Canada Just Built a Money Machine... And Most People Still Think It’s Spending
A $25B sovereign wealth fund could turn national projects into long-term profit… if we don’t screw it up
Let’s clear something up right out of the gate.
This isn’t about spending money.
It’s about owning what we build.
When Mark Carney announced Canada’s first Sovereign Wealth Fund… the “Canada Strong Fund” … most people heard one thing…
“Government throwing billions around again.”
That’s not what this is.
This is a shift in how Canada plays the game.
What actually got announced
The federal government is seeding a new fund with $25 billion.
Not to hand out.
Not to burn through.
To invest.
And here’s the key difference most people miss…
Loans = what the Canada Infrastructure Bank already does
Ownership = what this new fund is about
This new fund takes equity stakes in major projects…
Pipelines, energy, infrastructure… the kinds of projects that generate revenue for decades.
That means…
Canada doesn’t just help build things…
Canada owns a piece of them.
Why this matters (and why the U.S. is already playing this game)
We’re not operating in a vacuum here.
The U.S. is throwing serious firepower at its own projects… including tens of billions in credit support for things like LNG development.
Translation:
They’re not waiting politely for investment.
They’re greasing the wheels so projects happen on their soil.
Canada’s response?
Instead of just handing out incentives…
We invest and share in the upside.
Simple version (no finance degree required)
Think of it like this…
Borrow money to buy a car → you’ve got debt
Borrow money to build a rental fleet → you’ve got a business
That’s the shift.
We’re moving from “spending” to “owning income streams.”
Example already in play…
The Trans Mountain pipeline moves about 1 million barrels per day and charges roughly $10 per barrel in transport fees.
That’s about $3.65 billion a year in revenue.
Why?
Because Canada owns it.
Now imagine that logic applied across multiple major projects.
The Norway comparison everyone keeps bringing up
There’s a reason people keep pointing to Norway.
They didn’t just sell oil and call it a day.
They built a fund… now worth about $2.2 trillion USD … and used it to…
Fund government spending
Support healthcare and education
Stabilize their economy long-term
That fund now covers roughly 20–25% of their national budget.
Let that sink in.
They turned natural resources into a permanent income engine.
Canada’s version (and the catch)
We’re starting from zero.
This $25B is seed money.
The plan…
Invest in major nation-building projects
Take ownership stakes
Let profits flow back into the fund
Allow Canadians to invest and benefit over time
If it works?
You’re looking at a fund that could grow into the trillions over decades.
The part nobody wants to talk about
This isn’t guaranteed.
This kind of system only works if…
Projects are actually profitable
Leadership stays competent long-term
The fund is run independently (not politically meddled with)
That last one matters.
The idea is to structure it like the Bank of Canada … arms-length from government decisions.
If that holds, the model works.
If it doesn’t?
Yeah… it turns into exactly what critics are warning about.
Speaking of critics…
You’re going to hear this a lot…
“It’s just more debt”
“If projects are profitable, private companies would fund them”
“This is a slush fund in disguise”
That’s the political fight.
But the real question isn’t ideological.
It’s practical…
Do we want to own part of the future we’re building…
or just help finance it for someone else?
What this really is
This isn’t flashy.
It’s not instant.
It’s a 20–30 year move.
The kind of move countries either thank themselves for later…
or regret not committing to.
Canada just stepped onto that path.
Now we find out if we can stay on it.
The Recap…
Canada just launched a $25B sovereign wealth fund… and most people think it’s spending.
It’s not. It’s ownership.
If this works, we stop building wealth for others… and start keeping it.
Big shift. Long game.
The Gut-Punch…
We’ve spent decades exporting value.
This is the first serious attempt to own it on the way out.
The question isn’t whether the idea works.
It’s whether we’ve got the discipline to see it through.
Source credit:
Analysis based on public explanation of Canada’s sovereign wealth fund proposal and supporting examples, including infrastructure financing models and international comparisons.
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I'd put a small excise tax of 1-1.5 % tax on resource exports to increase the fund annually by 15 - 25 billion. Want a continuing stream of infrastrucure build outs. Leverage this though private investments 5:1 and a lot of the burden on governments for infastructure plays is lifted. Like a phoenix rising Canada will be the envy of the world. Canada Strong.
It's time we owned our own resources and infrastructure. $25 Billion seems like a drop in the bucket to get started.