004 - April 2026 Data Dive, with David Aizikov and Giacomo Ladas
In this month's Data Dive, David Aizikov and Giacomo Ladas join us to take a closer look at the latest National Rent Report by Urbanation and Rentals.ca, unpacking the trends behind the headlines and what they signal for Canada's rental market.
Rents have now declined on an annual basis for 18 consecutive months, and the market is on the verge of a milestone: average asking rents are edging back below $2,000 a month nationally, effectively reversing three years of rent inflation. But as this episode explores, falling rents aren't entirely good news. With youth unemployment approaching 15% and real wages for young Canadians declining after inflation, softening rents are as much a signal of economic strain as they are a win for affordability.
The conversation also tackles the big supply question: with cranes dotting skylines across the country, are we building too much? David and Giacomo argue that the narrow view says yes, but that the same short-term thinking left Canada in a 40-year construction deficit that created this crisis in the first place. The group also examines the growing pressure on small landlords, who are being forced to negotiate rent reductions and retention incentives to compete with newer, amenity-rich purpose-built rentals, all while their operating costs remain unchanged.
Finally, the episode looks ahead at a looming crunch: construction starts have collapsed, but population growth is projected to return by 2027, raising the very real possibility that today's vacancy relief becomes tomorrow's supply shortage all over again.
Tune in for expert insights, data-driven analysis, and a forward-looking perspective on the key indicators to watch in the months ahead.