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Canada Real Estate 2026: Energy-Driven Inflation, 4-Year Price Decline, Construction Slowdown & Where Smart Money Is Going
Addy Saeed connects current Canadian market headlines into one system: inflation is moving back toward 3% largely due to energy, while core inflation remains around 2.2%, raising the question of whether the Bank of Canada should hold or react and risk tightening into a soft economy. Housing prices have declined for four years (about 20% from peak) with a weak spring market, rising inventory in Ontario and B.C., and a fragmented, hyperlocal landscape. CMHC data shows permits slowing, implying fewer future projects and a potential midterm supply tightening after today’s elevated completions. Institutional capital is positioning defensively, highlighted by KingSett and Choice acquiring First Capital REIT in a $9.4B deal. Infrastructure like Toronto’s Ontario Line and corporate logistics investment such as Toyota’s $300M commitment are framed as drivers of future demand, while an off-market NDA example illustrates how some deal terms can reduce buyer leverage.
00:00 Market In Transition
00:36 Inflation Energy Shock
01:38 Four Years Down
02:49 Permits Signal Supply
03:55 Smart Money Moves
04:49 Transit Reshapes Demand
05:33 Jobs Follow Logistics
06:11 NDA Deal Control
07:15 Cycle Takeaways
07:54 Disclaimers And Outro
About Your Hosts:
Addy Saeed: With over 20 years of experience in the real estate industry, I've navigated through the complexities of property investment, development, and management. My goal is to demystify real estate investing for our listeners.
References:
By Westcliff Asset Management IncCanada Real Estate 2026: Energy-Driven Inflation, 4-Year Price Decline, Construction Slowdown & Where Smart Money Is Going
Addy Saeed connects current Canadian market headlines into one system: inflation is moving back toward 3% largely due to energy, while core inflation remains around 2.2%, raising the question of whether the Bank of Canada should hold or react and risk tightening into a soft economy. Housing prices have declined for four years (about 20% from peak) with a weak spring market, rising inventory in Ontario and B.C., and a fragmented, hyperlocal landscape. CMHC data shows permits slowing, implying fewer future projects and a potential midterm supply tightening after today’s elevated completions. Institutional capital is positioning defensively, highlighted by KingSett and Choice acquiring First Capital REIT in a $9.4B deal. Infrastructure like Toronto’s Ontario Line and corporate logistics investment such as Toyota’s $300M commitment are framed as drivers of future demand, while an off-market NDA example illustrates how some deal terms can reduce buyer leverage.
00:00 Market In Transition
00:36 Inflation Energy Shock
01:38 Four Years Down
02:49 Permits Signal Supply
03:55 Smart Money Moves
04:49 Transit Reshapes Demand
05:33 Jobs Follow Logistics
06:11 NDA Deal Control
07:15 Cycle Takeaways
07:54 Disclaimers And Outro
About Your Hosts:
Addy Saeed: With over 20 years of experience in the real estate industry, I've navigated through the complexities of property investment, development, and management. My goal is to demystify real estate investing for our listeners.
References: