sual supports – income growth and housing strength – weren’t doing as much. The catch is the regional split. TD said debt-to-income ratios have fallen in most provinces since the COVID-19 pandemic, but not in Ontario and Prince Edward Island. Ontario now has the highest household leverage in Canada, which makes it more sensitive to still-high borrowing costs and more exposed if home prices stay weak or incomes take a hit. That matters in a slower-growth backdrop: provinces with lighter debt loads may be able to keep consumption steadier, while Ontario could swing the national picture.
Why should I care?
For markets: TD says Ontario now has Canada’s highest debt-to-income ratio.
High debt-to-income means interest costs take a bigger bite out of monthly cash flow when borrowing rates stay elevated. If incomes soften, households usually protect the “must-pay” bills first, so discretionary spending tends to adjust faster. Weak housing can add another drag by shrinking perceived wealth and making it harder to borrow against home equity. Put together, TD’s message is that Canada’s headline wealth strength can hide a key fault line: Ontario’s consumer and housing activity may be more downside-sensitive than in lower-leverage provinces. For investors watching Canadian banks, retailers, and homebuilders, that province-level divergence can become a major driver of earnings momentum and credit quality.
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