Hi. What city do you live in? If you're comfortable mentioning it. Also, I rent. There are a lot of good young professionals who want to rent from people who are trusting and understandable. The other side of that equation is the landlord who micromanages, jacks up rent, expects unreasonable things, or tries to limit what you can do in your unit despite the laws. Finally, is there data that might suggest when the interest rates might peak relative to inflation? It looks like at some point the two might meet on that chart.
I'm in Toronto. Very true - there are many solid landlord/tenant relationships. I suppose I zero in on the horror stories. I've had horrible landlords too. Respect goes both ways.
Interest rates and inflation don't necessarily need to meet. I think the thing to watch is core inflation data to see when the Fed and Bank of Canada might pause. There are some tentative signs that inflation (i.e. the rate of change) has peaked but too early to say. The long end of the yield curve has remained relatively stable (compared to short end) indicating the bond market thinks rates will come down perhaps in the next year or so.
Hi. What city do you live in? If you're comfortable mentioning it. Also, I rent. There are a lot of good young professionals who want to rent from people who are trusting and understandable. The other side of that equation is the landlord who micromanages, jacks up rent, expects unreasonable things, or tries to limit what you can do in your unit despite the laws. Finally, is there data that might suggest when the interest rates might peak relative to inflation? It looks like at some point the two might meet on that chart.
I'm in Toronto. Very true - there are many solid landlord/tenant relationships. I suppose I zero in on the horror stories. I've had horrible landlords too. Respect goes both ways.
Interest rates and inflation don't necessarily need to meet. I think the thing to watch is core inflation data to see when the Fed and Bank of Canada might pause. There are some tentative signs that inflation (i.e. the rate of change) has peaked but too early to say. The long end of the yield curve has remained relatively stable (compared to short end) indicating the bond market thinks rates will come down perhaps in the next year or so.