Published On: January 22, 2026|Categories: Real Estate|
A strong year for retail – despite the exit of one of Canada’s most iconic brands, Hudson Bay. A slower, but steady time for the industrial sector. A dramatically different set of circumstances in multifamily.
Perhaps most notably, there are more green shoots in the office sector, where a recovery seems to be underway for owners and operators of premium space – but not for all.
Finally, at least in some CRE sectors, there’s been a loosening of the availability of debt, with more lenders increasing activity within the markets. Caution is still the watchword but after a “pens down” period, transaction activity has picked up. When we see the final year-end figures, early in 2026, we’ll know by how much.
Welcome to the final days of 2025. And welcome to our annual RENX Top-20 stories of the past 12 months. Our list includes some major transactions as well as recognition of major trends and touchpoints within commercial and multifamily real estate.
While those within the industry kept searching for some sense of certainty, or clarity, what most of us continued to see were rapidly changing conditions. A reversal of Canada’s stunning population growth rate, the ongoing trade and tariffs upheaval under a radically changed U.S. government, an indication that interest rates are likely to have stabilized and stronger return-to-office mandates are all impacting fundamentals.
The pre-sale condo and for-sale housing markets continue to show weakness, even as pent-up demand grows.
Some well-known players have struggled mightily, or failed completely. Others have charted expansion courses and are executing. We’ve tried to use our Top-10, listed here, to showcase not just individual activity but major themes within the industry.
You can decide for yourself whether or not we have succeeded, but we hope you enjoy perusing this list.
Our top stories list
One final note: As always with our year-end selections, we have placed the Top-10 in a numbered order, starting with what we feel were the most impactful articles, sectors, trends and companies. Nos. 11 to 20 – available via our year-end newsletter – are not listed in any particular order.
InterRent, one of Canada’s largest multifamily housing owners, agreed to be acquired by Ottawa’s CLV Group and Singapore’s GIC in a $4B transaction. It’s the second straight year such a transaction tops our list (Blackstone announced its deal to acquire Tricon in 2024).
Hudson’s Bay Company closed dozens of department stores across Canada after sliding into bankruptcy proceedings – putting millions of square feet of prime retail space onto the leasing market. Canada’s major retail owners, however, have had no qualms about HBC’s demise.
Colliers has spent the past couple of years significantly expanding its reach and its business footprint. Early in 2025, it made another big move announcing a deal to buy Triovest’s Canadian CRE services platform from Coril Holdings.
QuadReal Property Group sold a landmark Vancouver office and commercial property, the recently-reimagined The Post complex, in one of the year’s marquee CRE transactions. It came amid a sudden spike in activity in the sector as return-to-office mandates gained traction.
Grosvenor announced in October, a massive CMHC loan to construct two purpose-built rental towers at Burnaby’s Brentwood Block. As CMHC became the de facto lender for multires developments, it was one of several huge loan packages within the sector.
Toronto telecom titan Rogers Communications Inc. agreed in August to sell nine Rogers Business data centres to infrastructure investment manager InfraRed Capital Partners – a U.K.-based subsidiary of Canadian-owned Sun Life. It reflected another year of major DC sector growth.
The seniors housing sector also stayed hot, hot, hot for investors. And no Canadian company was busier than Chartwell Retirement Residences, which hit $1 billion in acquisitions … and just kept on going.
Despite the state of the Toronto condo market, values remain much higher than seven years ago. So, Tridel and the court-appointed monitor for One Bloor West applied for, and then won, court approval to cancel almost all existing presale agreements.
Oxford Properties wasn’t the first back in, but it certainly was a big player as office activity picked up, investing $730M to acquire the 50 per cent interest in seven Calgary and Vancouver towers previously owned by CPP Investments.
Strip malls across Canada, especially those anchored by grocery stores and pharmacies, remained a hot asset throughout the year. We published this article in February, but the buying spree continued right into the final weeks of 2025.