Stocks just overtook homes as the main source of US household wealth
The same isn't true in Canada.
My dad sent me an article from Canoe Financial over the weekend that included the chart below. What it shows is that corporate equities and mutual fund shares now make up a greater percentage of household wealth in the US than residential real estate for only the second time since 1990.
From a macro perspective, and when you consider the popularity of index funds, this means that American households probably have a lot of their wealth concentrated in high-growth tech stocks. And since these stocks are being driven higher largely due to the promise of AI, there's perhaps a concentration risk for US households.
The other thing this chart made me wonder about was what it would look like for Canadian households.
According to these net worth indicators released by Statistics Canada in October 2025, real estate as a share of total household assets was sitting at 41.8%. Financial assets as a share of total assets were at 53.4%, but this includes life insurance and pensions, which are not included in the US chart.
If we remove this line item, we're left with "other financial assets" at 37.8%. However, this account also includes cash deposits, bonds, foreign investments, and other receivables, which I also don't think are carried in the US chart. So net-net, Canadian household wealth is composed of real estate at 41.8% and corporate equities at some number below 37.8%.
Real estate is the larger net worth account for Canadian households. Whether this is good or bad is a topic for another post, but there's certainly an argument to be made that Canadians are over-indexing on real estate at the expense of investing in new ideas and businesses.
This week it was announced that Canada's population grew by approximately 430,000 people over the last quarter (+1.1%). And that it represents the highest population growth rate of any quarter since the second quarter of 1957. Even more impressive, though, is the fact that in the first 9 months of this year we have already added over 1 million people in total. This beats all full-year periods since Confederation in 1867!
Here's what all of this starts to look like visually:
Stocks just overtook homes as the main source of US household wealth
The same isn't true in Canada.
My dad sent me an article from Canoe Financial over the weekend that included the chart below. What it shows is that corporate equities and mutual fund shares now make up a greater percentage of household wealth in the US than residential real estate for only the second time since 1990.
From a macro perspective, and when you consider the popularity of index funds, this means that American households probably have a lot of their wealth concentrated in high-growth tech stocks. And since these stocks are being driven higher largely due to the promise of AI, there's perhaps a concentration risk for US households.
The other thing this chart made me wonder about was what it would look like for Canadian households.
According to these net worth indicators released by Statistics Canada in October 2025, real estate as a share of total household assets was sitting at 41.8%. Financial assets as a share of total assets were at 53.4%, but this includes life insurance and pensions, which are not included in the US chart.
If we remove this line item, we're left with "other financial assets" at 37.8%. However, this account also includes cash deposits, bonds, foreign investments, and other receivables, which I also don't think are carried in the US chart. So net-net, Canadian household wealth is composed of real estate at 41.8% and corporate equities at some number below 37.8%.
Real estate is the larger net worth account for Canadian households. Whether this is good or bad is a topic for another post, but there's certainly an argument to be made that Canadians are over-indexing on real estate at the expense of investing in new ideas and businesses.
This week it was announced that Canada's population grew by approximately 430,000 people over the last quarter (+1.1%). And that it represents the highest population growth rate of any quarter since the second quarter of 1957. Even more impressive, though, is the fact that in the first 9 months of this year we have already added over 1 million people in total. This beats all full-year periods since Confederation in 1867!
Here's what all of this starts to look like visually:
The unfortunate side of these records is that it is coming at a time where we're, perhaps counterintuitively, building a lot less new housing; which is to say that construction starts are declining. In fact, I was on a call this week where people who examine development and construction costs all day were predicting a 5-6% decline in hard costs in the Toronto region next year. And this is a direct result of fewer new projects getting started.
Broadly speaking, this is how things tend to work in real estate development: there are heavy lags between changes in demand and changes in supply because of how long it takes to build new buildings. But what's happening right now is more than this. Interest costs are impacting everyone. And investor interest in pre-construction homes has softened significantly, demonstrating how much our industry relies on individual investors. Many projects cannot go.
What I ultimately think this is going to do is exacerbate our current supply-demand imbalances. Meaning that when the market does come back -- and it of course will -- it's going to come back with a vengeance. And that's because it is going to need to catch up to all of the new demand that is accumulating as we speak.
The unfortunate side of these records is that it is coming at a time where we're, perhaps counterintuitively, building a lot less new housing; which is to say that construction starts are declining. In fact, I was on a call this week where people who examine development and construction costs all day were predicting a 5-6% decline in hard costs in the Toronto region next year. And this is a direct result of fewer new projects getting started.
Broadly speaking, this is how things tend to work in real estate development: there are heavy lags between changes in demand and changes in supply because of how long it takes to build new buildings. But what's happening right now is more than this. Interest costs are impacting everyone. And investor interest in pre-construction homes has softened significantly, demonstrating how much our industry relies on individual investors. Many projects cannot go.
What I ultimately think this is going to do is exacerbate our current supply-demand imbalances. Meaning that when the market does come back -- and it of course will -- it's going to come back with a vengeance. And that's because it is going to need to catch up to all of the new demand that is accumulating as we speak.