This from ‘Easy credit, soaring prices raise new housing fears’ by Tara Perkins, Kevin Carmichael and David Ebner, Globe and Mail Update, Friday, Oct. 30, 2009 7:52pm -
“Nick Burzese and his fiancée Di Pham recently realized the North American dream – they bought a house of their own. And the couple’s new home is not just anywhere. It’s in Vancouver, one of the country’s priciest markets. Having rented for years, the couple, who both work in the mortgage business, thought they’d never be able to afford a house in the city. They were doomed, they felt, to live in a distant suburb. As they house-hunted, they saw to their disappointment that the recession hadn’t dampened the market much. “Everywhere we went, there were so many people there,” says Mr. Burzese, 36, a broker at MPRO Mortgage Architects. Eventually, they came across an old 11/2-storey “character” home on a leafy street of detached houses near the Pacific National Exhibition grounds, on the city’s east side. “We immediately fell in love with it,” Mr. Burzese says. “It’s really an area that’s starting to transform.” Ms. Pham, 28, and Mr. Burzese put $57,000 down on the $570,000 house early this year. The couple says they’re comfortable with the debt. They make good money and are installing a basement apartment as a “mortgage helper.” But they might not have been able to get into the market were it not for the intervention of the Bank of Canada and the federal government – in the form of a continued low interest rates and federal policies aimed at maintaining the flow of lending and spending. The interest rate on their mortgage? Just 1.5 per cent.”








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