why Canadian real estate investors hit the "financing wall" after acquiring two or three properties and how to strategically overcome it. The wall exists because A-lenders often use only 50% of rental income in debt ratio calculations and enforce internal portfolio caps, sometimes limiting investors to four or five doors. To break through, investors must follow a four-stage financing journey. Stage one involves maximizing borrowing power within the A-lender space by understanding each lender's unique internal rules, such as line-of-credit assumptions and seasoning requirements. Stage two pivots to alternative B-lenders, who use 80% to 100% of rental income and accommodate self-employed borrowers, albeit at rates roughly 1% higher. Stage three leverages commercial financing for residential properties—from single-family homes to fourplexes—qualifying based on the property's net operating income rather than personal capacity. Stage four, private money, should only be used as an absolute last resort. Barsoum emphasizes that working with a qualified income property mortgage broker to map out this strategy from the start is the key to avoiding surprises and scaling indefinitely.
Wealth Foundations Education
Financing Your First Rental Property: The 3-Pillar Strategy | Streetwise Wealth 15 min EP 083 Video
EP 083 · 15 min · Nov 2025
Financing Your First Rental Property: The 3-Pillar Strategy | Streetwise Wealth
Dalia Barsoum breaks down the strategic framework for financing your first rental property in Canada using a three-pillar approach. In Pillar One, she explains how lenders evaluate your personal financial house, including the 680-plus credit score threshold for A-lender rates, income documentation strategies for salaried versus self-employed borrowers, and flexible down payment sources beyond personal savings. Pillar Two covers the property's viability, revealing how lenders apply different rental income calculations—using 50, 80, or 100 percent of rent—and why selecting an appraiser who understands investment properties is critical to supporting your property's value. Pillar Three addresses deal structure, comparing personal versus corporate ownership and partner involvement, emphasizing the need for your accountant and mortgage broker to collaborate before you firm up your offer. Finally, Dalia warns against the rate trap, illustrating how the lowest-rate lender can restrict your future borrowing capacity or trap pre-construction equity by lending on the lower of purchase price or appraised value. She concludes by introducing the complimentary Streetwise Financing Roadmap to help investors preserve borrowing power and scale strategically.
Wealth Foundations Education
OSFI's New Rental Financing Rule: Impact on Canadian Real Estate Investors (2025) 11 min EP 082 Video
EP 082 · 11 min · Oct 2025
OSFI's New Rental Financing Rule: Impact on Canadian Real Estate Investors (2025)
Dalia Barsoum explains OSFI's upcoming bank capital rule and its practical impact on Canadian real estate investors. While OSFI has clarified that this is not a fundamental change to borrower mortgage guidelines, it introduces a new behind-the-scenes classification test. Lenders will calculate an investor's residual personal income after covering existing mortgages and debts, then compare it to the total income required to approve a new rental property deal. If the residual income covers less than 50% of the required total income, the property will be flagged as income-producing, requiring the bank to set aside capital reserves. This could result in modest rate premiums of 5 to 10 basis points and tighter guidelines from conservative A-lenders, potentially limiting the number of rentals per client. The rule takes effect in January 2026, creating a window for investors to act under current guidelines. Strategic financing and experienced mortgage brokerage support will be essential for navigating these changes and optimizing portfolio growth.
Market Pulse Market Commentary
,How Much Down Payment Do You Really Need for a Rental Property in Canada? | Streetwise Wealth 18 min EP 081 Video
EP 081 · 18 min · Oct 2025
,How Much Down Payment Do You Really Need for a Rental Property in Canada? | Streetwise Wealth
In this episode of the Streetwise 10 series, host Dalia Barsoum breaks down exactly how much down payment Canadian real estate investors truly need to purchase a rental property. While many focus on the standard 20% rule for non-owner-occupied residential properties with one to four units, Dalia explains why this is only the starting point. She details the house hacking strategy, where occupying one unit allows investors to put as little as 5% down using the insured mortgage sliding scale calculation—5% on the first $500,000 and 10% on the remainder, up to a $1.5 million price ceiling. The video also explores three critical factors that can increase your required down payment: your personal income and debt qualification, the property type triggering commercial financing requirements, and deal complexity such as student rentals or Airbnb investments that push lenders to require 25% or more. Finally, Dalia addresses creative zero-down strategies like vendor takebacks and joint ventures—warning beginners to master fundamentals first—and closes with essential budgeting guidance for closing costs in Ontario.
Wealth Foundations Education
Corporation vs. Personal Name for Rental Property in Canada | Streetwise 10 14 min EP 080 Video
EP 080 · 14 min · Sep 2025
Corporation vs. Personal Name for Rental Property in Canada | Streetwise 10
In this episode of the Streetwise 10 series, host Dalia Barsoum breaks down one of the most important decisions Canadian real estate investors face before closing: whether to hold a rental property in a corporation or personal name. She outlines the advantages of personal ownership, including simplicity, lower setup costs, better residential mortgage rates, and access to strategic products like secured lines of credit. However, she warns that personal ownership exposes all personal assets to liability and can push rental cash flow into higher marginal tax brackets. Conversely, holding properties in a corporation offers liability protection and opportunities for tax deferral and income splitting, though it comes with higher legal and accounting costs, potential rate premiums, and limited financing product availability for residential properties. Barsoum debunks two common myths—corporations do not shield investors from mortgage liability because lenders require personal guarantees, and corporate mortgages may still appear on personal credit reports depending on the lender. Her rule of thumb is to hold your first one or two properties personally, but consider incorporating when scaling, buying commercial properties with five or more units, pursuing complex strategies like flipping, or bringing on partners. She emphasizes collaborating with a qualified accountant and mortgage broker to choose the right structure.
Wealth Foundations Education
Interest-Only Switch: Unlock Cash Flow with an Advancable Mortgage 8 min EP 079 Video
EP 079 · 8 min · Sep 2025
Interest-Only Switch: Unlock Cash Flow with an Advancable Mortgage
This episode explores the "Interest-Only Switch," a temporary mortgage strategy for homeowners and investors needing immediate cash flow relief. The host explains how switching from principal and interest payments to interest-only payments can act as a short-term bridge until your financial situation stabilizes. The video covers two scenarios: moving from a B lender or alternative lender to a private mortgage with interest-only payments for 12 to 24 months, and—most powerfully—converting a traditional bank mortgage into an advancable mortgage paired with a secured line of credit. Using a detailed example of a $625,000 property carrying a $500,000 mortgage, the episode breaks down how restructuring the loan into a roughly $406,000 line of credit (65% of the property value) and a $93,000 mortgage can reduce monthly payments from $2,744 to $2,359, unlocking roughly $385 per month. The host also highlights the Streetwise advantages of this approach: you gain the option to pay principal when cash flow allows, you can re-access paid-down funds, and you can convert the line of credit back into a fixed or variable mortgage at no extra cost whenever you're ready.
Wealth Foundations Tutorial
Amortization Stretch Strategy: Lower Mortgage Payments and Boost Cash Flow 5 min EP 078 Video
EP 078 · 5 min · Sep 2025
Amortization Stretch Strategy: Lower Mortgage Payments and Boost Cash Flow
This episode explains the "amortization stretch," a strategy where homeowners and investors extend their mortgage amortization period to reduce monthly payments and improve immediate cash flow. Using a $500,000 mortgage at 5.25% as an example, stretching the amortization from 25 to 30 years lowers the monthly payment from $2,980 to $2,744—a savings of $236 per month. While this creates breathing room in the budget, it also increases the total interest paid over the life of the loan. The "streetwise way" to handle this tradeoff is to use prepayment privileges to shorten the effective amortization. This includes making annual lump-sum payments directly toward the principal or switching to an accelerated bi-weekly payment schedule. The strategy should be viewed as a temporary detour during a cash flow crunch rather than a permanent change. To implement it, start by calling your current lender to ask if they will extend the amortization without requiring a full refinance. If the lender insists on a refinance, seek a second opinion from a qualified mortgage advisor to explore alternatives such as switching to a new lender at a lower rate with potential cashback offers.
Wealth Foundations Education
Private Lending 101: How to Safely 'Be the Bank' and Protect Your Capital 6 min EP 076 Video
EP 076 · 6 min · Aug 2025
Private Lending 101: How to Safely 'Be the Bank' and Protect Your Capital
Dalia Barsoum breaks down the "Be the Bank" private lending strategy for Canadian real estate investors. She explains how investors can generate passive income by lending personal capital, secured line of credit funds, or registered funds as loans backed by real estate, typically as a first or second mortgage. In this role, you act like a bank, earning fixed monthly interest and sometimes an upfront lender fee. Dalia warns that the most common mistake is entering a handshake deal without proper due diligence or legal documentation. She outlines three essential pro tips for protecting your capital. First, always work with a real estate lawyer experienced in private lending to draft a bulletproof mortgage commitment. Second, secure your loan with a registered mortgage rather than a promissory note, which remains unsecured and lacks the legal power to help you recoup funds quickly in a default. Third, never put all your eggs in one basket—especially by using a secured line of credit—because a single default could leave you paying interest on borrowed money while waiting for recovery. Always validate both the property value and the borrower's ability to repay before lending.
Wealth Foundations Education
Rent-to-Own Deal Structure for Canadian Real Estate Investors 5 min EP 075 Video
EP 075 · 5 min · Aug 2025
Rent-to-Own Deal Structure for Canadian Real Estate Investors
The rent-to-own strategy offers Canadian real estate investors a creative way to generate returns while helping tenant-buyers achieve homeownership. In this episode, Dalia Barsoum explains how these deals work: investors purchase a property, collect an upfront deposit from a tenant-buyer, charge above-market rent, and agree to sell at a preset price within two to four years. She exposes two critical financing mistakes that can derail the deal. First, investors cannot use the tenant's deposit as their own down payment—lenders require you to demonstrate 'skin in the game' with 20% from your own resources, such as cash, a secured line of credit, or liquidated investments. Second, failing to connect your tenant-buyer with a mortgage professional from day one jeopardizes the exit strategy, as there is no guarantee they will qualify for a mortgage when the term ends. By addressing mortgage qualification, down payment verification, and debt management upfront, investors can structure win-win agreements that minimize risk and protect profits.
Wealth Foundations Education
Pre-Construction Investing: Unlock Equity & Avoid Closing Mistakes 6 min EP 074 Video
EP 074 · 6 min · Aug 2025
Pre-Construction Investing: Unlock Equity & Avoid Closing Mistakes
Pre-construction investing involves purchasing a property from a builder before it is built, with the hope that it appreciates by closing. However, investors face two critical financing pitfalls. The first is the Approval Illusion: believing a standard mortgage pre-approval guarantees funding. In reality, pre-approvals are conditional, and your income, credit, and property value must still qualify at closing. The solution is to secure a firm approval from the builder's on-site lender, who is already invested in the project. The second pitfall is the Instant Refinance Myth—the belief you can access paper equity on closing day. Most lenders base the mortgage on the lower of the purchase price or appraised value, meaning same-day refinancing is impossible with 99.9% of lenders. The standard strategy is to take a variable rate mortgage and refinance after six months. One major bank offers a rare exception for day-one equity access. If values drop, investors may need to use equity from other properties or arrange a vendor takeback with the builder.
Wealth Foundations Education
The ADU & Laneway House Financing Playbook: Secure Your Exit Before You Build 5 min EP 073 Video
EP 073 · 5 min · Aug 2025
The ADU & Laneway House Financing Playbook: Secure Your Exit Before You Build
Building an accessory dwelling unit (ADU), garden suite, or laneway home is an increasingly popular strategy among Ontario real estate investors looking to boost cash flow and property value. Enabled in part by Bill 23, which encourages municipal densification and reduces development costs, this approach allows investors to add separate units to an existing residential property—typically bringing the total to up to four units. Many investors plan to refinance after construction to recoup their capital and redeploy it into their next deal. However, the biggest financing mistake is assuming that all lenders will recognize the additional value and rental income from the new unit. In reality, many alternative lenders will ignore both, while many A lenders will consider them. The strategic solution is to plan your exit financing before breaking ground. Investors should consult an income property mortgage broker to validate assumptions about qualification, timing, amount, and terms. Additionally, you must obtain an "as-is" and an "as-completed" appraisal upfront from an appraiser on your future lender's approved list. Otherwise, the appraisal may be rejected later. If construction exceeds 120 days, the report must be updated to reflect current comparables.
Wealth Foundations Education
BRRRR Strategy: How to Refinance and Pull Your Capital Out Fast 8 min EP 072 Video
EP 072 · 8 min · Aug 2025
BRRRR Strategy: How to Refinance and Pull Your Capital Out Fast
The BRRRR strategy—Buy, Renovate, Rent, Refinance, Repeat—centers on the velocity of money: forcing appreciation through renovations, then refinancing to pull capital out for the next deal. In this episode, Dalia Barsoum breaks down how investors can build long-term wealth and cash flow while keeping their money active. She exposes two common financing mistakes that stall the strategy. The first is the refinance trap, where a lender's seasoning period prevents you from accessing your new equity immediately after renovations. The second is the fixed-rate trap, where locking into a fixed term upfront results in hefty penalties if you need to switch lenders at refinance. To avoid these pitfalls, Dalia recommends planning your refinance strategy before you buy, including as-is and as-complete appraisals with approved appraisers. She advises using variable-rate mortgages to minimize breakage penalties and maintain flexibility. Finally, she explains how advanceable mortgages or lines of credit from one-stop lenders allow you to access equity without breaking the original mortgage, preserving your momentum and maximizing returns.
Wealth Foundations Education
House Flip Financing: Mastering the Bridge-to-Hold Exit Strategy 7 min EP 071 Video
EP 071 · 7 min · Aug 2025
House Flip Financing: Mastering the Bridge-to-Hold Exit Strategy
House flipping offers active investors the potential for large, short-term cash payouts, but two common financing mistakes can erase profits before the property ever hits the market. The first is failing to understand the true cost of private money. Dalia Barsoum explains that flippers must demand transparency on interest rates, lender fees, mortgage broker fees, prepayment penalties, renewal terms, and administrative fees, as these all directly impact the bottom line. She also stresses the importance of independent legal advice, since private lenders use non-standard mortgage documents with unique terms. The second mistake is entering a flip without a Plan B. Dalia introduces the "bridge-to-hold" strategy, where investors work with a qualified income property mortgage broker upfront to secure backup financing that converts expensive short-term private debt into a stable rental mortgage if the property doesn't sell on time. Developing this exit strategy before you start protects you from renovation delays, market slowdowns, and unexpected valuation shortfalls.
Wealth Foundations Education
Multifamily Investing Secrets: How Lenders Calculate NOI & DCR to Determine Your Down Payment 9 min EP 070 Video
EP 070 · 9 min · Aug 2025
Multifamily Investing Secrets: How Lenders Calculate NOI & DCR to Determine Your Down Payment
Investing in multifamily properties with five or more units is a powerful strategy for accelerating cash flow and net worth through economies of scale. However, many Canadian investors make costly assumptions about down payments, believing they need only 25% for conventional financing or as little as 5% under CMHC's MLI Select program. In reality, lenders use the Debt Coverage Ratio (DCR)—the property's Net Operating Income divided by the annual mortgage payment—to determine how much you must actually put down. Dalia Barsoum breaks down how to calculate NOI accurately by accounting for all revenue streams and realistic expenses, warning against trusting seller financials that may omit property management or other costs. She reveals that conventional lenders typically require a 1.25 DCR, while CMHC programs require 1.1. To help investors analyze deals confidently, she offers a complimentary Multifamily Toolkit with a DCR calculator. She also shares a critical insider tip: five and six-unit buildings can sometimes qualify for residential mortgages, offering better rates, longer amortizations, and significant savings on commercial fees—an especially valuable strategy for vacant properties that wouldn't meet commercial NOI requirements.
Wealth Foundations Education
Buy & Hold Real Estate Strategy: Avoid the Hidden Financing Traps 8 min EP 069 Video
EP 069 · 8 min · Aug 2025
Buy & Hold Real Estate Strategy: Avoid the Hidden Financing Traps
This episode breaks down the foundational buy and hold real estate strategy, where investors generate long-term wealth through cash flow, mortgage paydown, and property appreciation. The host explains that while this approach is the bedrock of real estate investing, many investors sabotage their growth by chasing the lowest headline interest rate. She reveals two costly hidden traps that can derail a portfolio: the Product Trap and the Lender Trap. The Product Trap involves restrictive no-frills mortgages that may block refinancing, prevent lender switches, or impose severe penalties. The Lender Trap occurs when an investor chooses a lender based solely on rate, only to discover later that the lender caps the number of properties they will finance or refuses to lend once the portfolio exceeds a certain size. To avoid these pitfalls, the host recommends adopting a portfolio financing mindset, reading the fine print, and seeking powerful product features like advanceable mortgages—which automatically increase a secured line of credit as principal is paid down—and 30-year amortizations to improve cash flow. The episode also introduces the complimentary Financing Roadmap from Streetwise Mortgages to strategically place every transaction with the right lender at the right time.
Wealth Foundations Education
How to Avoid the #1 Mistake in Real Estate Investing (It's Not the Property) 5 min EP 068 Video
EP 068 · 5 min · Aug 2025
How to Avoid the #1 Mistake in Real Estate Investing (It's Not the Property)
Dalia Barsoum argues that the most critical decision in Canadian real estate investing is not property selection, but mortgage financing and capital structure. Most investors focus 90% of their energy on finding deals while treating the mortgage as a commodity to secure at the lowest rate, which leads to costly mistakes. The wrong mortgage can trap capital, prevent refinancing, and impose hidden fees that erase profits. To become a strategic investor, you must align your financing with your investment goals from day one. Dalia introduces Canada's three financing tiers: A lenders (banks, credit unions, and monoline lenders) offering the best rates but requiring sufficient reported income and excellent liquidity; B lenders (alternative lenders and trust companies) providing flexibility for self-employed borrowers and those with lower credit scores at higher rates and fees; and private lenders (MICs and individuals) offering fast, property-focused financing ideal for flips, bridge loans, and construction. Understanding these tiers is the secret weapon for scaling a portfolio while avoiding expensive financing errors.
Wealth Foundations Education
ADU Financing Guide: How to Fund an Accessory Dwelling Unit, Garden Suite or Laneway Home 45 min EP 067 Video
EP 067 · 45 min · Jul 2025
ADU Financing Guide: How to Fund an Accessory Dwelling Unit, Garden Suite or Laneway Home
Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs), garden suites and laneway homes offer Canadian real estate investors a powerful way to generate additional rental income and boost property value. In this episode, Dalia Barsoum delivers a step-by-step guide to financing these projects from start to finish. She outlines four core financing building blocks: funding the build, post-construction refinance ability, carrying costs, and leverage alignment. For investors who already own a property, she explores four funding options ranked from cheapest to most expensive: a secured line of credit on the subject property, lines of credit on other portfolio properties, private mortgages, and full construction loans. Dalia reveals the hidden costs of construction financing—including lender fees, broker fees, interest reserves, 10 percent draw holdbacks, and floor rates—using a real $750,000 property example. She also explains how to finance a new purchase when you intend to build immediately or later, why a variable-rate mortgage preserves refinance flexibility, and how construction loans can cover both the acquisition and build costs. Finally, she stresses the importance of validating your exit financing upfront with as-is and as-complete appraisals to avoid costly surprises when refinancing after the project is complete.
Wealth Foundations Education
Multifamily Financing Canada: 6 Essential Strategies for 5+ Unit Buildings 38 min EP 066 Video
EP 066 · 38 min · Jun 2025
Multifamily Financing Canada: 6 Essential Strategies for 5+ Unit Buildings
Dalia Barsoum breaks down the critical shift from residential to multifamily financing for Canadian investors looking to acquire buildings with five or more units. Unlike 1–4 unit properties where lenders qualify based on personal income and debt, multifamily financing qualifies the building itself through Net Operating Income (NOI) and the Debt Coverage Ratio (DCR). Dalia explains how to accurately calculate NOI by accounting for rental income, vacancy allowances, bad debt, property taxes, insurance, utilities, management reserves, and lender-specific admin reserves. She demonstrates how the DCR—typically 1.25 for conventional loans and 1.1 for CMHC MLI Select—determines the maximum loan amount and therefore the required down payment. The episode details six financing strategies: primary options including conventional bank loans, CMHC-insured loans, and alternative lending with hybrid qualification; plus creative short-term solutions like bridge financing and private money. She emphasizes using creative financing as a stepping stone to long-term primary financing once a building is stabilized.
Wealth Foundations Education
Debunking the Rental Property Limit Myth: How to Scale to 40+ Doors in Canada 36 min EP 065 Video
EP 065 · 36 min · Jun 2025
Debunking the Rental Property Limit Myth: How to Scale to 40+ Doors in Canada
Dalia Barsoum debunks the common myth that Canadian investors face a hard cap on residential rental property financing. While individual lenders have limits, she explains how investors can scale from two to over 40 properties by strategically moving between A lenders, alternative lenders, and credit unions. The key is proactively managing eight critical factors before hitting the "financing wall." This episode dives deep into two of the most important twists: your personal credit and personal income. You'll discover why banks typically require a 650 credit score—but financing exists for scores as low as 500—why keeping utilization under 70% protects your borrowing power, and how payment history and collections impact approvals. Dalia also breaks down income qualification rules, emphasizing that investors must qualify with personal income even when holding properties in a corporation. She covers strategies for employees with seasonal or fluctuating hours, self-employed borrowers using stated income programs, and retirees with pension or RRIF income, highlighting why planning with your accountant and mortgage advisor before filing taxes gives you the upper hand.
Wealth Foundations Education
6 Proven Strategies to Fund Your First Canadian Investment Property 27 min EP 064 Video
EP 064 · 27 min · May 2025
6 Proven Strategies to Fund Your First Canadian Investment Property
Buying your first investment property in Canada often feels impossible if you don't have a large pile of cash saved up. In this educational breakdown, Dalia Barsoum shares six proven money strategies to fund your down payment and closing costs. She begins with the home equity line of credit (HELOC), explaining how homeowners can access up to 80% of their property value and only pay interest on what they use. She then covers using cash reserves, unsecured lines of credit, and joint venture partnerships—sharing her own story of partnering with a colleague to buy her first rental. The video also dives into creative financing through vendor takeback mortgages, where the seller provides partial funding, and private money for short-term bridge financing. Throughout, Dalia emphasizes the importance of stress-testing for interest rate hikes, maintaining cash reserves, securing proper legal agreements, and having a clear exit strategy before using temporary or expensive capital.
Wealth Foundations Education
Quit Your Job to Invest in Real Estate? Think Twice 6 min EP 063 Video
EP 063 · 6 min · Feb 2025
Quit Your Job to Invest in Real Estate? Think Twice
Dalia Barsoum explains why quitting your job to focus on real estate investing full-time is a decision that requires careful strategic planning. While she acknowledges that real estate is an excellent asset class for building wealth and cash flow, she warns that treating it like an instant income replacement is dangerous. For residential investors relying on buy-and-hold strategies, mortgage qualification depends heavily on personal income, making it difficult to secure sustainable financing without a job. Active strategies like flipping or assignments can generate lump sums but come with unpredictable income and market risks. Dalia emphasizes that real estate investing is a business that requires understanding revenue, operating costs, risk management, and strategy execution. Commercial multifamily deals differ because financing is based on the property's net operating income rather than personal income, but even then, investors need clear plans for capital, strategy, and cash flow timing. Her core recommendation is to test the waters, build a foundation, and develop a business plan while still employed before taking the leap to full-time investing.
Wealth Foundations Education
Converting Residential to 5+ Units: CMHC vs. Conventional Financing Strategies 10 min EP 062 Video
EP 062 · 10 min · Feb 2025
Converting Residential to 5+ Units: CMHC vs. Conventional Financing Strategies
Dalia Barsoum explains the financing landscape for investors converting residential properties into 5+ unit multifamily commercial buildings in Canada. She emphasizes that without construction drawings and budgets, investors must initially close with residential financing, then transition to commercial construction funds. The episode details two primary construction financing paths: CMHC and conventional. CMHC construction financing offers up to 95% loan-to-cost and cheaper rates, but typically rolls the initial loan directly into a long-term loan upon completion, potentially capping your ability to access increased property value. Conventional financing generally covers 75% of as-is value and construction costs—though this can be pushed higher with experience—but carries higher interest rates around prime plus 2% to 3%. Its advantage is preserving exit flexibility, allowing investors to refinance into CMHC after completion to capture equity. Dalia stresses the importance of as-is and as-complete appraisals, validating that the exit mortgage will cover construction loans, and planning for cost overruns or delays. Creative solutions like vendor takebacks can also reduce upfront cash requirements.
Wealth Foundations Education
Mortgage Broker vs. Direct Lender: Which Is Better for Your Portfolio? 6 min EP 061 Video
EP 061 · 6 min · Feb 2025
Mortgage Broker vs. Direct Lender: Which Is Better for Your Portfolio?
In this episode, Dalia Barsoum draws on her unique background—15 years at one of the large six banks and her current role as a mortgage broker—to break down the real differences between working with a direct lender and a mortgage broker. She explains that direct lenders are restricted by their own internal policies, risk management procedures, and the specific products they have on the shelf, meaning they operate within a fixed box and can only sell what they have. While they may offer excellent rates and cashbacks for straightforward files, the advice is inherently limited. On the other hand, a mortgage broker offers access to multiple lenders and products, allowing them to place deals based on the borrower's best interest rather than a single institution's bottom line. Dalia highlights how strategic financing looks beyond the immediate transaction to understand your big-picture goals, current challenges, and long-term portfolio growth. She notes that unbiased advice can help you avoid costly financing mistakes, and that even brokers occasionally send clients back to their bank when it truly serves the client's needs.
Wealth Foundations Education
The Financing Roadmap: How to Scale Your Real Estate Portfolio in 2025 12 min EP 059 Video
EP 059 · 12 min · Jan 2025
The Financing Roadmap: How to Scale Your Real Estate Portfolio in 2025
This episode introduces the Financing Roadmap, a complimentary strategic planning tool designed to help Canadian real estate investors scale their portfolios in 2025. The host explains how clients have used this framework to grow from a single property to portfolios of 20, 30, or even 40 residential units, eventually expanding into apartment buildings, developments, and storage facilities. Beyond growth, the roadmap emphasizes risk management in a shifting market where poorly planned leverage has led to portfolio losses. The framework consists of five building blocks. First, assessing your current financial state, including debts, credit, corporate structures, and rental income optimization. Second, setting clear property and financing goals for the year and long-term. Third, aligning capital sources such as home equity, unsecured lines of credit, joint venture partnerships, and other people's money. Fourth, maximizing borrowing power by cleaning up balance sheets, restructuring debt, and planning self-employed income. Fifth, structuring deals sequentially to ensure today’s financing doesn’t block tomorrow’s acquisition. The episode concludes with an invitation to receive a complimentary customized roadmap from certified advisors.
Wealth Foundations Education
The Door Myth Debunked: Why More Properties Won't Build Wealth 7 min EP 058 Video
EP 058 · 7 min · Dec 2024
The Door Myth Debunked: Why More Properties Won't Build Wealth
Dalia Barsoum challenges the common real estate investing belief that accumulating more doors automatically creates more wealth. Drawing from over a decade of financing income properties and analyzing thousands of Canadian portfolios, she reveals that many investors with hundreds of properties are burnt out, behind on accounting, and trapped by operational complexity, while others with 10-15 well-managed properties generate consistent cash flow and build wealth steadily. The episode emphasizes that success depends on foundational elements: structuring debt strategically, buying cash-flowing properties in appreciating markets, and managing leverage carefully. Dalia recommends specific mortgage tactics like bi-weekly accelerated payments to reduce amortization from 30 to 26 years, and using flip profits or other strategies to accelerate paydown further. She explains that truly wealthy investors transition from an asset accumulation phase to a position of 50-60% loan-to-value, where healthy cash flow and equity cushions create lasting wealth. The key message is to go deep—optimizing each property's financing and operations—rather than going wide and increasing complexity without a solid foundation.
Wealth Foundations Education
Leverage Risk Management: How to Protect Your Real Estate Portfolio and Financial Future 5 min EP 057 Video
EP 057 · 5 min · Dec 2024
Leverage Risk Management: How to Protect Your Real Estate Portfolio and Financial Future
Dalia Barsoum discusses leverage risk, an often-overlooked aspect of real estate investing that can make or break an investor's financial future. While buying properties and maximizing cash flow are exciting topics that energize investors, the type of loans and total extent of leverage across an entire portfolio ultimately play a huge role in determining long-term success. She emphasizes the need to move beyond property-level financing decisions—such as fixed versus variable rates—and instead zoom out to assess portfolio-level risk at least quarterly. Key areas to review include mortgage renewal dates to avoid clustering risk, evaluating exposure from high-leverage strategies like private money or unsecured renovation loans across multiple properties, and monitoring interest rate trends and lending rule changes. Dalia warns that sitting on high leverage for extended periods exposes a large piece of your portfolio to market cycles and negative influences. She notes that she unfortunately witnessed investors lose entire portfolios during the 2023 cycle due to this lack of discipline. The episode stresses proactive risk management, consulting advisors who can see the big picture, and staying informed to safeguard the wealth you are building.
Wealth Foundations Education
5 Costly Real Estate Investing Mistakes That Destroy Portfolios 12 min EP 056 Video
EP 056 · 12 min · Dec 2024
5 Costly Real Estate Investing Mistakes That Destroy Portfolios
Dalia Barsoum breaks down five costly mistakes that can derail real estate investors. She warns against making wrong assumptions about refinancing and construction loans without validating exit strategies with a financing advisor. She highlights the dangers of creative financing and high-leverage positions, especially using private loans and promissory notes, which can collapse when markets shift. Dalia also stresses the importance of knowing your numbers—keeping books and tax paperwork up to date to make informed decisions. She notes that in the 2023-2024 cycle, many large portfolios fell apart due to over-leverage across multiple properties combined with unsecured promissory notes. Finally, she cautions against chasing door count over portfolio quality, explaining that a smaller, optimized portfolio with strong cash flow and disciplined debt management often outperforms larger, over-leveraged ones. Her core message is to focus on cash flow, revenue risk, and debt structure first, allowing sustainable wealth to follow naturally.
Wealth Foundations Education
2025 Canadian Mortgage Outlook: New Insured Refinancing Rules & Market Opportunities 5 min EP 055 Video
EP 055 · 5 min · Nov 2024
2025 Canadian Mortgage Outlook: New Insured Refinancing Rules & Market Opportunities
As 2024 draws to a close, Dalia Barsoum breaks down the major shifts shaping Canada's mortgage and housing landscape for 2025. With consumer confidence at 30-month highs and the Bank of Canada delivering its most substantial single rate cut since 2020 in October, analysts anticipate a broader rate reduction cycle extending through 2025. While immigration targets have been adjusted for 2025 and 2026, levels remain historically significant, combining with a national population growth of 3% and record-low housing starts to intensify demand from both newcomers and established residents. A standout policy change launching January 15, 2025, brings back insured refinancing for the first time since 2016, allowing homeowners to borrow up to 90% of their property's after-improvement value—up to $2 million—to create additional self-contained housing units such as basement apartments or laneway houses. The program requires owner occupancy, proper zoning, and prohibits short-term rentals, while permitting up to four total units. With the lowest single-family home permits in decades and numerous buyers waiting on the sidelines since 2022, these converging factors are setting the stage for an active market ahead.
Market Pulse Market Commentary
August 2024 Canadian Real Estate Market Update: Rate Cuts, Delinquency Context & Housing Supply 5 min EP 054 Video
EP 054 · 5 min · Sep 2024
August 2024 Canadian Real Estate Market Update: Rate Cuts, Delinquency Context & Housing Supply
Dalia Barsoum presents the August 2024 Canadian real estate market update, emphasizing the importance of looking beyond alarming headlines to understand the full context. Inflation is cooling, with July headline CPI dropping to 2.5% year-over-year and core measures down to 2.4%, leading markets to expect rate cuts that could bring the overnight rate to 3.75% by year-end. Dalia debunks scary mortgage delinquency headlines by explaining that while Ontario saw a 67% surge in reports, the rate is 1.6 per thousand mortgages—below 2014 levels and part of a return to normal after pandemic lows. Nationally, delinquency remains below pre-pandemic 2019 levels. Housing starts jumped 16% in July, but this may be temporary due to developers rushing ahead of CMHC ML Select program changes, while building permits declined sharply in Ontario and British Columbia. Home sales dipped 7% month-over-month, yet active listings surged 25% nationally and 47% in Ontario, giving investors more options. Broader economic signals show rising consumer insolvencies and slowing spending, suggesting headwinds but also normalization after a period of exceptional growth.
Market Pulse Market Commentary
Fixed vs Variable Mortgage Rates for Rentals: June 2024 Analysis 5 min EP 053 Video
EP 053 · 5 min · Jun 2024
Fixed vs Variable Mortgage Rates for Rentals: June 2024 Analysis
Dalia Barsoum presents a data-driven analysis of fixed versus variable mortgage rates for Canadian rental property investors as of June 2024. Following the Bank of Canada's June 5th overnight rate reduction, she examines bond market forecasts indicating rates could fall roughly 1% over the next year through four quarter-point cuts, with the lowest rates expected in two to three years at approximately 2% below current levels. On a $500,000 mortgage, a variable rate at prime plus 0.05% saves over $10,000 compared to a five-year fixed rate. Surprisingly, taking a three-year fixed today and later switching to a variable is mathematically equivalent to a five-year variable now, while a two-year fixed followed by a variable costs roughly $6,000 more than going variable immediately. For investors prioritizing payment certainty, the three-year fixed is attractive, while the five-year variable offers flexibility to sell or refinance. For primary residences, variable rates are the clear winner. Barsoum invites viewers to connect for customized borrowing strategies across their portfolios.
Market Pulse Market Commentary
Buy Now or Wait? The Real Cost of Waiting for Rate Cuts in 2024 6 min EP 052 Video
EP 052 · 6 min · Mar 2024
Buy Now or Wait? The Real Cost of Waiting for Rate Cuts in 2024
In this March 2024 episode, Streetwise Wealth founder Dalia Barsoum tackles the pressing question facing Canadian real estate investors: is it better to buy now or wait for interest rate cuts? She begins by noting a significant shift in the economic landscape—inflation has cooled to 2.9%, and the Bank of Canada has explicitly stated that rising shelter costs will not prevent rate reductions, acknowledging that housing supply constraints make lower shelter costs unlikely. Barsoum then presents a stark numerical comparison using a $600,000 rental property. While waiting one year for a 1% rate drop might save roughly $5,000 in mortgage interest, she warns that a 5% price increase during that same period would cost an additional $30,000. She emphasizes that investors can currently write off interest expenses, making the savings even less impactful. She concludes by urging viewers to seize cash-flowing and rent-to-own opportunities now, refinance when rates fall, and ignore fearful media narratives—historically, wealth is built when others hesitate.
Market Pulse Market Commentary
Readvanceable Mortgage Rule Changes: How the 65% Global Limit Affects Your HELOC Access 9 min EP 051 Video
EP 051 · 9 min · Oct 2023
Readvanceable Mortgage Rule Changes: How the 65% Global Limit Affects Your HELOC Access
This episode breaks down OSFI's upcoming changes to readvanceable mortgage products effective November 1, 2023, for Canada's Big Six banks. Dalia Barsoum explains how these products traditionally combined a mortgage with a HELOC to allow borrowing up to 80% of a home's value, where principal payments automatically increased the available credit line. Under the new regulator guidelines, any lending above 65% LTV must be amortizing and non-advanceable. This means principal paydowns on the portion exceeding 65% will no longer recycle into the line of credit; instead, they will gradually reduce the global limit from 80% down to 65% over time. Using a Scotia STEP letter example and a $1 million property scenario, she illustrates exactly how monthly global limit reductions work and why borrowers' ability to tap equity is shrinking. Products established before September 15, 2012 are grandfathered, but all newer readvanceable mortgages will be affected. The episode concludes with guidance on exploring alternative financing options to maintain capital access.
Wealth Foundations Education
What Is a Promissory Note? Risks for Canadian Real Estate Investors and Lenders 6 min EP 050 Video
EP 050 · 6 min · Sep 2023
What Is a Promissory Note? Risks for Canadian Real Estate Investors and Lenders
In this episode, Dalia Barsoum breaks down promissory notes as a financing tool for Canadian real estate investors and lenders. She explains that a promissory note is essentially an unsecured loan based on a borrower's promise to repay, often backed by a personal guarantee but not protected like a registered private mortgage. Barsoum notes that while these loans can help investors bridge a construction funding gap or consolidate short-term debt when secured financing is unavailable, they typically carry double-digit interest rates of 17% or more plus higher fees. For borrowers, the biggest risk is over-leverage—taking on more unsecured debt than they can handle because the lack of property collateral makes it easy to accumulate excessive obligations. For lenders, the high returns are lucrative but reflect high risk; in a default, promissory note holders are often last in line after registered mortgages, and recovering capital may require legal action. She concludes by urging both borrowers and lenders to get independent legal advice and explore all other financing options before pursuing this path.
Wealth Foundations Education
Fixed vs Variable Mortgage: Investor Strategy for a Changing Rate Environment 7 min EP 049 Video
EP 049 · 7 min · Apr 2023
Fixed vs Variable Mortgage: Investor Strategy for a Changing Rate Environment
In this episode, Dalia Barsoum analyzes the mortgage rate landscape for Canadian real estate investors facing the fixed versus variable decision. Recorded in April 2023, she explains that the Bank of Canada had signaled a pause in rate hikes, with the market pricing in potential cuts by early 2024. She highlights an unusual market condition where one- to five-year fixed rates had dropped below five-year variable rates. Barsoum advises investors with adjustable-rate mortgages to stay the course, as their payments will fall automatically when the Bank of Canada cuts rates. For those in fixed-payment variable mortgages, she warns that payments may not decrease automatically and suggests reviewing lender policies or switching to an adjustable product. For new financing, renewals, or refinances, she cautions against locking into long-term fixed rates that would prevent benefiting from future cuts, instead recommending one-year fixed or variable terms. Finally, she stresses the importance of increasing liquidity through secured lines of credit and restructuring debt before tighter lending guidelines take effect.
Market Pulse Market Commentary
Investor Spotlight: Cory Froc on Surviving Over-Leverage and Rebuilding After the 2008 Crash 5 min EP 048 Video
EP 048 · 5 min · Apr 2023
Investor Spotlight: Cory Froc on Surviving Over-Leverage and Rebuilding After the 2008 Crash
with Cory Froc
Expert Insights Interview
Top Goal-Setting Hacks for Real Estate Investors in 2023 9 min EP 047 Video
EP 047 · 9 min · Jan 2023
Top Goal-Setting Hacks for Real Estate Investors in 2023
Dalia Barsoum kicks off 2023 with a reality check for real estate investors: traditional goal-setting and New Year's resolutions fail because willpower alone isn't enough. Drawing from her own experience quitting her nine-to-five job in 2011 and building Streetwise Mortgages, she explains that success requires hacking the human tendency to lose motivation. Her first hack is to deeply connect with the emotional "why" behind your goals and simplify to your top three priorities rather than spreading yourself thin. The second hack, inspired by James Clear's Atomic Habits, focuses on building systems and processes that break big goals into small, consistent actions scheduled as non-negotiable calendar blocks—including regular meetings with your financial team. The third hack emphasizes surrounding yourself with accountability partners and like-minded investors who have already achieved what you're pursuing. Finally, she stresses the importance of monthly and quarterly measurement and adjustment. Despite 2023's uncertainty, Dalia encourages viewers to mute the fear-based media, stay focused, and book a goals-based financing strategy session to build a strong foundation for the year.
Mindset & Operator Stories Education
Multi-Family Investing with Brian Pulis: Building a $250M Portfolio in Any Market 19 min EP 046 Video
EP 046 · 19 min · Jan 2023
Multi-Family Investing with Brian Pulis: Building a $250M Portfolio in Any Market
with Brian Pulis
Expert Insights Interview
4 Strategies to Stabilize and Fortify Your Investment Portfolio for 2023 5 min EP 045 Video
EP 045 · 5 min · Dec 2022
4 Strategies to Stabilize and Fortify Your Investment Portfolio for 2023
As the end of 2022 approaches, Dalia Barsoum shifts focus from rehashing headlines to delivering actionable strategies for real estate investors preparing for 2023. She begins by encouraging viewers to reflect on their 2022 goals, identify lessons learned, and determine what they would do differently. She then outlines four specific actions to stabilize and fortify a portfolio: first, address cash flow pressures at the total portfolio level through debt restructuring, extending amortizations, adding ancillary income streams like parking or short-term rentals, or exploring the StreetWise cash flow booster strategy. Second, she advises exiting existing private loans where feasible, as lenders are tightening guidelines, increasing rates and fees, and reducing loan-to-values. Third, for properties renewing in the next six months, she recommends managing interest rate exposure by avoiding five-year fixed terms at the peak of the cycle and instead considering variable rates or short-term fixed options. Finally, she stresses the importance of preparing for success by freeing up underutilized capital through secured and unsecured lines of credit, and ensuring joint venture partners are mortgage-ready to capitalize on upcoming opportunities.
Wealth Foundations Education
Alfonso Cuadra on Wealth Transfer Opportunities, Assumable Mortgages & Portfolio Optimization 25 min EP 044 Video
EP 044 · 25 min · Nov 2022
Alfonso Cuadra on Wealth Transfer Opportunities, Assumable Mortgages & Portfolio Optimization
with Alfonso Cuadra
Expert Insights Interview
How to Adapt and Thrive in Difficult Times with Tim Storey 25 min EP 043 Video
EP 043 · 25 min · Oct 2022
How to Adapt and Thrive in Difficult Times with Tim Storey
with Tim Storey
Mindset & Operator Stories Interview
The Cash Flow Booster Strategy: How to Turn a $310 Negative Cash Flow Property Into $2,400/Month Positive 7 min EP 042 Video
EP 042 · 7 min · Oct 2022
The Cash Flow Booster Strategy: How to Turn a $310 Negative Cash Flow Property Into $2,400/Month Positive
Dalia Barsoum explains the "Cash Flow Booster," a strategy for property owners facing negative cash flow due to rising interest rates. Using a hypothetical rental property example — a $520,000 mortgage at 5% with a $2,760 monthly payment, $3,500 in rent, and $1,050 in expenses — she shows how the property bleeds $310 per month. The solution involves setting up an advancable secured line of credit and using it to make the mortgage payments, reducing the monthly interest-only carrying cost to roughly $140. This flips the property to approximately $2,436 in positive monthly cash flow. Over 18 months, the owner accumulates roughly $44,000 in cash reserves while the LOC balance grows to $50,000. Because the line is advancable, the principal paydown increases the available limit by about $8,000. At the end of the cycle, the investor can either use the accumulated cash to clear the line or convert the LOC back into a mortgage. Dalia notes this strategy also works on a primary residence.
Deal Dissections Case Study
Mortgage Rate Forecast: Fixed vs Variable, Bank of Canada Outlook & Payment Strategies with Rob McLister 14 min EP 041 Video
EP 041 · 14 min · Oct 2022
Mortgage Rate Forecast: Fixed vs Variable, Bank of Canada Outlook & Payment Strategies with Rob McLister
with Rob McLister
Market Pulse Interview
Adapt & Thrive: Protecting Cash Flow and Finding Opportunities in a Rising Rate Market with Michal Wach 16 min EP 040 Video
EP 040 · 16 min · Sep 2022
Adapt & Thrive: Protecting Cash Flow and Finding Opportunities in a Rising Rate Market with Michal Wach
with Michal Wach
Expert Insights Interview
Mortgage Trigger Rate Explained: How to Manage It in a Rising Rate Environment 7 min EP 039 Video
EP 039 · 7 min · Sep 2022
Mortgage Trigger Rate Explained: How to Manage It in a Rising Rate Environment
In this episode, Dalia Barsoum explains the mortgage trigger rate—a critical concept for Canadians holding fixed-payment variable rate mortgages during the Bank of Canada's aggressive 2022 rate-hiking cycle. While these mortgages keep payments stable on the surface, rising rates shift the allocation between interest and principal until eventually the payment fails to cover any principal at all. Dalia uses a $500,000 mortgage example from January 2022 to illustrate how quickly principal repayment can evaporate as prime rises from 2.45% to 5.45%. She clarifies the distinction between the trigger rate (where no principal is paid) and the trigger point (where the balance returns to the original loan amount). When the trigger point is reached, lenders typically offer three solutions: a lump sum payment, converting to a fixed rate, or increasing monthly payments. Dalia advises against locking into long-term fixed rates at the peak of the cycle and introduces the adjustable variable rate mortgage as a proactive alternative. She encourages viewers to review their mortgage statements before the next rate increase and reach out for personalized guidance.
Wealth Foundations Education
Adapt & Thrive: Real Estate Strategies for Rising Rates and Market Uncertainty with Danielle Chiasson 26 min EP 038 Video
EP 038 · 26 min · Sep 2022
Adapt & Thrive: Real Estate Strategies for Rising Rates and Market Uncertainty with Danielle Chiasson
with Danielle Chiasson
Expert Insights Interview
Adapting to Rising Rates & Market Shifts with REIN's Patrick Francey & JG Francoeur 27 min EP 037 Video
EP 037 · 27 min · Sep 2022
Adapting to Rising Rates & Market Shifts with REIN's Patrick Francey & JG Francoeur
with Patrick Francey
Expert Insights Interview
Adapt & Thrive: Real Estate Investing Through Market Cycles with Harry James 33 min EP 036 Video
EP 036 · 33 min · Aug 2022
Adapt & Thrive: Real Estate Investing Through Market Cycles with Harry James
with Harry James
Expert Insights Interview
Adapt & Thrive: Managing Cash Flow and Finding Opportunities in a Shifting Market with Elizabeth Kelly 21 min EP 035 Video
EP 035 · 21 min · Aug 2022
Adapt & Thrive: Managing Cash Flow and Finding Opportunities in a Shifting Market with Elizabeth Kelly
with Elizabeth Kelly
Expert Insights Interview
How to stop your mortgage payment from going up after the upcoming rate increase in September? 5 min EP 034 Video
EP 034 · 5 min · Aug 2022
How to stop your mortgage payment from going up after the upcoming rate increase in September?
In this episode, Dalia Barsoum addresses a pressing concern for Canadian homeowners and investors facing the Bank of Canada's September 7, 2022 rate announcement. With floating rate mortgage holders already impacted by previous hikes, she shares a strategy to prevent further payment increases without resorting to a five-year fixed term. Dalia explains the critical technical distinction between adjustable rate mortgages, where payments change instantly with central bank rate movements to maintain amortization schedules, and variable rate mortgages, where payments remain fixed while the allocation between principal and interest adjusts. She highlights two important caveats: the trigger rate, which could force a payment reset if rates spike high enough, and the reality that fixed payments during rising rates result in less principal reduction and a higher balance at term end. Referencing National Bank research indicating a low probability of hitting trigger rates under current forecasts, she argues that switching from an ARM to a VRM can offer the payment stability and peace of mind many borrowers need in a volatile rate environment.
Wealth Foundations Education
Adapt & Thrive: Mortgage Strategy in a Rising Rate Environment with Dustan Woodhouse 15 min EP 033 Video
EP 033 · 15 min · Aug 2022
Adapt & Thrive: Mortgage Strategy in a Rising Rate Environment with Dustan Woodhouse
with Dustan Woodhouse
Expert Insights Interview
Adapt & Thrive: Cashflow Strategies and Market Opportunities with Kory Mackinnon 14 min EP 032 Video
EP 032 · 14 min · Jul 2022
Adapt & Thrive: Cashflow Strategies and Market Opportunities with Kory Mackinnon
with Kory Mackinnon
Expert Insights Interview
Adapt & Thrive: Christian Szpilfogel on Cash Flow, Risk Management & Market Opportunities 21 min EP 031 Video
EP 031 · 21 min · Jul 2022
Adapt & Thrive: Christian Szpilfogel on Cash Flow, Risk Management & Market Opportunities
with Christian Szpilfogel
Expert Insights Interview
Adapt & Thrive: Quentin D'Souza on Cash Flow, Opportunities and Rising Interest Rates 17 min EP 030 Video
EP 030 · 17 min · Jul 2022
Adapt & Thrive: Quentin D'Souza on Cash Flow, Opportunities and Rising Interest Rates
with Quentin D'Souza
Expert Insights Interview
Adapt & Thrive: Investing Through Rising Rates with Chris Shebib 18 min EP 029 Video
EP 029 · 18 min · Jul 2022
Adapt & Thrive: Investing Through Rising Rates with Chris Shebib
with Chris Shebib
Expert Insights Interview
Adapt & Thrive: Navigating Rising Rates & Finding Opportunities with Sarah Larbi 14 min EP 028 Video
EP 028 · 14 min · Jul 2022
Adapt & Thrive: Navigating Rising Rates & Finding Opportunities with Sarah Larbi
with Sarah Larbi
Expert Insights Interview
Fixed vs. Variable Mortgage Rates for Investors: April 2022 Update 5 min EP 027 Video
EP 027 · 5 min · Apr 2022
Fixed vs. Variable Mortgage Rates for Investors: April 2022 Update
Dalia Barsoum breaks down the fixed versus variable mortgage debate for Canadian real estate investors following the Bank of Canada's March 2, 2022 rate hike. With additional increases forecasted, she advises investors to conduct a personal stress test by modeling a one percent rate jump across their portfolio. Using a simple rule of thumb—approximately $15 more per month for every $100,000 in mortgage debt per 0.25 percent increase—investors can quickly gauge their exposure. If a property or personal budget can absorb the higher payments, Barsoum recommends staying variable. She explains that the spread between fixed and variable rates is at an all-time high of roughly 1.5 percent, giving variable rates significant room to climb before becoming costlier than fixed. More importantly, variable mortgages offer investor-friendly flexibility, including the ability to refinance, switch lenders, or sell with minimal penalties. For those facing cash flow strain, she suggests alternatives like extending amortization, consolidating debt, or converting to interest-only payments rather than locking into a fixed rate.
Market Pulse Market Commentary
Full Refinance Explained: Using Equity to Grow Your Portfolio 5 min EP 026 Video
EP 026 · 5 min · Oct 2021
Full Refinance Explained: Using Equity to Grow Your Portfolio
This episode breaks down the full refinance strategy for real estate investors looking to tap into their home equity. Host Dalia Barsoum explains how breaking an existing mortgage and creating a new loan up to 80% of a property's value can unlock capital for portfolio growth. Through a clear numerical example, she illustrates how a property valued at $800,000 with a $500,000 mortgage can yield $140,000 in accessible equity. Dalia outlines the key advantages, including lower interest rates compared to secured lines of credit and potential monthly payment reductions. She also details the drawbacks: immediate principal and interest payments on the full amount regardless of fund usage, and the negative impact on future borrowing power since lenders assess payments on the total equity taken out. The episode concludes with strategic guidance on when to choose a full refinance over a secured line of credit, recommending it only when you have immediate use for the funds within three months, and introducing a hybrid approach that combines both methods to optimize interest savings and preserve future purchasing power.
Wealth Foundations Education
Secured Lines of Credit: Your Best Fuel for Real Estate Portfolio Growth 8 min EP 025 Video
EP 025 · 8 min · Aug 2021
Secured Lines of Credit: Your Best Fuel for Real Estate Portfolio Growth
In this episode, Dalia Barsoum kicks off a four-part series on using equity in existing properties to fuel real estate portfolio growth. She explains why equity is superior to savings or joint venture capital: it is cheaper, accumulates faster in Ontario markets, and allows investors to retain 100% of cash flow, appreciation, and mortgage paydown. The episode focuses on secured lines of credit (LOCs) as the first of four equity-access strategies. Dalia defines a secured LOC as a revolving credit facility backed by property equity that works like a large checking account, charging interest only on amounts used. She highlights key advantages including pay-as-you-go flexibility, the ability to register in first or second position, and lower interest-only payments compared to traditional mortgages. A detailed example compares a $50,000 LOC payment versus a mortgage payment. Dalia also introduces advanceable LOCs, which automatically increase their limit as mortgage principal is paid down—building future capital without requalifying. She concludes with important caveats: LOC rates run higher than mortgages, unencumbered properties cap at 65% loan-to-value, and investors must still qualify under standard mortgage rules.
Wealth Foundations Education
Top 5 BRRR Financing Tips and Traps for Real Estate Investors 9 min EP 024 Video
EP 024 · 9 min · Jun 2021
Top 5 BRRR Financing Tips and Traps for Real Estate Investors
In this episode, Dalia Barsoum breaks down the financing mechanics behind the BRRR (Buy, Renovate, Refinance, Rent) strategy, one of the most powerful approaches for forcing appreciation and boosting rental cash flow in a short timeframe. She explains how strategic renovations—such as adding legal units or upgrading existing ones—can lift property value, allowing investors to refinance and extract capital to recycle into their next deal. Barsoum outlines five critical financing tips and traps to consider before acquiring a property. First, she recommends choosing a variable rate mortgage at acquisition to maintain flexibility, since fixed-rate penalties can be prohibitive if you need to switch lenders to refinance quickly. Second, she emphasizes the importance of property condition, noting that assets requiring major gut jobs may force you into higher down payments or alternative lenders. Third, investors must validate their refinance exit assumptions, including lender seasoning rules and how much equity can actually be extracted. Fourth, she explains how renovation capital is typically structured, highlighting the Purchase Plus Improvements program and the role of secured lines of credit. Finally, she advises preparing a detailed executive summary for the appraiser to support maximum value at refinance, including before-and-after photos, permits, and recent comparables.
Wealth Foundations Education
New Mortgage Stress Test June 2021: 5 Strategies to Protect Your Buying Power 7 min EP 023 Video
EP 023 · 7 min · May 2021
New Mortgage Stress Test June 2021: 5 Strategies to Protect Your Buying Power
In this episode, Dalia Barsoum breaks down the upcoming OSFI mortgage stress test changes set to take effect on June 1, 2021. She explains that the new rules apply to all mortgages—both insured and conventional—regardless of down payment size. The stress test requires banks to qualify borrowers at the higher of their contract rate plus 2% or the new Bank of Canada benchmark rate of 5.25%, up from the previous 4.79%. While this change only reduces buying power by approximately 4 to 4.5%—much less than the 22% drop seen in 2018—it still requires investors to adjust their financing strategies. Dalia shares five practical debt and income management strategies to help investors maneuver the new rules: re-amortizing existing debts to lower monthly payments, paying off unsecured debts like credit cards, converting secured lines of credit into mortgages to reduce the payment used for qualification, topping up income by using market rents or adding co-applicants, and proactive portfolio planning through a financing roadmap methodology.
Market Pulse Market Commentary
Fixed vs Variable Mortgage Rates: Investor Strategies for 2021 6 min EP 022 Video
EP 022 · 6 min · Jan 2021
Fixed vs Variable Mortgage Rates: Investor Strategies for 2021
Dalia Barsoum addresses two pressing mortgage questions in a low-rate environment: whether to choose fixed or variable, and whether to break an existing fixed-rate mortgage to switch. She explains that the Bank of Canada expects its overnight target rate to remain low until late 2022 or early 2023, keeping variable rates stable, while government bond yields have begun rising and are expected to push five-year fixed rates higher as the economy stabilizes. For borrowers deciding between products, she recommends variable rates for real estate investors who need flexibility to refinance and recycle equity, and fixed rates for homeowners seeking long-term payment stability. She cautions that fixed-rate mortgages carry hefty breakage penalties and that portability and refinancing with the same lender are not guaranteed due to requalification requirements and policy windows. For those considering a switch, she outlines a cost-benefit analysis that weighs discharge penalties and setup costs against interest savings, noting that breaking early in a term often fails to produce net savings.
Market Pulse Market Commentary
Property Pulse: 3 Financing Lessons From 2020 to Prepare for 2021 7 min EP 021 Video
EP 021 · 7 min · Jan 2021
Property Pulse: 3 Financing Lessons From 2020 to Prepare for 2021
In this episode of Property Pulse, host Dalia Barsoum reflects on the transformative lending landscape of 2020 and extracts three critical lessons for real estate investors heading into 2021. The first lesson emphasizes proactive financial planning: investors who regularly reviewed their portfolios and established lines of credit and cash reserves before the crisis were able to pivot successfully, while reactive investors faced significant stress when job losses and rent collection issues arose. The second lesson warns against rushing into mortgage deferrals without exploring alternatives, as many investors later learned that deferrals impeded new financing approvals and resulted in higher monthly payments once the deferral period ended. The third lesson focuses on mortgage flexibility and fine print, highlighting how fixed-rate and fully closed mortgage holders faced hefty penalties or complete lockouts when they needed to access equity during rapidly changing market conditions. Barsoum recommends incorporating variable-rate mortgages into portfolios now, given the Bank of Canada's commitment to maintaining low overnight lending rates through 2023, and stresses the importance of understanding prepayment privileges, exit clauses, and breakage penalties beyond simply chasing the lowest rate.
Market Pulse Market Commentary
Property Development Strategy: Land Acquisition, Risk Mitigation & Construction Financing 8 min EP 020 Video
EP 020 · 8 min · Dec 2020
Property Development Strategy: Land Acquisition, Risk Mitigation & Construction Financing
with Nick Stillo
Expert Insights Interview
Multi-Residential Investing: Apartment Building Strategies and Financing Tips 18 min EP 019 Video
EP 019 · 18 min · Nov 2020
Multi-Residential Investing: Apartment Building Strategies and Financing Tips
with Matthew Frederick
Expert Insights Interview
Wholesaling Properties in Ontario: Strategies, Risks & Financing 12 min EP 018 Video
EP 018 · 12 min · Sep 2020
Wholesaling Properties in Ontario: Strategies, Risks & Financing
with Luc Boiron
Expert Insights Interview
New Construction Condo Investing: Market Outlook and Financing Strategies 6 min EP 017 Video
EP 017 · 6 min · Sep 2020
New Construction Condo Investing: Market Outlook and Financing Strategies
with Claude Boiron
Market Pulse Interview
Buy & Hold Strategy: Market Outlook, Financing Tips & Expert Insights 8 min EP 016 Video
EP 016 · 8 min · Aug 2020
Buy & Hold Strategy: Market Outlook, Financing Tips & Expert Insights
with Sarah Larbi
Expert Insights Interview
Student Rental Investing: Strategy, Risks & Financing Tips 7 min EP 015 Video
EP 015 · 7 min · Aug 2020
Student Rental Investing: Strategy, Risks & Financing Tips
with Gillian Irving
Expert Insights Interview
Property Pulse: BRRR Strategy Financing & Refinancing Tips with Quentin D'Souza 19 min EP 014 Video
EP 014 · 19 min · Jul 2020
Property Pulse: BRRR Strategy Financing & Refinancing Tips with Quentin D'Souza
with Quentin D'Souza
Expert Insights Interview
Rent-to-Own (RTO) Investment Strategy: Cash Flow Opportunities and Market Outlook 7 min EP 013 Video
EP 013 · 7 min · Jul 2020
Rent-to-Own (RTO) Investment Strategy: Cash Flow Opportunities and Market Outlook
with Rachel Oliver
Expert Insights Interview
Simcoe County Real Estate Market Update: Pandemic Impact, Inventory Shortage & Investor Financing Strategies 7 min EP 012 Video
EP 012 · 7 min · Jul 2020
Simcoe County Real Estate Market Update: Pandemic Impact, Inventory Shortage & Investor Financing Strategies
with Colby Marshall
Market Pulse Market Commentary
Peterborough Real Estate Market Update: Pandemic Impact, Secondary Suites & Student Rental Opportunities 5 min EP 011 Video
EP 011 · 5 min · Jul 2020
Peterborough Real Estate Market Update: Pandemic Impact, Secondary Suites & Student Rental Opportunities
with Rob Break
Market Pulse Interview
Durham Region Market Update: Pandemic Trends & Investment Strategy 13 min EP 010 Video
EP 010 · 13 min · Jun 2020
Durham Region Market Update: Pandemic Trends & Investment Strategy
with Chris Shabib
Market Pulse Interview
Ottawa, Chatham & Windsor Market Update: COVID-19 Impact on Ontario Real Estate Investing 17 min EP 009 Video
EP 009 · 17 min · Jun 2020
Ottawa, Chatham & Windsor Market Update: COVID-19 Impact on Ontario Real Estate Investing
with Christina Danby
Market Pulse Market Commentary
Property Pulse Report EP6: Southwestern Ontario Market Update – Hamilton, Brantford, KWC, St. Catharines & London 23 min EP 008 Video
EP 008 · 23 min · Jun 2020
Property Pulse Report EP6: Southwestern Ontario Market Update – Hamilton, Brantford, KWC, St. Catharines & London
with Tehani Aburana
Market Pulse Market Commentary
Property Pulse (EP5): Investment Property Values Below $600K in Ontario Cash Flow Markets 5 min EP 007 Video
EP 007 · 5 min · Jun 2020
Property Pulse (EP5): Investment Property Values Below $600K in Ontario Cash Flow Markets
with Victoria McPherson
Market Pulse Market Commentary
Should You Buy Real Estate Right Now? Pandemic Investing Insights with Jennifer Hunt 20 min EP 006 Video
EP 006 · 20 min · May 2020
Should You Buy Real Estate Right Now? Pandemic Investing Insights with Jennifer Hunt
with Jennifer Hunt
Market Pulse Interview
Ontario Rental Market Update: Pandemic Impact on Rents, Demand & Landlord Strategies 16 min EP 005 Video
EP 005 · 16 min · May 2020
Ontario Rental Market Update: Pandemic Impact on Rents, Demand & Landlord Strategies
with Lena Girguis
Market Pulse Interview
Property Pulse Report (EP2): COVID-19 Legal Guide for Real Estate Transactions & Tenancies 8 min EP 004 Video
EP 004 · 8 min · May 2020
Property Pulse Report (EP2): COVID-19 Legal Guide for Real Estate Transactions & Tenancies
with Mark Weisleder
Expert Insights Interview
Property Pulse: COVID-19 Impact on Ontario Real Estate Appraisals and Property Values 10 min EP 003 Video
EP 003 · 10 min · May 2020
Property Pulse: COVID-19 Impact on Ontario Real Estate Appraisals and Property Values
with Lorenzo Presutti
Market Pulse Interview
2018 Mortgage Stress Test Explained: 4 Investor Strategies to Maintain Borrowing Power 17 min EP 002 Video
EP 002 · 17 min · Mar 2018
2018 Mortgage Stress Test Explained: 4 Investor Strategies to Maintain Borrowing Power
with Dalia Barsoum
Wealth Foundations Interview
How to Leverage Home Equity to Invest in Real Estate and Build Wealth 27 min EP 001 Video
EP 001 · 27 min · Mar 2018
How to Leverage Home Equity to Invest in Real Estate and Build Wealth
with Dalia Barsoum
Wealth Foundations Interview

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