Canadian investors keep finding the same locked door. Mortgage Company of Canada just shut it on them.
The Markham, Ontario fund told shareholders on May 14 that nobody is getting money out, while new share purchases are off the table too.
That makes it the latest Canadian private real estate fund to slam the brakes on withdrawals - adding to a pile of frozen money that's starting to look like a real problem.
What Just Happened
Mortgage Company of Canada lends money backed by real estate. Investors put cash in, the company makes loans, and investors get monthly payouts in return.
That just stopped. The fund paused all redemptions and monthly payouts on May 14, with no timeline for when it reopens.
The uncertainty is the part hitting confidence hardest. Investors who picked the fund for steady income now have no idea when that steady income comes back.
The move is part of a trend called "gating." That's when a fund stops letting investors take money out, to avoid having to sell assets in a soft market.
We pull together moves shifting investor money every weekday morning in Market Briefs - in five minutes, plus a free investing masterclass when you join.
The Bigger Liquidity Squeeze
One fund having a bad week is normal. About $22 billion across Canada's private real estate funds being locked up is not - that's almost 40% of the country's C$80 billion total pool.
The setup is the same problem playing out everywhere. Funds promised investors they could exit anytime, but the underlying assets - buildings, development loans, and mortgages - take months to sell or refinance.
These funds boomed for two decades as Canadian home prices kept climbing. Real estate looked like a sure thing, and the products offered steady income with easy access.
Then rates climbed, prices dropped, and "easy access" stopped being so easy. Trez Capital suspended five open-ended funds last August after a surge in withdrawal requests, while Centurion Apartment REIT capped withdrawals at C$20 million a month.
Romspen blocked redemptions earlier - and now Mortgage Company of Canada joins them.
Adviser Jamie Grundman told Bloomberg the trend "spreads like wildfire," while economist Diana Petramala warned the pain "drags on for years."
What To Watch
Prime Minister Mark Carney is pushing builders to ramp up housing supply. The catch: a chunk of the money that funds those builders is currently trapped.
The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp says it is watching the gating trend, but it hasn't said what that means for the country's housing build-out.
Canadian home prices still sit far below their peak. That weakness in the market is the same thing pressuring fund managers - properties take longer to sell when buyers aren't bidding hard.
Blackstone's big U.S. real estate fund went through the same drill in 2022 and took years to fully unwind. Canada is now running its own version of that story - with more funds and more frustrated investors caught inside.
Join the investors reading Market Briefs every weekday morning - and grab a free 45-minute investing course while you're at it.
