18 Household Staples Canadians Are Replacing With Cheaper Alternatives Right Now
Canadian households are rethinking the everyday items that once went into carts without much thought. With grocery bills, cleaning supplies,
Canadian households are rethinking the everyday items that once went into carts without much thought. With grocery bills, cleaning supplies,
Grocery shopping in Canada has become a weekly exercise in second-guessing. A cart that once felt predictable can now feel
Canadians have become more selective about where each dollar goes, especially as routine costs continue to feel heavier than they
For many Canadians trying to buy a first home in 2026, the hardest part is no longer just saving a
Few farm products illustrate the fragility of Canada-U.S. trade quite like mushrooms. They are perishable, harvested year-round, and moved through
A quiet piece of Canada-U.S. security architecture has suddenly become a public symbol of strain between two longtime allies. Washington
Canada’s inflation story has turned hotter again, and this time the jump is hard to miss. Fresh data released on
The easiest opportunities on the TSX are usually the ones everyone is already discussing. The harder ones tend to hide
Markets rarely punish ideas that sound reckless at the start. More often, the expensive mistakes are the ones that sound
Long-term wealth usually does not get wrecked by one spectacular mistake. More often, it gets worn down by quiet, repeatable
The temptation is strongest when a market already looks validated. Canada’s benchmark spent the early part of 2026 testing record
Economic uncertainty rarely spreads its pressure evenly. It usually pushes households toward cheaper baskets, keeps essential bills near the top
For many Canadian investors, the hardest part of a higher-rate backdrop is not picking a single winning asset. It is
Canadian equities do not usually wait for a new calendar year to change character. A single earnings cycle, a shift
The TFSA has always looked simple on the surface: contribute after-tax dollars, let the money grow, and withdraw it tax-free.
For central bankers, patience is rarely passive. The Bank of Canada’s latest account of its April 29 deliberations shows a
The Gordie Howe International Bridge was supposed to symbolize something simple: a faster, more modern link between two economies that
Canada’s Arctic has moved from the edge of the national conversation to the centre of Ottawa’s security agenda. After repeated
Revir Media Group
447 Broadway
2nd FL #750
New York, NY 10013