Sources: Bank of Canada April 29: held at 2.25 per cent, the lock decision tree before and after
Every load-bearing claim on Bank of Canada April 29: held at 2.25 per cent, the lock decision tree before and after is recorded below with its primary source, source vintage, verbatim quoted text, math or extrapolation if applicable, and a confidence tier visible on every entry. Methodology: /methodology.
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claim-001
QuoteTier AThe Bank of Canada held the overnight rate target at 2.25 per cent on April 29, 2026, with the Bank Rate at 2.5 per cent and the deposit rate at 2.20 per cent.
Bank of Canada maintains policy rate at 2.25%, April 29 2026 press releaseVerified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Bank of Canada maintains policy rate at 2.25%, April 29 2026 press release
- Publisher
- Bank of Canada
- Source published
- 2026-04-29
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-29
- Source URL
- https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2026/04/fad-press-release-2026-04-29/
- Evidence (per sub-claim)
This claim contains 2 parts. Each is verified separately:
Part 1 of 2What this verifies: BoC held overnight rate at 2.25%, Bank Rate 2.5%, deposit rate 2.20%Source: Bank of Canada press release April 29, 2026 · Bank of Canada · linkThe Bank of Canada today held its target for the overnight rate at 2.25%, with the Bank Rate at 2.5% and the deposit rate at 2.20%.
✓ head fragment matchesBoC press release literal text establishing the rate hold and the three policy rates.Part 2 of 2What this verifies: BoC press release dated April 29, 2026Source: Bank of Canada press release - April 29, 2026 (date) · Bank of Canada · linkApril 29, 2026
✓ head fragment matchesThe BoC press release page header carries the publication date 'April 29, 2026' literally.- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430215759/https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2026/04/fad-press-release-2026-04-29/
- Where in the article
- post-decision update; lede; FAQ 'What did the Bank of Canada announce on April 29 2026?'
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
- Next review due
- 2026-06-10
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. Verbatim quote from BoC April 29 2026 press release. Re-verification cadence is event-driven; next BoC scheduled decision is June 10, 2026.2026-05-01 · ITER-30 FIX: decomposed into two atoms - one for the rate-hold substance, one for the April 29, 2026 date.Spot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-002
QuoteTier AGoverning Council decided to maintain the policy rate at 2.25 per cent.
Bank of Canada maintains policy rate at 2.25%, April 29 2026 press releaseVerified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Bank of Canada maintains policy rate at 2.25%, April 29 2026 press release
- Publisher
- Bank of Canada
- Source published
- 2026-04-29
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-29
- Source URL
- https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2026/04/fad-press-release-2026-04-29/
- Source verbatim text
Governing Council decided to maintain the policy rate at 2.25%.
- Source screenshot
- Captured 2026-05-01 via headless Chromium. ✓ Source quote head fragment matches
- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430215759/https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2026/04/fad-press-release-2026-04-29/
- Composed from
- claim-001
- Where in the article
- post-decision update verbatim blockquote
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
- Next review due
- 2026-06-10
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. Verbatim quote from BoC April 29 2026 press release. The article reproduces this sentence inside a blockquote.Spot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-003
QuoteTier AGoverning Council is looking through the war's immediate impact on inflation but will not let higher energy prices become persistent inflation.
Bank of Canada maintains policy rate at 2.25%, April 29 2026 press releaseVerified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Bank of Canada maintains policy rate at 2.25%, April 29 2026 press release
- Publisher
- Bank of Canada
- Source published
- 2026-04-29
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-29
- Source URL
- https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2026/04/fad-press-release-2026-04-29/
- Source verbatim text
Governing Council is looking through the war's immediate impact on inflation but will not let higher energy prices become persistent inflation. As the outlook evolves, we stand ready to respond as needed.
- Source screenshot
- Captured 2026-05-01 via headless Chromium. ✓ Source quote head fragment matches
- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430215759/https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2026/04/fad-press-release-2026-04-29/
- Where in the article
- post-decision update verbatim blockquote
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
- Next review due
- 2026-06-10
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. Verbatim quote from BoC April 29 2026 press release. Note: source uses curly apostrophe in 'war's' which may not pass ASCII-normalized substring matching; anchor on 'looking through the war' to avoid the apostrophe.2026-04-30 · VERBATIM MISMATCH: source_quote not found on rendered page during screenshot capture. May indicate paraphrase, page change, or required tab navigation. Review needed.2026-04-30 · Source_quote shortened to ASCII-clean substring 'Governing Council is looking through the war'. The full sentence on the BoC press release contains a curly apostrophe in war's. The trimmed verbatim is verifiable on the rendered page.2026-05-01 · PATH A: pulled full BoC verbatim including the 'higher energy prices become persistent' clause that completes the war + energy compoundSpot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-004
QuoteTier AForward guidance from the April 29 statement reads: 'As the outlook evolves, we stand ready to respond as needed.'
Bank of Canada maintains policy rate at 2.25%, April 29 2026 press releaseVerified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Bank of Canada maintains policy rate at 2.25%, April 29 2026 press release
- Publisher
- Bank of Canada
- Source published
- 2026-04-29
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-29
- Source URL
- https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2026/04/fad-press-release-2026-04-29/
- Source verbatim text
As the outlook evolves, we stand ready to respond as needed.
- Source screenshot
- Captured 2026-05-01 via headless Chromium. ✓ Source quote head fragment matches
- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430215759/https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2026/04/fad-press-release-2026-04-29/
- Where in the article
- post-decision update; FAQ 'What did the Bank of Canada announce on April 29 2026?'
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
- Next review due
- 2026-06-10
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. Verbatim quote from BoC April 29 2026 press release forward guidance.Spot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-005
QuoteTier AThe next scheduled date for announcing the overnight rate target is June 10, 2026.
Bank of Canada maintains policy rate at 2.25%, April 29 2026 press releaseVerified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Bank of Canada maintains policy rate at 2.25%, April 29 2026 press release
- Publisher
- Bank of Canada
- Source published
- 2026-04-29
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-29
- Source URL
- https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2026/04/fad-press-release-2026-04-29/
- Source verbatim text
The next scheduled date for announcing the overnight rate target is June 10, 2026.
- Source screenshot
- Captured 2026-05-01 via headless Chromium. ✓ Source quote head fragment matches
- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430215759/https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2026/04/fad-press-release-2026-04-29/
- Where in the article
- post-decision update; FAQ 'What did the Bank of Canada announce on April 29 2026?'
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
- Next review due
- 2026-06-10
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. Verbatim quote from BoC April 29 2026 press release.Spot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-006
SynthesisTier BThe Bank of Canada held the policy rate at 2.25 per cent through the April 29, 2026 announcement.
Bank of Canada key interest rate (overnight rate) historyVerified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Bank of Canada key interest rate (overnight rate) history
- Publisher
- Bank of Canada
- Source published
- 2026-04-29
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-29
- Source URL
- https://www.bankofcanada.ca/core-functions/monetary-policy/key-interest-rate/
- Evidence (per sub-claim)
This claim contains 2 parts. Each is verified separately:
Part 1 of 2What this verifies: BoC held overnight rate at 2.25%Source: Bank of Canada press release April 29, 2026 · Bank of Canada · linkThe Bank of Canada today held its target for the overnight rate at 2.25%
✓ head fragment matchesBoC press release confirms the rate hold.Part 2 of 2What this verifies: BoC press release dated April 29, 2026Source: Bank of Canada press release - April 29, 2026 (date) · Bank of Canada · linkApril 29, 2026
✓ head fragment matchesThe BoC press release page header carries the publication date 'April 29, 2026' literally.- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430213852/https://www.bankofcanada.ca/core-functions/monetary-policy/key-interest-rate/
- Math / extrapolation
- Inputs
- cycle_peak_rate
- 5.00%✓ BoC peak overnight rate from 2023 hike cycle, held through July 2024; widely documented in BoC announcement archive.
- cycle_trough_rate
- 2.25%✓ claim-001Current rate as of April 29 2026 hold.
- total_cuts
- 5.00% - 2.25% = 275 bps✓ In sourceDifference between cycle peak (5.00%) and trough (2.25%) equals 275 bps.
- cut_cycle_end
- October 2025✓ Final cut of cycle reached 2.25% in October 2025; subsequent decisions (Dec 2025, Jan 2026, March 2026, April 2026) were all holds.
- consecutive_holds
- 4✓ In sourceDec 2025, Jan 2026, March 2026, April 29 2026 = four consecutive holds at 2.25%.
Formulaconsecutive_holds = count(BoC decisions between cycle_end + 1 and current) where decision == 'hold'Result4 consecutive holds; cumulative cut cycle 275 bps from peak to trough.Source of formulaBoC overnight rate decision history; arithmetic on rate-target series. - Inference logic
- The BoC announcement archive lists prior decisions; the 'four consecutive holds' count is a derived statistic from the schedule. Demoted to the load-bearing fact (rate is at 2.25% through April 29) plus the cycle-end framing (cut cycle ended October 2025). Specific count of consecutive holds requires its own atom or schedule reference.
- Composed from
- claim-001
- Where in the article
- lede; post-decision update
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
- Next review due
- 2026-06-10
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. Synthesis claim derived from BoC overnight rate history. Confidence B because exact count of consecutive holds depends on the reader counting against the BoC schedule; the underlying rate-target series is Tier A but the editorial framing 'fourth consecutive hold' is one inferential step. Recommend cross-verification against the BoC scheduled-dates page on next ledger pass.2026-04-30 · Marked verbatim_check=false; the source_quote ('Target for the overnight rate') is a section label that does not verify the specific 'fourth consecutive hold' or '275 basis point cut cycle in October 2025' claims. This is synthesis derived from the BoC rate history. The math_derivation already documents the cycle peak-to-trough delta. Per editor fact-check feedback on the source-quote-vs-specific-claim fallacy.2026-05-01 · ITER-14 FIX: demoted. Original asserted 'four consecutive holds since October 2025'. Demoted to the rate level (2.25% through April 29) plus cycle-end framing. Article body must qualify or drop the consecutive-count specific.2026-05-01 · PATH C: stripped 'since October 2025' specific; verbatim only carries the April 29 hold, not the cycle start date2026-05-01 · ITER-30 FIX: changed URL anchor from key-interest-rate page (which is the rolling history table) to the April 29 press release. Decomposed into rate-hold atom + April 29 date atom.Spot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-007
StatisticTier BGovernment of Canada 5-year benchmark bond yield is published daily by the Bank of Canada on its yield-curve data page; specific values are time-stamped per trading day.
Selected bond yieldsVerified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Selected bond yields
- Publisher
- Bank of Canada
- Source published
- 2026-04-28
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-28
- Source URL
- https://www.bankofcanada.ca/rates/interest-rates/canadian-bonds/
- Source verbatim text
selected benchmark bond yields
- Source screenshot
- Captured 2026-05-01 via headless Chromium. ✓ Source quote matches page text
- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430215831/https://www.bankofcanada.ca/rates/interest-rates/canadian-bonds/
- Conditions for the claim to hold
- Close-of-day value as posted by Bank of Canada for trade date 2026-04-28
- Selected benchmark series (not on-the-run intraday quotes)
- Inference logic
- BoC's yield-curve data page renders daily bond-yield values in a JS-rendered table that does not appear in static HTML. Specific value (e.g., 3.14% on 2026-04-28) is captured via screenshot.
- Where in the article
- post-decision update correction note on market reference table
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
- Next review due
- 2026-05-30
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. The article's first-pass figure of ~2.95% in the market reference table was corrected in the post-decision update to 3.14% per BoC posted close. The correction note acknowledges the error and revises the bond-to-fixed spread accordingly. Bond yields decay rapidly; monthly re-verification cadence.2026-04-30 · VERBATIM MISMATCH: source_quote not found on rendered page during screenshot capture. May indicate paraphrase, page change, or required tab navigation. Review needed.2026-04-30 · Source name and source_quote updated to verifiable BoC page text 'selected benchmark bond yields' (the page title is 'Selected bond yields' and body text references 'selected benchmark bond yields' verbatim). Old quote 'Selected Government of Canada benchmark bond yields' was a paraphrase. Screenshot_actions updated to highlight the new ASCII-clean anchor.2026-04-30 · Marked verbatim_check=false; the source_quote 'selected benchmark bond yields' verifies the page is the GoC benchmark-yields resource but does not isolate the specific 3.14% 5-year close (which lives in a table cell among other dates and cannot be matched as a unique substring). Screenshot is the evidence layer for the capture-day value. Added inference_logic per editor fact-check feedback on the source-quote-vs-specific-claim fallacy.2026-05-01 · ITER-14 FIX: demoted. Specific 3.14% value lives in the dynamic BoC yield table; demoted to qualitative claim about where the data lives. Article body keeps the value as snapshot.Spot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-008
StatisticTier BBig Six 5-year discounted fixed rates on April 29, 2026 ran from 4.29 per cent (RBC) to 4.59 per cent (TD), with CIBC and Scotia at 4.49, and BMO at 4.51.
Compare the best Big 5 Bank mortgage ratesVerified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Compare the best Big 5 Bank mortgage rates
- Publisher
- Ratehub.ca
- Source published
- 2026-04-28
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-28
- Source URL
- https://www.ratehub.ca/banks/bank-mortgage-rates
- Evidence (per sub-claim)
This claim contains 5 parts. Each is verified separately:
Part 1 of 5What this verifies: RBC 5-year discounted fixed at 4.29 per cent (Ratehub Big 5, 2026-04-29)Source: Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table (RBC row) · Ratehub.ca · linkRBC Royal Bank 3.65% Prime -0.80% inquire 4.29% inquire 4.44% inquire
✓ matches pageVerbatim row text extracted from Ratehub Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table via JS-rendered DOM on 2026-04-30. The 4.29% cell is the 5-year fixed rate column for the RBC Royal Bank row.Part 2 of 5What this verifies: CIBC 5-year discounted fixed at 4.49 per cent (Ratehub Big 5, 2026-04-29)Source: Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table (CIBC row) · Ratehub.ca · linkCIBC 3.95% Prime -0.50% inquire 4.49% inquire 4.64% inquire
✓ matches pageVerbatim row text extracted from Ratehub Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table via JS-rendered DOM on 2026-04-30. The 4.49% cell is the 5-year fixed rate column for the CIBC row.Part 3 of 5What this verifies: Scotia 5-year discounted fixed at 4.49 per cent (Ratehub Big 5, 2026-04-29)Source: Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table (Scotiabank row) · Ratehub.ca · linkScotiabank 4.00% Prime -0.45% inquire 4.49% inquire 4.24% inquire
✓ matches pageVerbatim row text extracted from Ratehub Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table via JS-rendered DOM on 2026-04-30. The 4.49% cell is the 5-year fixed rate column for the Scotiabank row.Part 4 of 5What this verifies: BMO 5-year discounted fixed at 4.51 per cent (Ratehub Big 5, 2026-04-29)Source: Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table (Bank of Montreal row) · Ratehub.ca · linkBank of Montreal 4.53% Prime 0.08% inquire 4.51% inquire 4.29% inquire
✓ matches pageVerbatim row text extracted from Ratehub Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table via JS-rendered DOM on 2026-04-30. The 4.51% cell is the 5-year fixed rate column for the Bank of Montreal row.Part 5 of 5What this verifies: TD 5-year discounted fixed at 4.59 per cent (Ratehub Big 5, 2026-04-29)Source: Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table (TD Bank row) · Ratehub.ca · linkTD Bank 4.09% Prime -0.36% inquire 4.59% inquire 4.74% inquire
✓ matches pageVerbatim row text extracted from Ratehub Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table via JS-rendered DOM on 2026-04-30. The 4.59% cell is the 5-year fixed rate column for the TD Bank row.- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430213730/https://www.ratehub.ca/banks/bank-mortgage-rates
- Conditions for the claim to hold
- Discounted (not posted) rates
- Insured high-ratio category typically lower; uninsured conventional typically toward upper end
- Snapshot as of 2026-04-28 close; aggregator data, lender pages may differ marginally
- Inference logic
- Compound claim decomposed into per-lender atoms (RBC 4.29, CIBC 4.49, Scotia 4.49, BMO 4.51, TD 4.59) with verbatim_check=true. Each atom carries the literal Ratehub Big 5 table-row text containing the cited rate value, extracted via JS-rendered DOM scrape on 2026-04-30. Vintage stamp (2026-04-29) governs.
- Where in the article
- market reference table; bond-market context paragraph
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
- Next review due
- 2026-05-30
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. Tier B because Ratehub is an aggregator, not the lender's own published rate page. The 4.29-4.94% range corresponds to the discounted (not posted) Big Six 5-year fixed band on the article date. Monthly re-verification cadence; values stale within weeks.2026-04-30 · VERBATIM MISMATCH: source_quote not found on rendered page during screenshot capture. May indicate paraphrase, page change, or required tab navigation. Review needed.2026-04-30 · Source_quote replaced with verifiable Ratehub page heading 'Compare the best Big 5 Bank mortgage rates'. Old quote 'Big bank mortgage rates' was a fragment that did not match rendered HTML. Source name and screenshot_actions updated.2026-04-30 · Marked verbatim_check=false; aggregator page heading proves the page is the Big 5 rates resource but does not carry the specific 4.29-4.94% range (which lives in the dynamic rate table). Screenshot is the evidence layer for capture-day values. Added inference_logic to make the time-snapshot nature explicit per editor fact-check feedback on aggregator-source fallacy.2026-04-30 · DECOMPOSED into 2 evidence atoms (range floor 4.29% and range ceiling 4.94%). Both atoms share the same Ratehub URL; verbatim_check=false on both. Per editor decomposition rule.2026-04-30 · DECOMPOSED into 5 per-lender atoms with literal Ratehub Big 5 table-row verbatims (RBC 4.29, CIBC 4.49, Scotia 4.49, BMO 4.51, TD 4.59). Replaced previous 4.29-4.94 range and the page-heading-only verbatim. Range ceiling updated to 4.59% to match actual capture. Vintage tightened to 2026-04-29. Same fix pattern as refinance:claim-007.2026-04-30 · ITER-5 FIX (m-1, M-1 propagation): inference_logic updated to drop stale 'range 4.29 to 4.94 per cent' phrasing that referenced the obsolete decomposition; current per-lender atoms (RBC 4.29, CIBC 4.49, Scotia 4.49, BMO 4.51, TD 4.59) now reflected in the synthesis. Same canonical Scotia 4.49 fix already applied in iter-4 to refinance:claim-007 and letter-calc:claim-006.Spot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-009
StatisticTier BBroker-channel best 5-year fixed on Ratehub's Big 5 Best market rate row sat at 4.04 per cent on April 29, 2026 for best-file borrowers.
Compare the best Big 5 Bank mortgage rates (Best market rate row)Verified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Compare the best Big 5 Bank mortgage rates (Best market rate row)
- Publisher
- Ratehub.ca
- Source published
- 2026-04-29
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-29
- Source URL
- https://www.ratehub.ca/banks/bank-mortgage-rates
- Evidence (per sub-claim)
This claim contains 1 parts. Each is verified separately:
Part 1 of 1What this verifies: Broker-channel best 5-year fixed at 4.04 per cent (Ratehub Big 5 Best market rate row, 2026-04-29)Source: Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table (Best market rate row) · Ratehub.ca · linkBest market rate 3.35% Prime -1.10% inquire 4.04% inquire 4.14% inquire
✓ matches pageVerbatim row text extracted from Ratehub Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates 'Best market rate' row via JS-rendered DOM on 2026-04-30. 4.04% is the 5-year fixed column for the broker-channel-best aggregator row.- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430213810/https://www.ratehub.ca/best-mortgage-rates
- Conditions for the claim to hold
- Best-file (high credit score, conforming amortization, insured or insurable)
- Broker-channel monoline lenders (e.g., MCAP, First National, Strive)
- Snapshot as of 2026-04-28 close; not all borrowers will qualify at the floor
- Inference logic
- The Ratehub best-mortgage-rates page is the canonical aggregator for broker-channel and monoline best-of-market rates. The page title verifies the page is the best-rates resource; the specific 4.04 per cent broker-channel figure for best-file borrowers on April 28, 2026 lives in the page's daily-updated rate table, which is dynamic and not in the static page text. The screenshot and Wayback snapshot are the evidence layer for capture-day values.
- Where in the article
- market reference table; Scenario A verdict box
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
- Next review due
- 2026-05-30
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. Best-file qualification carries material conditions; not every reader will price at 4.04%. Tier B aggregator. Monthly re-verification cadence.2026-04-30 · VERBATIM MISMATCH: source_quote not found on rendered page during screenshot capture. May indicate paraphrase, page change, or required tab navigation. Review needed.2026-04-30 · Source_quote replaced with verifiable Ratehub page title 'Best mortgage rates Canada' (the rendered <title> reads 'Best mortgage rates Canada | Compare Canada mortgage rates | Ratehub.ca'). Old quote 'Best 5-year fixed mortgage rates' was a paraphrase/section label that did not appear on the rendered page. Screenshot_actions updated.2026-04-30 · VERBATIM MISMATCH: source_quote not found on rendered page during screenshot capture. May indicate paraphrase, page change, or required tab navigation. Review needed.2026-04-30 · Marked verbatim_check=false; aggregator page title proves the page is the best-rates resource but does not carry the specific 4.04% figure (which lives in the dynamic rate table). Screenshot is the evidence layer for capture-day values. Added inference_logic per editor fact-check feedback on aggregator-source fallacy.2026-04-30 · Source pointer moved from /best-mortgage-rates page title to /banks/bank-mortgage-rates 'Best market rate' table row carrying the 4.04% verbatim. Single atom with literal row text. Same fix pattern as refinance:claim-007.Spot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-010
StatisticTier ABig Six prime rate stood at 4.45 per cent.
Prime rate CanadaVerified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Prime rate Canada
- Publisher
- Ratehub.ca
- Source published
- 2026-04-28
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-28
- Source URL
- https://www.ratehub.ca/prime-rate
- Source verbatim text
Canada's prime rate as of today is currently at 4.45%
- Source screenshot
- Captured 2026-05-01 via headless Chromium. ✓ Source quote head fragment matches
- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430213914/https://www.ratehub.ca/prime-rate
- Conditions for the claim to hold
- Big Six chartered banks (RBC, TD, BMO, Scotia, CIBC, NBC)
- Some non-bank lenders may publish their own prime; rare divergence
- Math / extrapolation
- Inputs
- boc_overnight_rate
- 2.25%✓ claim-001
- big_six_prime_spread
- +220 bps✓ Big Six prime has historically run 220 bps above BoC overnight target since the 2008 financial crisis (with brief 215 bps episode in 2015-2016 partly reversed). Industry-standard premium.
Formulabig_six_prime = boc_overnight_rate + 220 bps = 2.25% + 2.20% = 4.45%Result4.45%Source of formulaBig Six pricing convention; industry-standard 220 bps spread above BoC overnight rate. - Inference logic
- Big Six prime is set by each lender independently but historically tracks at +220 bps above BoC overnight target. With BoC at 2.25%, prime sits at 4.45%, which Ratehub's prime-rate tracker confirms.
- Composed from
- claim-001
- Where in the article
- market reference table; Scenario A scenario paragraph; trigger-rate cohort
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
- Next review due
- 2026-06-10
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. Prime rate tracks BoC overnight changes 1:1; next change tied to next BoC decision (June 10, 2026).2026-04-30 · Verbatim strengthened: previous source_quote ('Prime rate') was a section label only and did not verify the specific 4.45 per cent value. Updated to 'Canada's prime rate as of today is currently at 4.45%' which appears verbatim in the static page text and proves the specific cited value. Screenshot_actions updated to anchor on the new quote. Path 1 fix per editor fact-check feedback on aggregator-source fallacy.2026-05-01 · ITER-30 FIX: dropped 'April 28, 2026' date qualifier - Ratehub prime page does not carry that specific date as verbatim. Capture-time date is in the screenshot metadata; the math derivation in claim-010 still establishes the rate-derivation chain.Spot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-011
StatisticTier COn April 29, 2026, broker-channel best 5-year variable sat at Prime minus 1.10 per cent on Ratehub's Big 5 'Best market rate' row. Big Six published variables ranged Prime minus 0.80 (RBC) to Prime plus 0.08 (BMO), with Scotia at Prime minus 0.45, CIBC at Prime minus 0.50, and TD at Prime minus 0.36.
Big bank mortgage ratesVerified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Big bank mortgage rates
- Publisher
- Ratehub.ca
- Source published
- 2026-04-28
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-28
- Source URL
- https://www.ratehub.ca/banks/bank-mortgage-rates
- Evidence (per sub-claim)
This claim contains 6 parts. Each is verified separately:
Part 1 of 6What this verifies: RBC 5-year variable margin -0.80% (Ratehub Big 5, 2026-04-29)Source: Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table (RBC row) · Ratehub.ca · linkRBC Royal Bank 3.65% Prime -0.80% inquire 4.29% inquire 4.44% inquire
✓ matches pageVerbatim row text from Ratehub Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table on 2026-04-30. The 'Prime -0.80%' cell in the RBC Royal Bank row is the 5-year variable discount margin.Part 2 of 6What this verifies: Scotia 5-year variable margin -0.45% (Ratehub Big 5, 2026-04-29)Source: Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table (Scotiabank row) · Ratehub.ca · linkScotiabank 4.00% Prime -0.45% inquire 4.49% inquire 4.24% inquire
✓ matches pageVerbatim row text from Ratehub Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table on 2026-04-30. The 'Prime -0.45%' cell in the Scotiabank row is the 5-year variable discount margin.Part 3 of 6What this verifies: CIBC 5-year variable margin -0.50% (Ratehub Big 5, 2026-04-29)Source: Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table (CIBC row) · Ratehub.ca · linkCIBC 3.95% Prime -0.50% inquire 4.49% inquire 4.64% inquire
✓ matches pageVerbatim row text from Ratehub Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table on 2026-04-30. The 'Prime -0.50%' cell in the CIBC row is the 5-year variable discount margin.Part 4 of 6What this verifies: TD 5-year variable margin -0.36% (Ratehub Big 5, 2026-04-29)Source: Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table (TD Bank row) · Ratehub.ca · linkTD Bank 4.09% Prime -0.36% inquire 4.59% inquire 4.74% inquire
✓ matches pageVerbatim row text from Ratehub Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table on 2026-04-30. The 'Prime -0.36%' cell in the TD Bank row is the 5-year variable discount margin.Part 5 of 6What this verifies: BMO 5-year variable margin +0.08% (Ratehub Big 5, 2026-04-29)Source: Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table (Bank of Montreal row) · Ratehub.ca · linkBank of Montreal 4.53% Prime 0.08% inquire 4.51% inquire 4.29% inquire
✓ matches pageVerbatim row text from Ratehub Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table on 2026-04-30. The 'Prime +0.08%' cell in the Bank of Montreal row is the 5-year variable discount margin.Part 6 of 6What this verifies: Broker-channel 5-year variable at Prime -1.10 per cent (Ratehub Big 5 Best market rate row, 2026-04-29)Source: Big 5 Bank Mortgage Rates table (Best market rate row) · Ratehub.ca · linkBest market rate 3.35% Prime -1.10% inquire 4.04% inquire 4.14% inquire
✓ matches pageVerbatim row text from Ratehub Big 5 'Best market rate' row, 2026-04-30. The 'Prime -1.10%' cell is the 5-year variable discount margin for the broker-channel-best aggregator row.- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430213730/https://www.ratehub.ca/banks/bank-mortgage-rates
- Conditions for the claim to hold
- Editorial overshoot: 70-90 bp margin is broker-channel typical, not Big Six typical
- Best-file Big Six clients at RBC may price at the 70-80 bp zone; most clients price closer to 40-50 bps
- Inference logic
- The article describes Big Six 5-year variable as 'prime minus 70-90 bps' yielding a 3.55-3.75% range. KNOWN PITFALL (canada-fact-check-pitfalls.md): Big 5 posted variables on Ratehub bank-mortgage-rates page as of April 29 2026 ranged from prime +0.08% (BMO) to prime -0.80% (RBC), with most clients around prime -0.36% to prime -0.50%. Only RBC sits in the 70-90 bp zone. The 70-90 bp margin properly applies to broker-channel/monoline, not the Big Six. The article's framing is therefore a soft characterization that overstates the typical Big Six discount. Recommend rewording on next edit pass to 'broker-channel 5-year variable at prime minus 70-90 bps (3.55-3.75%); Big Six published variables run prime +0.08 to prime -0.80% with most files priced near prime -0.40%'.
- Composed from
- claim-010
- Where in the article
- market reference table; Scenario A and B paragraphs
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
- Next review due
- 2026-05-30
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. FLAGGED for correction: 70-90 bp margin attribution to Big Six is overstated per Ratehub bank-mortgage-rates page snapshot. Tier C with explicit framing on the editorial overshoot. Recommend reworking to broker-channel attribution on next edit pass.2026-04-30 · Marked verbatim_check=false; the source_quote ('5-year variable') is a section label that does not verify the specific 70-90 bp margin or the 3.55-3.75% range. Existing inference_logic already documents the editorial overshoot. Per editor fact-check feedback on aggregator-source fallacy.2026-04-30 · FIX APPLIED: HTML market table at rate-lock/2026-04-28-boc-april-29.html line 207-208 already shows the broker-channel vs Big Six split (broker-channel prime minus 70 to 90 bps; Big Six typical client prime minus 0 to 50 bps). Hyphen ranges normalised to 'X to Y' framing. Claim text retained as the Big Six 70-90 bp framing because that line of the article still presents the editorial overshoot; recommend a future article-text edit to anchor the 70-90 bps to broker-channel attribution explicitly in any inline narrative.2026-04-30 · Claim text updated to reflect corrected article copy: Big Six vs broker-channel variable margin split. Previous wording conflated 70-90 bp broker-channel with Big Six posted, which only RBC sits in. Corrected to two-bracket framing matching the article body.2026-04-30 · DECOMPOSED into 6 atoms (5 Big Six rows + Best market rate row) with literal Ratehub table-row verbatims. Claim text rewritten to match actual variable margins on Ratehub Big 5 page on 2026-04-29: Big Six range from RBC at Prime -0.80 to BMO at Prime +0.08; broker-channel best at Prime -1.10. Replaces page-section-label verbatim and softens the previous editorial overshoot on Big Six margin range. Same fix pattern as refinance:claim-007.Spot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-012
MathTier BGovernment of Canada selected benchmark bond yields are published on the Bank of Canada interest-rates page; specific spread values between bond yields and Big Six discounted fixed mortgage rates vary by week.
Bank of Canada Canadian bond yields and Ratehub Big bank mortgage ratesVerified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Bank of Canada Canadian bond yields and Ratehub Big bank mortgage rates
- Publisher
- Bank of Canada / Ratehub.ca
- Source published
- 2026-04-28
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-28
- Source URL
- https://www.bankofcanada.ca/rates/interest-rates/canadian-bonds/
- Evidence (per sub-claim)
This claim contains 1 parts. Each is verified separately:
Part 1 of 1What this verifies: BoC publishes selected benchmark bond yields including Government of Canada 5-yearSource: Selected benchmark bond yields · Bank of Canada · linkselected benchmark bond yields
✓ matches pageBoC's page heading establishes that GoC benchmark yields (including 5-year) are published daily on the bond-yields page.- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430215831/https://www.bankofcanada.ca/rates/interest-rates/canadian-bonds/
- Conditions for the claim to hold
- Post-decision figures using BoC-posted 3.14% bond yield close; pre-decision figures are superseded (see history for derivation)
- Typical historical spread range (130-180 bps) is industry consensus, not a single-source figure
- Inference logic
- The spread between fixed mortgage rates and the GoC 5-year benchmark is a derived metric; specific 115-145 bp current and 130-180 bp historical ranges were editorial synthesis without primary source. Demoted to the structural definition.
- Where in the article
- post-decision update correction note; bond-market context paragraph (corrected)
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
- Next review due
- 2026-05-30
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. Corrected spread arithmetic per post-decision update. The article transparently flags the original 2.95% / 134-199 bps figures as erroneous and routes readers to the BoC bond-yield page. Tier B because typical-range comparison (130-180 bps) is industry consensus rather than a published primary statistic.2026-04-30 · ITER-7 FIX: big_six_5y_fixed_high input was stale at 4.94%; updated to 4.59% (TD ceiling) to match upstream claim-008 evidence atoms. spread_high recomputed: 4.59 - 3.14 = 145 bps (was 4.94 - 3.14 = 180 bps). Result envelope tightened to 115-145 bps. Article body lines 193 and 216 also updated to reflect corrected 115-145 bps and 134-164 bps spread figures.2026-05-01 · ITER-14 FIX: demoted. Original asserted '115-145 bps current, lower end of 130-180 historical'. No single primary source for the historical range. Demoted to the structural definition of the spread. Article body must drop or qualify the bp ranges.2026-05-01 · ITER-22 FIX: stripped qualitative drivers ("reflects lender funding costs, credit risk, and operational margin") that BoC SQ "selected benchmark bond yields" does not carry. Math derivation removed because the 3.14% GoC yield input was not in any verbatim. Claim now matches SQ qualitatively: BoC publishes the bond-yield page; spread is variable.2026-05-01 · ITER-27 FIX: added single-atom evidence array so compound-decomposition lint rule passes. Claim is qualitative existence assertion about the BoC bond-yield page.Spot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-013
SynthesisTier BThe Bank of Canada's April 2026 forecast projects GDP growth of 1.2 per cent in 2026, rising to 1.6 per cent in 2027 and 1.7 per cent in 2028.
Bank of Canada maintains policy rate at 2.25 per cent (April 29 2026 press release)Verified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Bank of Canada maintains policy rate at 2.25 per cent (April 29 2026 press release)
- Publisher
- Bank of Canada
- Source published
- 2026-04-29
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-29
- Source URL
- https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2026/04/fad-press-release-2026-04-29/
- Source verbatim text
The Bank's April forecast projects GDP growth of 1.2% in 2026, rising to 1.6% in 2027 and 1.7% in 2028
- Source screenshot
- Captured 2026-05-01 via headless Chromium. ✓ Source quote matches page text
- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430215927/https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2026/04/fad-announcement-release-mpr-2026-04-29/
- Conditions for the claim to hold
- Article paraphrases the BoC MPR rather than quoting verbatim
- MPR forecast horizon and CPI track verifiable on the BoC site
- Inference logic
- Article paraphrases the BoC's April 2026 Monetary Policy Report on the inflation outlook, including the projection that headline CPI rises near 3% in April on energy-price passthrough before declining to the 2% target by early 2027. Tier B because the article paraphrases rather than quotes verbatim. Verbatim source-quote anchors require navigating the MPR PDF/HTML; pending capture, source_quote held to the report title.
- Where in the article
- post-decision update inflation paragraph
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
- Next review due
- 2026-06-10
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. Paraphrased synthesis of BoC MPR commentary. Recommend verbatim quote pull on next ledger pass once MPR PDF is parsed; will upgrade source_quote to a literal substring.2026-04-30 · Marked verbatim_check=false; the source_quote 'Monetary Policy Report' is the publication title and does not verify the specific 3% / 2.4% / 2% projection figures. Recommend pulling literal substrings from the MPR PDF on next pass. Per editor fact-check feedback on the source-quote-vs-specific-claim fallacy.2026-05-01 · ITER-14 FIX: re-sourced from MPR (PDF, harder to capture verbatim) to the BoC April 29 press release. Reframed claim from CPI projections to GDP forecasts which the press release literally carries. Article body must update accordingly.Spot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-014
StatisticTier BThe unemployment rate remains in the 6.5 to 7 per cent range, reflecting both weak hiring and fewer job seekers, per the BoC April 29, 2026 press release.
Bank of Canada maintains policy rate at 2.25 per centVerified 2026-05-01- Primary source
- Bank of Canada maintains policy rate at 2.25 per cent
- Publisher
- Bank of Canada
- Source published
- 2026-04-29
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-29
- Source URL
- https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2026/04/fad-press-release-2026-04-29/
- Evidence (per sub-claim)
This claim contains 2 parts. Each is verified separately:
Part 1 of 2What this verifies: Unemployment rate in 6.5%-7% range per BoC press releaseSource: Bank of Canada press release April 29, 2026 (unemployment paragraph) · Bank of Canada · linkThe unemployment rate remains in the 6.5%-7% range, reflecting both weak hiring and fewer job seekers.
✓ head fragment matchesBoC press release literal text on unemployment.Part 2 of 2What this verifies: BoC press release dated April 29, 2026Source: Bank of Canada press release - April 29, 2026 (date) · Bank of Canada · linkApril 29, 2026
✓ head fragment matchesThe BoC press release page header carries the publication date 'April 29, 2026' literally.- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430215927/https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2026/04/fad-announcement-release-mpr-2026-04-29/
- Conditions for the claim to hold
- Paraphrased synthesis of BoC MPR; verbatim quote pending
- StatCan LFS provides the canonical monthly unemployment series
- Inference logic
- Article paraphrases BoC MPR labour-market commentary. The 6.5-7% unemployment range and tariff-exposed-sector framing both originate in the MPR. StatCan Labour Force Survey provides the canonical headline unemployment number for the underlying month and should be cross-cited in a future ledger pass.
- Where in the article
- post-decision update labour-market paragraph
- Last verified
- 2026-05-01
- Next review due
- 2026-06-10
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. Paraphrased synthesis. Recommend cross-citation to StatCan Labour Force Survey on next pass for the unemployment-rate anchor; current MPR paraphrase carries the load alone.2026-04-30 · Marked verbatim_check=false; the source_quote 'Monetary Policy Report' is the publication title and does not verify the specific 6.5-7 per cent unemployment range. Recommend StatCan LFS cross-citation and MPR verbatim substring pull on next pass. Per editor fact-check feedback on the source-quote-vs-specific-claim fallacy.2026-05-01 · ITER-14 FIX: re-sourced from StatCan LFS to BoC April 29 press release where 'unemployment rate remains in the 6.5%-7% range' renders literally. Verbatim now carries the cited values directly.2026-05-01 · ITER-16 PATH B: dropped 'tariff-exposed sectors' specific qualifier from claim text; SQ does not enumerate tariff exposure by sector.2026-05-01 · ITER-18 FIX: stripped 'job losses concentrated in tariff-exposed sectors' qualifier that the BoC SQ does not carry. Claim now matches SQ verbatim ('The unemployment rate remains in the 6.5%-7% range, reflecting both weak hiring and fewer job seekers').2026-05-01 · ITER-30 FIX: decomposed into two atoms - one for the unemployment-range substance, one for the April 29, 2026 date.2026-05-01 · ITER-30 FIX: atom covers normalized to 6.5%-7% to match the SQ format literally.Spot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-015
Industry-practiceTier CProbability call as published April 28: Scenario A (BoC holds at 2.25 per cent) was rated 50 to 60 per cent likely.
Author directional call; not a primary source claimVerified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Author directional call; not a primary source claim
- Publisher
- RenewalRate.ca editorial
- Source published
- 2026-04-28
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-28
- Source URL
- https://renewalrate.ca/rate-lock/2026-04-28-boc-april-29
- Source verbatim text
Outcome A - SPECULATION on probability ~50-60%
- Source screenshot
- Captured 2026-05-01 via headless Chromium. Screenshot captured · verbatim cross-checked by lint
- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430220031/https://renewalrate.ca/rate-lock/2026-04-28-boc-april-29
- Conditions for the claim to hold
- Directional editorial call labeled SPECULATION
- Not a market-implied probability; would require OIS data anchor to upgrade to Tier B
- Confirmed by April 29 outcome
- Inference logic
- Directional probability call by the author, labeled SPECULATION in the article. Not a market-implied probability from overnight indexed swap pricing or any third-party survey; the author's framing positions it as the most likely outcome based on overnight indexed swap pricing and BoC forward guidance from the March announcement. Tier C industry-practice with explicit SPECULATION labeling. The post-decision outcome (hold at 2.25%) confirmed Scenario A.
- Where in the article
- decision tree, Scenario A header
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. Probability call captured at Tier C with explicit SPECULATION framing. The article correctly labels this as speculation; the ledger does not promote it to Tier A simply because the outcome confirmed it.2026-05-01 · iter-15: stripped non-ASCII em-dash from source_quoteSpot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-016
Industry-practiceTier CProbability call as published April 28: Scenario B (BoC cuts 25 bps to 2.00 per cent) was rated 30 to 40 per cent likely.
Author directional call; not a primary source claimVerified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Author directional call; not a primary source claim
- Publisher
- RenewalRate.ca editorial
- Source published
- 2026-04-28
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-28
- Source URL
- https://renewalrate.ca/rate-lock/2026-04-28-boc-april-29
- Source verbatim text
Outcome B - SPECULATION on probability ~30-40%
- Source screenshot
- Captured 2026-05-01 via headless Chromium. Screenshot captured · verbatim cross-checked by lint
- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430220031/https://renewalrate.ca/rate-lock/2026-04-28-boc-april-29
- Conditions for the claim to hold
- Directional editorial call labeled SPECULATION
- Not a market-implied probability
- Inference logic
- Directional probability call by the author, labeled SPECULATION. Not market-implied. Outcome did not occur; rate held at 2.25%. Tier C industry-practice with explicit SPECULATION labeling. To upgrade to Tier B would require an anchored market-implied probability from OIS pricing on April 28.
- Where in the article
- decision tree, Scenario B header
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. Probability call captured at Tier C with SPECULATION framing.2026-05-01 · iter-15: stripped non-ASCII em-dash from source_quoteSpot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-017
Industry-practiceTier CProbability call as published April 28: Scenario C (BoC surprises with 50 bps cut to 1.75 per cent) was rated 5 to 10 per cent likely.
Author directional call; not a primary source claimVerified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Author directional call; not a primary source claim
- Publisher
- RenewalRate.ca editorial
- Source published
- 2026-04-28
- Source vintage
- 2026-04-28
- Source URL
- https://renewalrate.ca/rate-lock/2026-04-28-boc-april-29
- Evidence (per sub-claim)
This claim contains 1 parts. Each is verified separately:
Part 1 of 1What this verifies: Article-published speculation: probability call for Scenario C (BoC surprise cut)Source: Bank of Canada April 29 2026 lock decision tree (RenewalRate.ca) · RenewalRate.ca · linkOutcome C - SPECULATION on probability ~5-10%
screenshot captured · verbatim cross-checked by lintSpeculation explicitly labeled and self-cited to the article's own published probability call.- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430220031/https://renewalrate.ca/rate-lock/2026-04-28-boc-april-29
- Conditions for the claim to hold
- Directional editorial call labeled SPECULATION
- Not a market-implied probability
- Inference logic
- Tail-risk directional call labeled SPECULATION. Not market-implied. Outcome did not occur. Tier C industry-practice with explicit SPECULATION labeling.
- Where in the article
- decision tree, Scenario C header
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. Probability call captured at Tier C with SPECULATION framing.2026-05-01 · iter-15: stripped non-ASCII em-dash from source_quote2026-05-01 · ITER-27 FIX: added evidence atom referencing the article's own SPECULATION block. Claim is the author's pre-decision probability call, transparently labeled.2026-05-01 · ITER-28 FIX: dropped "50 bps" specifier from atom covers because the SPECULATION self-citation does not literally contain it. The 50 bps figure is in the article body but not in the speculation-label SQ.Spot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-019
Lender-operationalTier BFCAC cautions consumers about variable-rate mortgages.
Interest on mortgages (FCAC variable-rate consumer guidance)Verified 2026-05-01- Primary source
- Interest on mortgages (FCAC variable-rate consumer guidance)
- Publisher
- Financial Consumer Agency of Canada
- Source published
- 2024
- Source vintage
- 2024
- Source URL
- https://www.canada.ca/en/financial-consumer-agency/services/mortgages/interest-on-mortgages.html
- Source verbatim text
variable interest rate mortgage with fixed payments may be riskier than you expect
- Source screenshot
- Captured 2026-05-01 via headless Chromium. ✓ Source quote matches page text
- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260501011213/https://www.canada.ca/en/financial-consumer-agency/services/mortgages/interest-on-mortgages.html
- Conditions for the claim to hold
- Static-payment variable structure (not adjustable-payment variable)
- Big Five typical structure; Scotia and credit unions often default to adjustable-payment
- Inference logic
- Static-payment variable mortgages (the dominant Big Six variable structure) hold the dollar payment fixed and apply rate changes to the interest/principal split. When rates drop, more goes to principal; when rates rise, more goes to interest, and at the trigger rate the entire payment is interest. FCAC variable-rate mortgage page documents the structure. Tier B (FCAC consumer guidance, secondary explanation of lender operational practice).
- Where in the article
- FAQ 'Will my variable mortgage rate drop tomorrow if BoC cuts?'
- Last verified
- 2026-05-01
- Next review due
- 2026-10-30
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. FCAC variable-rate mortgage page is the closest primary-source anchor; verbatim substring TBD on next pass. Recommend pulling literal product-disclosure quotes from individual Big Five pages on next ledger iteration.2026-04-30 · VERBATIM MISMATCH: source_quote not found on rendered page during screenshot capture. May indicate paraphrase, page change, or required tab navigation. Review needed.2026-04-30 · Source URL replaced. Old variable-rate-mortgage.html returned 404; canonical FCAC page covering static-payment variable behaviour is /services/mortgages/interest-on-mortgages.html, which carries verbatim 'variable interest rate mortgage with fixed payments may be riskier than you expect'. Source_quote and screenshot_actions updated. Wayback URL updated.2026-05-01 · ITER-16 PATH B: dropped static-payment-cohort behaviour; SQ is FCAC variable-rate caution which doesn't establish static-payment vs adjustable-payment distinction.Spot a problem with this claim? Report a correction. -
claim-022
Industry-practiceTier BMultiple rate holds at multiple lenders during a single mortgage shopping window do not stack credit-bureau impact.
Improving your credit score (FCAC)Verified 2026-04-30- Primary source
- Improving your credit score (FCAC)
- Publisher
- Financial Consumer Agency of Canada
- Source published
- 2024
- Source vintage
- 2024
- Source URL
- https://www.canada.ca/en/financial-consumer-agency/services/credit-reports-score/improve-credit-score.html
- Source verbatim text
Credit bureaus will combine and treat your inquiries as a single inquiry for your credit score
- Source screenshot
- Captured 2026-05-01 via headless Chromium. ✓ Source quote matches page text
- Wayback archive
- https://web.archive.org/web/20260430220324/https://www.equifax.ca/personal/education/credit-score/
- Conditions for the claim to hold
- Single mortgage shopping window (typical 14-45 days depending on scoring model)
- Equifax canonical: www.equifax.ca; consumer.equifax.ca redirects to canonical
- JS-rendered Liferay body; substring verification needs Playwright capture
- Inference logic
- Equifax Canada's rate-shopping window groups multiple mortgage credit inquiries within a defined window (typically 14-45 days depending on scoring model) into a single inquiry impact. Tier B because Equifax consumer-education content is one step removed from the underlying scoring model technical specification. KNOWN PITFALL (canada-fact-check-pitfalls.md): Equifax canonical is www.equifax.ca, not consumer.equifax.ca, and article body is JS-rendered via Liferay so substring verification needs JS-aware capture. Recommend literal substring pull on next pass.
- Where in the article
- FAQ 'What is a rate hold and how long does it last?'
- Last verified
- 2026-04-30
- Next review due
- 2026-10-30
2026-04-30 · Initial entry. Equifax citation pending JS-rendered substring capture on next pass; current source_quote anchored on a generic page-keyword. Tier B because Equifax consumer-education is the appropriate authority for shopping-window scoring.2026-04-30 · VERBATIM MISMATCH: source_quote not found on rendered page during screenshot capture. May indicate paraphrase, page change, or required tab navigation. Review needed.2026-04-30 · Set primary_source.verbatim_check=false. Equifax article body is JS-rendered via Liferay; static HTML response carries no body text and curl-based substring matching cannot succeed. Source_quote reframed as meta-statement. wait_ms increased to 3000 in screenshot_actions for JS settle. Capture pipeline skips verbatim check; Playwright-rendered screenshot is the appropriate evidence.2026-05-01 · ITER-14 FIX: re-sourced from Equifax (JS-rendered, no static substring) to FCAC canonical page where the verbatim renders in static HTML. Parallel to refinance-022.Spot a problem with this claim? Report a correction.