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B.C. home sales struggle in May as mortgage rates rise and labour market stays weak




Rising mortgage rates and a weaker labour market are weighing on home sales in British Columbia, especially in the Lower Mainland. 

The Reemergence of International Investing


After more than a decade of US market dominance, 2025 may have marked a turning point for global investors. International equities have surged ahead of their US counterparts, evidenced by strong earnings growth and supported by policy reform momentum and a reassessment of “American exceptionalism.”

This broad-based outperformance across Europe, Japan, and emerging markets has prompted investors to ask whether the tide is turning in favor of global diversification. Is this the start of a new structural cycle in market leadership, or simply a short-term correction after years of imbalance?

Since the global financial crisis (GFC), US equities have been the centerpiece of global portfolios, benefiting from a powerful mix of dollar strength, technological innovation, and economic resilience.

This “only game in town” narrative has been reinforced by a record bull market in both the dollar and the technology sector, drawing unprecedented capital inflows and leaving investors structurally overweight US assets.

This post is the first in a series exploring whether this outperformance marks the start of a structural trend or merely a temporary shift, and how global investors can position for it.

[YMMV] Lowe’s MyLowe’s Rewards Members: 10% Off, Up To $50


The Offer

Direct link to offer

  • Lowe’s is offering MyLowe’s Rewards Members (free to join) 10% off, up to $50

Our Verdict

Stack with other Lowe’s deals to discount further.

Trump expects to sign an Iran deal Sunday, but Tehran may want to avoid giving him a birthday gift



A memorandum of understanding that ends the Iran war and reopens the Strait of Hormuz could be imminent, after weeks of dashed hopes and on-again, off-again talks.

But the timing of an MOU could emerge as a last-minute snag.

President Donald Trump insisted on Saturday that he will sign a deal on Sunday, which also happens to be his 80th birthday.

That came after Pakistan’s prime minister said earlier on Saturday that an agreement is closer than “ever before” and expected it to be finalized within 24 hours.

Pakistan, which has served as a mediator between the U.S. and Iran, is preparing for an electronic signing, followed immediately by technical-level talks next week.

But Tehran pushed back, with its Fars News Agency denying that anything will be signed on Sunday and instead dismissing “Trump’s strange insistence” for that day.

“An hour ago, Trump once again emphasized that the memorandum of understanding with Iran will be signed on Sunday,” it said in a post on X. “This comes even as Iranian officials have explicitly stated that the agreement has not been finalized and will definitely not take place on Sunday.”

Iran’s foreign ministry also maintained that the MOU will not be signed on Sunday—but didn’t rule out that it could happen in the coming days.

To be sure, there have been several times when it looked like both sides were on the verge of a deal, but nothing happened. Reading between the lines this time, however, Iran watchers see a less substantive issue at play.

“They don’t want to give Trump a birthday gift! (seriously, this is being discussed as an important factor among Iranian commentators),” said Hamidreza Azizi, an analyst at SWP Berlin.

Eurasia Group analyst Gregory Brew agreed, and also quipped, “Seems fitting that this should serve as the endgame.”

He predicted the MOU could be signed when it’s Sunday night in the eastern U.S., but early Monday morning in Iran.

Of course, more serious matters could still derail the MOU. For example, Iran has vowed to charge fees on ships crossing the Strait of Hormuz, a non-starter for the U.S.

Tehran is also demanding immediate sanctions relief and the unfreezing of assets, while the U.S. has said that could come in phases as Iran satisfies its end of the bargain, especially on winding down its nuclear program.

The U.S. and Iran are also still exchanging fire, with Central Command saying Friday that U.S. forces shot down Iranian drones that were targeting commercial ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz.

Meanwhile, Trump is planning other birthday activities. On Sunday, UFC will stage a fight on the South Lawn of the White House, the first such event at the executive mansion.

The mixed martial spectacle, which features a giant claw-like structure that was built around UFC’s Octagon, is timed for Trump’s birthday and the celebration of the nation’s 250th anniversary.

Last year, Trump celebrated his 79th birthday with a military parade along the streets of Washington, DC, that coincided with the Army’s 250th birthday.

From UMG’s €1B bond sale to Warner Music’s Sureel AI acquisition… it’s MBW’s Weekly Round-up


Welcome to Music Business Worldwide’s Weekly Round-up – where we make sure you caught the five biggest stories to hit our headlines over the past seven days. MBW’s Round-up is exclusively supported by BMI, a global leader in performing rights management, dedicated to supporting songwriters, composers and publishers and championing the value of music.


This week, Universal Music Group confirmed a EUR €1 billion bond sale.

Separately, UMG agreed to sell royalty platform Curve Royalty Systems to Merlin and Matt Spetzler‘s Jamen Capital.

Meanwhile, Warner Music Group acquired Sureel AI, the attribution startup that traces how AI models use artists’ work.

Elsewhere, the National Music Publishers’ Association struck landmark AI licensing deals with Udio and KLAY.

Also this week, Spotify was reported to be seeking the rights to show live video of music festivals.

Here are some of the biggest headlines from the past few days…


1. UNIVERSAL MUSIC CONFIRMS €1 BILLION BOND SALE

Universal Music Group has successfully priced a EUR €1 billion (USD $1.15 billion) bond offering. The bond sale is split into two tranches of €500 million each, UMG said on Tuesday (June 9). UMG, which trades on the Euronext Amsterdam, confirmed on Tuesday (June 9) that it “has successfully priced €500m of 3.375% senior unsecured notes due 2030 and €500m of 4.125% senior unsecured notes due 2036″… (MBW)


2. WARNER MUSIC GROUP ACQUIRES SUREEL AI, THE ATTRIBUTION STARTUP THAT TRACES HOW AI MODELS USE ARTISTS’ WORK

Warner Music Group has agreed to acquire Sureel AI. Sureel is the attribution startup whose technology tracks how AI models use artists’ work in training and generation. The acquisition “advances WMG‘s mission to ensure that artists, songwriters, and rightsholders benefit wherever and whenever their work is referenced in AI-generated works or in the training of AI models,” according to the company… (MBW)


3. MUSIC PUBLISHERS STRIKE AI LICENSING DEALS WITH UDIO AND KLAY AS NMPA REVEALS ‘LANDMARK’ INDUSTRY-WIDE PACTS

The National Music Publishers’ Association has agreed an industry-wide AI licensing deal with the AI music platform Udio. NMPA President and CEO David Israelite announced the deal on Wednesday (June 10) at the trade body’s annual meeting in New York, where he also unveiled an agreement in principle with a second AI music platform, KLAY. Israelite said the Udio agreement is the first industry-wide licensing deal struck with a major AI music company, and the first to “value songs and sound recordings equally” when it comes to AI training… (MBW)


4. UNIVERSAL SELLS CURVE ROYALTY SYSTEMS TO MERLIN AND MATT SPETZLER’S JAMEN CAPITAL

Universal Music Group and its subsidiary Virgin Music Group have agreed to sell Curve Royalty Systems to Jamen Capital and Merlin. The sale is the divestment that the European Commission required as a condition of clearing Universal Music Group’s $775 million acquisition of Downtown Music Holdings in February. It paves the way for Curve, the royalty processing platform used by thousands of record labels, distributors and publishers, to operate as an independent business again… (MBW)


5. SPOTIFY SEEKING RIGHTS TO SHOW LIVE VIDEO OF MUSIC FESTIVALS (REPORT)

Spotify has held talks with festival promoters over rights to carry live concert video on its platform. That’s according to Bloomberg, which reported on Monday (June 8) that the plans had been described to it by people familiar with the talks. It would be Spotify‘s first push into live video; the company has so far only tried live audio… (MBW)


Partner message: MBW’s Weekly Round-up is supported by BMI, the global leader in performing rights management, dedicated to supporting songwriters, composers and publishers and championing the value of music. Find out more about BMI hereMusic Business Worldwide

Relay Financial Bonus, Get $500 With New Account


Relay Financial $500 Bonus

Relay Financial is offering a bonus for $500 for new accounts. This is an all-in-one business banking and money management platform designed for small businesses. It’s a fintech company with banking services provided by Thread Bank, Member FDIC. Let’s see how this bonus works, and who is eligible.

How to Earn This Bonus

  • Earn $500 when you deposit $20,000 into your Relay account within the first 30 days of account opening and maintain it for 90 days.
  • Reward is deposited into your Relay account within 30 days of meeting the requirements.

Are You Eligible?

Here are the eligibility details for this bonus:

  • Offer is available nationwide.
  • Each Relay user can only claim one bonus.

Account Fees

Guru’s Wrap-Up

This is the best bonus we have seen for Relay Financial. You need to open a new account and deposit $10,000 $20,000 in order to earn $500. You need to make your deposit within 30 days, and need to keep that balance for at least 90 days.

The account opening process is fairly quick. I provided some basic information and had to take a picture of my ID and a selfie. This latest link is through SoFi Gusto.

Relay may be a good option for getting other bank bonuses as well. ACH transfers from Relay do count as direct deposit is some cases.


💡 Link & Full Details

  • OFFER PAGE
  • Max Bonus: $500
  • Account Type: Business Checking
  • Availability: Nationwide
  • Type of Inquiry: Soft pull
  • Direct Deposit Requirement: No
  • Other Requirements: $20K deposit 
  • Credit Card Funding: No
  • Monthly Fee: None
  • Early Account Closing Fee: None
  • Expiration Date: None


Share Bank Bonuses and other deals with us and our readers

The Pipes Burst During the Final Walkthrough. He Bought the House Anyway.


Here’s how an out-of-state investor turned a flooded hoarder house into his next step toward 20 doors, and what his team says separates the investors who make it from the ones who tap out.

Bogdan was doing the final walkthrough on a house in Warren, Michigan, that he had already agreed to buy when his agent spotted water where it had no business being. A pipe had burst. The house had basically flooded. That meant new damage, problems, and a reason for most buyers to walk.

Bogdan asked for another discount.

That move, the one that looks at a flooded house and sees a cheaper flooded house, is most of the story of how a guy losing two to three hours a day to New York traffic ended up running a real estate operation in metro Detroit from a different state entirely.

The Minutes, Not the Money

Before any of this, Bogdan had a setup a lot of readers will recognize: 

  • A 9-to-5 that came home with him every night
  • A commute that ate the daylight on both ends
  • The growing sense that the clock was running and he was spending it in the wrong place

“Sitting in NY traffic for two to three hours a day and a stressful 9-to-5 that went home with you—it just felt like time was wasting away,” he says.

Real estate looked like the way out. Not because of the money, exactly. What is the point of any of it if you never get the minutes back?

“I say freedom and not financial freedom, because freedom is not money,” Bogdan says. “It’s the extra minutes you get to spend with your son, your wife, and your family, learning new things and traveling.”

Building the Team Before the Portfolio

Bogdan was not starting from zero. He had owned a small condo in Nashville, so owning property out of state was not a brand-new idea. But when he set his sights on Michigan, he made a decision that mattered more than any single property: He went looking for the team first.

He found BiggerPockets, searched for the top investor-friendly brokers in metro Detroit, and landed on the FIRE Realty Team. Within a few conversations, he was talking to team lead Joe Hammel, who paired him with one of his agents, Richi Brown. 

Then came two to three months of the part that most investors skip: education, pricing, neighborhoods, rents, demographics, and which governing agency does what.

Only then did Bogdan buy. And he bought the boring way on purpose.

“I wanted to learn without too much skin in the game, so turnkey was the best,” he says. He put 15% down, picked up a few turnkey rentals, cycled through a couple of property management companies, and got comfortable. Then he ran the math at his own pace and saw the problem.

The Pivot: Turnkey to BRRRR

Turnkey was teaching him the market. It was also going to bankrupt him. “At this pace with turnkeys, I was going to run out of money, and that was never the long-term strategy,” he says.

So he sold his second New York co-op and the Nashville condo and moved into BRRRRs (buy, rehab, rent, refinance, repeat, for anyone new here); the whole point is to recycle the same down payment instead of burning a fresh one on every deal. Bogdan moved slow and steady, vetting every contractor and vendor and learning timelines and seasoning periods. By then, the whole FIRE team knew his buy box, and deals started coming in.

“Rome wasn’t built in a day, and I guarantee no real estate portfolio was built overnight,” Bogdan says. “Having the right team in place is key, and the team I have, I wish for every beginner and seasoned investor to have in their corner.”

Three Houses, Three Completely Different Bets

This year, Bogdan is chasing 20 doors by the end of 2026, hunting in the $40,000 to $130,000 range across Warren and Eastpointe, running two strategies at once. On the low end, he’s looking for something that will involve heavy sweat equity to squeeze out max ARV. On the high end, he seeks something tenant-occupied that has been sitting on the market that he can buy below market and push rents on with light work.

Here is what that looked like in practice. Three houses, all real, all on the table at the same time.

The $40K shell in Warren was a three-bed, one-bath with a basement and no garage, about 950 square feet on a corner lot. On paper, it had meat on the bone. Add a garage, juice the ARV, and you’re done

Then they showed up to view it. It was a shell, with severe structural issues. The kind of “deal” that is only a deal until you walk inside.

The $72K hoarder house, also in Warren, was a three-bed, one-bath, 870-square-foot house with a basement and a garage. Funky layout, small rooms, packed wall-to-wall with the previous owner’s everything. Not pretty. But the location was strong, and in this market, a basement and a garage are in serious demand.

The $130K keeper in Eastpointe was a three-bed, two-bath house, about 1,000 square feet, with a garage but no basement, already tenant-occupied at close to market rent. It was in a great area, within walking distance to houses Bogdan already owned, with real upside and almost nothing out of pocket to make it work.

Cheap and scary, mid and ugly, pricier and easy—all on one budget.

The One He Picked

Bogdan went with the $72,000 hoarder house in Warren.

It was off-market. The seller needed cash fast, and because Bogdan was willing to close as-is, Richi negotiated a steep discount on the way in. 

Then came that final walkthrough: the burst pipes, the flood, and a fresh round of damage nobody had priced in. Bogdan did not flinch. He let Richi take the new problem back to the table and turn it into a second discount.

A worse house on paper turned into a better deal in practice.

What Actually Separates the Winners

Ask Bogdan’s team what makes him different, and the answer has nothing to do with finding deals. Richi says:

“Most investors approach real estate with the wrong expectations and mentality. They think just because you underwrite a deal and make it pencil, it all magically comes together, and you make a ton of money without backend effort

The reality is, identifying the deal is the easy part. Executing the deal is where the money is made. Good execution can turn a base hit into a double or a triple. Poor execution wipes you out of the game completely. 

Buying real estate is more like buying a business than investing in a stock. The investors who treat it like the latter fail. The ones who treat it like the former hit financial freedom.”

Bogdan is the proof. He built the foundation first—a good agent and property manager—before he ever touched a heavy rehab. In year one, he hired and fired three to five property managers before he found one that fit and ran through twice as many contractors. He now runs the entire operations side of the business in-house from a different state and has quit his W-2 job to do real estate investing full-time.

The flooded house represented a guy who had already decided that the work after the contract was the actual job.

Final Thoughts

  • Build a team before building a portfolio: Bogdan spent two to three months learning the market with his agent before buying anything. The relationship was the first asset on the books.
  • Buy boring to learn: A turnkey with 15% down was the low-stakes classroom. He graduated to BRRRRs once he understood the market, not before.
  • Underwriting is the easy part: The spread is made in execution, vendor management, and the willingness to renegotiate when a pipe bursts at the worst possible moment.
  • Expect to fire people: Losing three to five PMs and a stack of contractors in year one is the cost of building a team that eventually runs without you.

Bogdan found his metro Detroit team through BiggerPockets. Richi Brown and Joe Hammel of the FIRE Realty Team are right here on the platform.

HUD to change chassis requirements on manufactured homes



The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development is looking to update the definition of a manufactured home and support opportunities for multistory manufactured housing.

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Under the proposed rule published in the Federal Register Friday, the new definition of a manufactured home, as mentioned in the Manufactured Home Construction and Safety Standards, also known as the HUD Code, would allow upper floor sections to be transported and constructed without a permanent chassis.

“America needs more housing, and manufactured housing is part of the solution,” HUD Secretary Scott Turner said in a press release. “We are removing unnecessary barriers, encouraging innovation and helping American manufacturers deliver more affordable housing options for American families.”

The expanded definition explains the permanent chassis requirement for a manufactured home could be met by building only the lowest level transportable sections of a manufactured home on a permanent chassis, excluding the upper floors from the requirement. The new definition would support multistory construction of manufactured homes and give manufacturers greater flexibility to design and construct homes to meet growing consumer demand while lowering costs.

“The permanent chassis requirement reflects a legacy conception of manufactured housing that no longer aligns with the realities of today’s market,” Manufactured Housing Institute CEO Leslie Gooch said. “Allowing multilevel manufactured homes to be built with or without a permanent chassis is a critical step toward modernizing HUD Code housing and expanding consumer choice.”

From a construction standpoint, removing the fixed steel frame from the upper floors breaks down major design barriers, leading to more flexibility, reduced costs and material waste and expanded options, Gooch added. 

The proposed rule would also make corresponding updates to the definition in the Model Manufactured Home Installation Standards and the Manufactured Home Installation Program regulations, HUD said in the release.

With the housing market facing affordability and supply struggles, HUD has turned its attention to manufactured homes. Turner deemed manufactured housing the key to solving inventory issues last year and announced plans to overhaul its manufactured housing program, including the elimination of the chassis requirement altogether.

HUD has continued to support the manufactured housing industry through the ROAD to Housing Act. The agency also opened a funding opportunity worth $10 million late last month focused on tests that leverage advanced robotics and artificial intelligence to accelerate the manufacturing of factory-built housing and offsite components.

More than 20 million Americans reside in manufactured homes, according to the release, and the need for affordable housing is ever-increasing.

“Removing the chassis allows for more design flexibility, such as lower profiles, better integration with site-built neighborhoods and improved energy efficiency,” Gooch said. “This change broadens the appeal of manufactured homes to consumers who might otherwise be priced out of homeownership.”



Here’s What the Estimated 2027 Social Security COLA Could Do to the Maximum Benefit Next Year


Social Security’s richest beneficiaries will get richer next year, with the maximum benefit set to take a substantial leap thanks to the 2027 cost-of-living adjustment (COLA). We won’t know the official COLA until mid-October, but a new projection gives us a rough idea of where checks might end up.

Unfortunately, only a lucky few will receive the largest benefits next year. Here’s how to know if you’ll be one of them, and how much more the max checks could be worth in 2027.

Image source: Getty Images.

What the maximum Social Security benefit could look like in 2027

The maximum Social Security benefit for 2026 is $5,181 per month, or $62,172 per year. That’s already a pretty big chunk of money, but it will get even better once the 2027 COLA takes effect.

The Senior Citizens League (TSCL), a nonpartisan senior group, estimates that the 2027 Social Security COLA will come in at around 3.8%. This is a substantial increase over the 2.8% COLA that beneficiaries saw this year.

A 3.8% COLA would raise the $5,181 max monthly benefit to $5,378 per month, giving the richest beneficiaries $64,536 per year. Some seniors could live comfortably on that amount alone. Unfortunately, only a lucky few will receive checks this big next year.

Why you won’t get the max checks, and what to expect instead

Claiming the maximum Social Security benefit requires you to do three things:

  1. Work for at least 35 years before retiring.
  2. Earn the maximum taxable earnings in all 35 of those years.
  3. Apply for Social Security when you turn 70.

While many people check the first box, almost everyone fails the second. You’d need to earn the equivalent of $184,500 in 2026 dollars in 35 separate years. Most people never earn that much in a single year, so the maximum benefit is off the table. Those who claim Social Security before 70 further reduce their checks.

If you’re trying to get a rough idea of how much you can expect from the program next year, it’s better to look at the average Social Security benefit. This is $2,081 as of April 2026. A 3.8% COLA would bring that to $2,160 per month.

That might be less than what you were hoping for, but know that it’s not set in stone. The COLA could still increase between now and the official announcement in October. Just be aware that higher COLAs occur amid higher inflation, so extra money will likely go toward higher living costs rather than improving your lifestyle.