BCBusiness

July/August 2025 – The Top 100

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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16 J o s e f H a n u s / S h u t t e r s t o c k B C B U S I N E S S . C A J U LY/A U G U S T 2 0 2 5 foreigners are also the biggest buyers: Florida, Arizona, Cali- fornia, Hawaii. I can hardly wait to see what the 2025 report, which will cover from last April up to March 2025, will have to say, given the unprecedented turbulence south of the border because of The White House Resident Who Shall Not Be Named. It seems likely that the sell-off, particularly in redder states like Florida, will be con- tinuing apace. In the meantime, there is much chatter among cur- rent owners, among friends, relatives and neighbours of owners, among realtors and among business-watcher types about what might happen among B.C. proprietors who have flocked to various parts of nearby Washington State and bought up a lot of recreational property, in particular. In Point Roberts, in Blaine, in Birch Bay, in rural vacation compounds on the road to Mount Baker, Canadians have become a significant compo- nent of the population. So it's a big question: will they decamp? Joy Trayers sure isn't planning to. Trayers says she's actually been through worse since she and her husband bought a share at the Black Mountain Ranch Campground 19 kilometres southeast of Sumas in August of 2001. Canadians looooove American real estate. For all that we have liked to serially complain over the decades that our True North Strong and Free land is being bought up by the Americans, the Japanese, the Chinese, the Russians, the Koreans, the South Asians—we apparently love that Yankee dirt right back. In fact, the U.S. National Association of Realtors report for 2024 (the last one avail- able) showed that tiny little us, population 40 million, surged ahead of China, population much bigger than 40 million, for number of properties bought in the U.S. Okay, so the 7,100 homes that Canadians bought in the U.S. in 2024 is a dribble compared to the peak of 2010 (69,100) or even the mid- 2000s, when the numbers were in the 40-50,000 range. But foreign buying has been slowly declining for all groups, leaving Canadians still among the most prevalent buyers in recent years, with a 13-percent share of all purchases. As it turns out, we can also be the biggest sellers, when things aren't going well. In the 2024 report, Canadians represented almost a quarter of foreign owners selling their properties. Much of that is happening in the states where NORTHERN REFLECTIONS With the U.S. and Canada firmly locked in a trade war, British Columbians who own property south of the border are feeling the heat L A N D V A L U E S By Frances Bula Frances Bula is a long-time Vancouver journalist and the 2023 recipient of the Bruce Hutchison Lifetime Achievement Award from the Jack Webster Foundation. BORDER BUDDIES Though a border divides Tsawwassen, B.C., and Point Roberts, Washington, many BCers have vacation properties in the U.S. border town

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