Montreal Gazette

Canada could have 50% more millionair­es by 2021: report

- DREW HASSELBACK

TORONTO The number of Canadian millionair­es is expected to grow by 50 per cent over the next five years, according to the latest edition of the annual Credit Suisse Wealth Report.

Credit Suisse said Canada currently has 1,117,000 adults with asset holdings exceeding US$1 million, an increase of 25,000 individual­s from last year. Based on forecasts in the growth of Canada’s gross domestic product and equity market capitaliza­tion, Credit Suisse expects the number of adult Canadians whose wealth exceeds US$1 million will rise by 50 per cent to 1,680,000 in 2021.

Canada is a rich country by global standards. According to Credit Suisse, Canada has about four per cent of the richest one per cent, even though Canada makes up only 0.6 per cent of the world’s adult population.

Credit Suisse said wealth per adult in Canada lags the U.S. by about 22 per cent. The average Canadian adult has about US$270,000 in assets, while the average American holds US$344,000.

Yet Canada’s wealth is better distribute­d, with Canada’s median wealth per adult, US$96,700, more than double than in the U.S., where it’s US45,000. Canada also has a smaller percentage of adults whose wealth is beneath US$10,000 and a larger percentage of adults with more than US$100,000.

Credit Suisse says wealth per adult in Canada has grown an average of 5.9 per cent a year since 2000 when measured in U.S. currency, or 4.9 per cent a year when measured in loonies. The Canadian economy is heavily weighted to resources and has suffered from the dip in prices for oil and other commoditie­s. Yet Credit Suisse says Canadian wealth has still managed to rise because low interest rates continue fuel housing prices in major urban cities.

Globally, Credit Suisse says aggregate wealth increased by US$3.5 trillion or 1.7 per cent to US$255.7 trillion. The bank said the increase merely kept pace with global population growth, and wealth per adult of US$52,819 was unchanged for the first time since 2008.

The United Kingdom posted a notable slide in wealth in the aftermath of the June Brexit vote. Wealth per adult decreased US$30,000 to US$289,000.

China is the fastest growing countries for wealth. Credit Suisse says the number of millionair­es there should increase by 73 per cent to 2,749,000 in 2012, up from 1,590,00 this year.

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