Another point worth diving into a little deeper. Home sale prices are determined by the CURRENT amount of sellers, and the CURRENT number of prospective buyers.
The vast vast vast majority of homes in existence are not currently for sale. As an example, at the end of November, the total active listings in Ontario was 44K compared to the 6 million total residential dwellings. That is less than 1% of the total dwellings actively listed for sale.
It only takes a small surge in listings for sellers to significantly outweigh buyers, and then you have the recipe for price drops. This has already started happening.
This guy is a realtor in the GTA and provides weekly market updates. His updates are a lot more current than what you see in the TRREA's statistics. Prices have declined significantly across the board since August. And this is without a massive surge in unemployment or a full-blown recession.
https://youtube.com/@teamsessa?si=xgw7Ip5jro5Q66C2
Additionally this is another realtor in Niagara who has gone theough all the numbers himself, using data directly from statscan and proven that housing supply has in fact kept pass with population until end of 2021 at least (when this video was posted), which is again contrary to the narrative published by the media.
https://youtu.be/ZQQ49btytvY?si=rn63sGnQqKwB1C_v
Most of our price increases can be explained by the massive debt bubble. There is some legitimacy to the supply side as well, but mostly that developers haven't been allowed to build the amount of housing types that buyers actually want (namely single family detached), so the total number of detached houses in existence vs population has gone down. However the total dwellings, according to John Flynn's findings, has kept pace with population growth.