Types of Alternative Investments Available in Canada
| Alternative | Minimum Investment | Accredited Required? | Liquidity | Annual Returns (Typical) | Fees |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Real estate crowdfunding | $1,000–$25,000 | Sometimes | Low (1–5 year lockup) | 6–12% | 1–3% |
| Private equity | $25,000–$500,000 | Yes (usually) | Very low (5–10 year lockup) | 10–20% (target) | 2% + 20% |
| Farmland | $10,000–$25,000 | Sometimes | Very low (5+ years) | 8–12% | 1–2% |
| Art / collectibles | $100–$50,000+ | No (platforms) | Low-moderate | Variable (0–20%+) | 1.5–3% |
| Cryptocurrency | $1+ | No | High (24/7 trading) | Extremely variable (-80% to +300%) | 0.5–2.5% |
| Hedge funds | $100,000–$1M | Yes | Low (quarterly redemptions) | 5–15% (target) | 2% + 20% |
| Private debt | $5,000–$50,000 | Sometimes | Low (1–3 year terms) | 7–12% | 1–2% |
| Private REITs | $5,000–$25,000 | Sometimes | Low (quarterly redemptions) | 6–10% | 1.5–3% |
Real Estate Crowdfunding in Canada
Platforms
| Platform | Minimum | Accredited? | Returns (Target) | Focus | Fees |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Addy Invest | $1 | No | 6–10% | Mixed real estate | Varies |
| NexusCrowd | $10,000 | Yes | 10–15% | Commercial real estate | 1–2% |
| BuyProperly | $2,500 | No | 8–12% | Residential properties | 2% |
| Frontfundr | $500 | No | Varies | Equity crowdfunding (mixed) | Platform fee |
Real Estate Crowdfunding vs REITs
| Factor | Crowdfunding | Publicly Traded REIT (XRE) |
|---|---|---|
| Liquidity | ❌ Locked up 1–5 years | ✅ Sell anytime on TSX |
| Minimum investment | $1–$25,000 | $50 (1 ETF unit) |
| Transparency | Low — quarterly reports | High — public filings |
| Diversification | 1–5 properties per deal | Dozens of properties in ETF |
| Returns | Potentially higher (illiquidity premium) | Market returns (6–10%) |
| Regulation | Less regulated | Fully regulated (securities) |
| Fees | 1–3% management + performance | 0.61% (XRE MER) |
| Appropriate for | Experienced, higher net worth | All investors |
Private Equity for Canadians
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| What it is | Investing in private companies not listed on stock exchanges |
| Minimum | Typically $25,000–$500,000+ |
| Lockup period | 5–10 years (no access to capital) |
| Target returns | 15–25% IRR (but highly variable) |
| Fee structure | “2 and 20” — 2% management fee + 20% of profits above hurdle |
| Access in Canada | Through exempt market dealers, PE funds, or platforms |
| Publicly traded PE | Brookfield Asset Management (BAM), Onex (ONEX), Fairfax (FFH) |
| Best for | High net worth, accredited investors |
Farmland Investing in Canada
| Platform | Minimum | Accredited? | Returns (Target) | Geographic Focus |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FarmFundr (US) | $15,000 | Yes | 8–12% | US farmland |
| AGInvest | $25,000 | Yes | 7–10% | Canadian farmland |
| Bonnefield Financial | Institutional | Yes | N/A | Canadian farmland leases |
Why Farmland?
| Factor | Detail |
|---|---|
| Inflation hedge | Farmland values and crop revenues rise with inflation |
| Low correlation | Little connection to stock market movements |
| Growing demand | Global population growing, arable land shrinking |
| Canadian advantage | Canada is one of the world’s largest agricultural exporters |
| Historical returns | Canadian farmland has averaged ~8% annually over 30+ years |
Art and Collectibles
| Platform | Minimum | What You Can Buy | Fees |
|---|---|---|---|
| Masterworks | $1,000 | Fractional shares in blue-chip art | 1.5% annual + 20% profit |
| Rally | $50+ | Collectible cars, watches, sports cards | Varies |
| Otis | $25+ | Streetwear, sneakers, collectibles | Varies |
Art and collectibles are highly speculative. Returns are unpredictable and dependent on taste, trends, and finding a buyer.
Cryptocurrency in Canada
How to Buy Crypto in Canada
| Platform | Coins Available | Fees | Regulated by |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wealthsimple Crypto | 50+ | 1.5–2% spread | OSC (Ontario) |
| Bitbuy (WonderFi) | 25+ | 0.2% trading | OSC |
| Newton | 70+ | 0–2% spread | OSC |
| Coinbase | 200+ | 0.5–1.5% | Not registered as Canadian dealer |
| Kraken | 200+ | 0.16–0.26% | Not registered in all provinces |
| Shakepay | BTC & ETH | 1.5–2% spread | AMF (Quebec) |
Crypto as a Portfolio Allocation
| Allocation | Risk Level | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| 0% | Conservative | Too volatile, no fundamental value |
| 1–3% | Moderate | Small allocation for diversification/upside |
| 5% | Aggressive | Conviction in crypto long-term |
| 10%+ | Very aggressive / speculative | Only for those who deeply understand crypto |
Crypto Tax Rules in Canada
| Event | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|
| Buying and holding crypto | No tax event |
| Selling crypto for profit | Capital gain (50% inclusion rate) |
| Trading one crypto for another | Disposition — capital gain/loss triggered |
| Mining crypto | Business income (100% taxable) |
| Crypto received as payment | Income at fair market value |
| Staking rewards | Income or capital gain (CRA guidance evolving) |
| NFT purchase/sale | Capital gain or business income |
| Lost/stolen crypto | May claim capital loss (with evidence) |
Hedge Funds in Canada
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Minimum | $100,000–$1,000,000+ |
| Accredited investor | Required |
| Strategies | Long/short equity, global macro, market neutral, event-driven |
| Fees | “2 and 20” — some charging “1 and 15” now |
| Liquidity | Quarterly or yearly redemptions, 30–90 day notice |
| Performance | Industry average trails simple index funds after fees |
| Regulated by | Provincial securities commissions |
| Best for | Ultra-high net worth seeking non-correlated strategies |
Accredited Investor Requirements in Canada
| Path | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Financial assets | $1,000,000+ in cash, securities, or contracts (excluding real estate) |
| Net income | $200,000+ individual (or $300,000+ combined with spouse) for 2 consecutive years |
| Net assets | $5,000,000+ (individual or with spouse) |
| Registered adviser | Registered investment adviser or dealer purchasing on your behalf |
| Eligible investor | $400,000+ in financial assets (lower threshold for some alternatives) |
Should You Invest in Alternatives?
Portfolio Allocation Guide
| Net Worth | Alternatives Allocation | Recommended Types |
|---|---|---|
| Under $100K | 0–2% | Crypto only (if any) |
| $100K–$500K | 0–5% | Crypto, public REITs, commodity ETFs |
| $500K–$1M | 0–10% | Add real estate crowdfunding, farmland |
| $1M–$5M | 5–15% | Add private equity, private debt |
| $5M+ | 10–25% | Full alternative sleeve (PE, hedge funds, farmland, art) |
Alternatives vs Simple Index Investing
| Factor | Alternative Investments | Index ETFs (XEQT/VEQT) |
|---|---|---|
| Average annual return | 5–15% (highly variable) | 7–10% (historically) |
| Fees | 1–3% + performance fees | 0.20–0.24% MER |
| Liquidity | Days to years | Instant — sell on TSX |
| Transparency | Low | High — public holdings |
| Diversification benefit | Some (low correlation) | Already globally diversified |
| Complexity | High — due diligence required | Very low — buy and hold |
| Minimum investment | $1,000–$500,000+ | $50 (1 ETF unit) |
| Appropriate for | Experienced, higher net worth | Everyone |
Risks of Alternative Investments
| Risk | Detail |
|---|---|
| Illiquidity | Many alternatives lock up your money for years |
| High fees | 2% management + 20% performance fees erode returns |
| Fraud risk | Less regulation than public markets |
| Complexity | Hard to understand and evaluate |
| Valuation uncertainty | Private assets don’t have market prices — valuations are estimates |
| Manager risk | Performance depends heavily on the fund manager |
| Lack of transparency | Limited reporting compared to public companies |
| Survivorship bias | Data only includes surviving funds — failed funds disappear from records |
| Tax complexity | Various structures create complicated tax reporting |