Statistics Canada's latest building permit numbers show an increase nationally in September with a monthly increase of 3.8 percent. Yearly (September 2016 to September 2017), the total value of permits in Canada was up 12.43 percent. As noted by Statistics Canada: "Canadian municipalities issued $7.9 billion worth of building permits in
September, up 3.8% from the previous month. A 1.7% decrease in the
residential sector was more than offset by a 13.9% increase in the
non-residential sector. A high-value institutional building permit
issued in Alberta was behind much of the increase." Ontario posted a decrease mainly due to lower construction intentions for apartments which probably does not bode well for the future of renters in the province.
With respect to the specifics across cities, the accompanying figure presents the percent change from September 2016 to September 2017 ranked from highest to lowest for Canadian CMAs. For all CMAs, the increase was 14.5 percent. At the top we have Halifax, St. John's and Brantford at 196.9, 154.5 and 145.2 percent growth respectively. At the bottom - well, Thunder Bay is last at -62.9 percent, just behind Hamilton at -43.7 percent and Kingston at -40 percent. Sudbury actually manages to shine at an increase of 123.3 percent - just behind Brantford putting it in fourth place. Of the 14 CMAs showing a decrease, seven were in Ontario - including Toronto which saw a year over year decrease of 13 percent.