Back in April, the US Census Bureau started running weekly surveys in order to try and assess how COVID-19 was impacting people's lives. They call this the "Household Pulse Survey." They're now up to week 12, with the latest data running up until July 21, 2020. Here's some housing data that I think many of you will find interesting:
The July 1, 2019 population estimate for the US was 328,239,523, of which about 77.7% are persons 18 years or older.
One of the things that the survey looked at was the total population 18 years or older living in owner-occupied and renter-occupied housing. About 148 million people (~60%) identified as living in the former, about 78 million (~29%) identified as living in the latter, and about 27 million people (~11%) did not report their tenure. This seems to jibe with point number one and the overall home ownership rate in the US.
For the owners, 1/3 reported to own their home "free and clear" of a mortgage and about 58% said that they made last month's mortgage payment. So about 91% of owners were seemingly okay in June. The remaining ~9% were people who either got a mortgage payment deferral, or simply didn't pay. About 0.5% did not report.
For the renters, about 5% reported to be living in a home with free rent and about 75% said that they made last month's rental payment. Over 18% said that they missed last month's rent and just over 2% said that they had their rent deferred. The remaining 1% or so are people who simply did not report.
Combining both tenures, it looks like about 12.5% to 13% of respondents had a bit of a problem paying their housing costs last month. (I'm giving a range, because presumably the "did not report" crowd could go either way.) I don't know about you, but this number doesn't seem all that shocking to me.
If you would like to download a copy of all of the survey results, click here.

Jens von Bergmann (data analyst and mathematician); Nathanael Lauster (sociologist); and Douglas Harris (law professor) have been working since 2018 on a study of how condominiums are used and occupied across Canada. The goal is to use the results to better inform public and academic debate.
They recently presented some of their early findings at the National Housing Conference in Ottawa and have since made that information public. It is still a work in progress, but already there are some interesting takeaways. To start, here is a chart showing occupied housing units in Canada and in select CMAs:

Not surprisingly, Canada is broadly speaking a nation of single-detached houses. But in our three largest cities -- Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver -- apartments/condominiums are doing a lot of the heavy lifting.
Vancouver has the highest proportion of condominiums. It is a geographically constrained metro area and it is one of the first cities in the country to adopt condominiums as a housing tenure. And in Montreal, there are more apartments under 5 storeys than there are single-detached houses. Not surprising. There's no "missing middle" in this city.
But the really interesting question is, how are these condominiums being used and occupied? It's a challenging question to answer, which is why it's so often debated, but here's what the researchers have found so far:

The owner and renter categories are self-explanatory. Temporary, which is the least common type of tenure, is where the owner has declared their principal residence as being somewhere else. In other words, the condominium is a second home.
The vacant category is effectively that city's condominium rental vacancy rate. These are condominium units which are empty, but that are at the same time listed for rent. There are relatively few of these. In Toronto and Vancouver they're virtually non-existent in this dataset (2016).
Finally, we get to unoccupied units. This one is tricky and the researchers aren't exactly clear on what is driving this number. They chalk it up, at least partially, to the flexible nature of condominiums. For example, it could be empty because the unit is switching from owner-occupied to rental, or vice versa.
That said, it is very interesting to note that Toronto and Vancouver actually have the lowest percentage of unoccupied condominium units. This may be surprising to some of you given the public discourse around investor units in these two cities.
Generally, they found that in Canada's three largest metro areas, the following rule of thumb seems to apply: For every 10 condominium units built, 6 will become owner-occupied, 3 will enter the rental stock, and 1 will go unoccupied. Does that seem right to you?
If you'd like to dig into the methodology that the researchers used, you can do that over here at Mountain Doodles. All of the charts and data used in this post were taken from there.
According to Bloomberg (using data from CMHC), 2017 was a surprising record year for housing starts in Canada: 219,675 units. This is the most since 2007 and is up from 197,916 units in 2016.
The explanation: job growth (nearly 400,000 new jobs) and population growth were both more robust than expected.
Multiple unit project starts are also up significantly with 142,840 units starting in 2017. This is a 15% increase from the prior year. Of these units, 102,516 of them were “apartment-like homes.”
But all of this is nationwide data. Look at what happened in Toronto and Vancouver:
The increased activity mostly sidestepped land-constrained Toronto and Vancouver, the country’s two most expensive markets, but was robust in the suburbs and less pricey surrounding cities. Starts in Toronto fell 1 percent to 38,738 in 2017, while declining 6 percent in Vancouver to 26,204 units.
This is not because of a lack of demand. It’s becoming systematically more difficult and more costly to build new housing in these two markets.