Every other source describes what a property is — its owner, its value, its last recorded price. By the time that record is confirmed, the deal is done. The Goldthorpe Report reads what the market is doing, week by week, so you see the move while it's still a move.
The Goldthorpe Report is Canadian property intelligence — a monthly read on residential, commercial, sold and rental real estate across every province, built for the brokers, lenders, investors and analytics teams who move on the market before it’s public record.
Everyone can tell you what a property is. We tell you what it's about to do.
Most need the monthly Report — the briefing that lands once a month, ready for the meeting. When a month is too long to wait, the Terminal puts the same intelligence on a live screen.
One document, once a month: where prices are moving, what's about to transact, how fast the market is clearing, and how this month reads against a decade behind it. Sourced, dated, and built for the room you'll present it in. Available now.
See the Report →The same intelligence, live — the signals updating as the market throws them, not summarised a month later. A window you look through to watch Canadian real estate move in real time. In preview now; access by request.
Join the preview →Every listing, relisting, price cut and withdrawal is a signal. We've read all of them, every week, since 2014.
A listing that relists lower, then quietly disappears. The same building posted twice across two brokers. These patterns flag a likely transaction weeks before it surfaces in public record — and we read every one of them.
Not last quarter's index. Price-cut prevalence, days-on-market, and the spread between asking and close — the live tempo of the for-sale market, refreshed weekly while the quarter is still being written.
This week's move means nothing on its own. We hold a continuous weekly record stretching back to 2014, so every signal sits against twelve years of the same properties — followed, not re-counted from a fresh snapshot.
A single signal rarely means much. A sequence of them tells you what's coming.
An industrial property lists in March. In April the ask drops four percent. In May it disappears from market entirely — no “sold” banner, no public price, just gone. Three weeks later it reappears, relisted for lease by a different name.
To everyone reading the registry, nothing has happened yet. To anyone reading the signals, the building has already changed hands — and a new investor is putting it to work. That gap is where Goldthorpe lives.
Illustrative scenario. The Goldthorpe Report does not predict individual transactions.