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Samson Solomon

Mortgage Content Expert

  • 25 25 years of experience in banking, financial planning and lending
  • 207 articles written at nesto
  • 174 articles reviewed at nesto
  • Mortgages
  • Investments
  • Financial Planning

Expertise & Education

Expertise

  • Bank of Canada policy & rate decisions
  • Variable (VRM) and adjustable (ARM) rate mortgages
  • Real estate secured lending (RESL)
  • Mortgage strategy for purchases, renewals & refinances
  • Canadian housing market trends
  • Mortgage stress test & qualification guidelines
  • First-time homebuyer programs & government incentives
  • CMHC-insured & conventional mortgage products
  • Home equity lines of credit (HELOCs) & debt consolidation
  • Self-employed & non-traditional income mortgage solutions
  • Investment property & rental income financing
  • Credit & financial planning for mortgage readiness

Most Canadians assume a Bank of Canada rate cut means their mortgage costs will fall. For variable and adjustable mortgage holders, that's true; their monthly payments shift with their lender's prime rate. For fixed-rate borrowers, bond markets have already moved, and they rarely wait for the Bank to act.

— Samson Solomon

About Samson

Samson is a Mortgage Content Expert at nesto with over 25 years of experience in retail banking, financial advising and real estate secured lending (RESL). He is licensed as a mortgage agent (FSRA, Level 1) in Ontario and holds a Diploma in Financial Planning, the Registered Financial and Retirement Advisor (RFRA), and the Chartered Financial Planner (FP) designations from the Chartered Institute of Financial Planning (CIFP).

In his current role, Samson provides mortgage expert consultation to improve nesto’s SEO and user experience, creating content that helps clients understand and navigate the Canadian mortgage market. His writing draws on hands-on experience in relationship management, credit underwriting, mortgage sales, and financial planning.

Samson wants you to know

A Bank of Canada pause doesn't mean your mortgage costs are about to drop, and this is where a lot of people get tripped up. Think of it this way: variable and adjustable-rate mortgages are tied to the prime rate, so when the Bank moves, those borrowers feel it almost right away. Fixed rates, on the other hand, are driven by the bond market, and bond markets don't wait for the Bank of Canada to make up its mind. They've usually already moved well before any announcement, based on market and inflation expectations. So if your renewal is coming up in the next few months, don't sit tight waiting for a cut that may not come, or may already be baked into the fixed rates you're seeing today. Pull up your options, compare fixed vs. variable/adjustable side-by-side, and have a conversation with a mortgage expert who can walk you through what actually makes sense for your unique financial situation.

Samson's picks

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