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RELIABLE. DURABLE. GROWING. November 2017 Equity Investors

CAUTIONARY STATEMENTS This presentation contains forward-looking statements that involve a number of risks and uncertainties, including statements regarding the outlook for CT Real Estate Investment Trust s ( CT REIT or the REIT ) business and results of operations. Forward-looking statements are provided for the purposes of providing information about CT REIT s future outlook and anticipated events or results and may include statements regarding known and unknown risks and uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results to differ materially from those indicated. Such factors include, but are not limited to, general economic conditions, the financial position, business strategy, budgets, capital expenditures, financial results, distributions, taxes, plans and objectives of or involving CT REIT. Particularly, statements regarding future results, performance, achievements, prospects or opportunities for CT REIT or the real estate industry are forward-looking statements. In some cases, forward-looking information can be identified by terms such as may, might, will, could, should, would, occur, expect, plan, anticipate, believe, intend, estimate, predict, potential, continue, likely, schedule, or the negative thereof or other similar expressions concerning matters that are not historical facts. Some of the specific forward-looking statements in this presentation include, but are not limited to, statements with respect to the following: CT REIT s relationship with Canadian Tire Corporation, Limited, ( CTC, which term refers to Canadian Tire Corporation, Limited and its subsidiaries unless the context otherwise requires); CT REIT s ability to execute its growth strategies; CT REIT s distribution policy and the distributions to be paid to its unitholders; CT REIT s capital structure strategy and its impact on the financial performance of the REIT and distributions to be paid to its unitholders; CT REIT s access to available sources of debt and/or equity financing; the expected tax treatment of CT REIT and its distributions to its unitholders; including the REIT s ability to qualify as a mutual fund trust, as defined in the Income Tax Act (Canada), and as a real estate investment trust, as defined in the rules applicable to SIFT trusts and SIFT partnerships in the Income Tax Act (Canada); CT REIT s ability to meet its stated obligations; CT REIT s ability to meet its stated obligations; CT REIT s ability to expand its asset base, make accretive acquisitions, develop or intensify its property and participate with CTC in the development or intensification of the properties; interest rates and the future interest rate environment. CT REIT has based these forward-looking statements on factors and assumptions about future events and financial trends that it believes may affect its financial condition, results of operations, business strategy and financial needs, including that the Canadian economy will remain stable over the next 12 months, that inflation will remain relatively low, that tax laws and the interpretation and enforcement thereof remain unchanged, that conditions within the real estate market, including competition for acquisitions, will be consistent with the current climate, that the Canadian capital markets will provide CT REIT with access to equity and/or debt at reasonable rates when required and that CTC will continue its involvement with the REIT in a manner that is consistent with its past involvement. Although the forward-looking statements contained in this presentation are based upon assumptions that management of CT REIT believes are reasonable based on information currently available to management, there can be no assurance that actual results will be consistent with these forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements necessarily involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond the REIT s control, that may cause CT REIT s or the industry s actual results, performance, achievements, prospects and opportunities in future periods to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. These considerations, risks and uncertainties include, among other things, the factors discussed in our Annual Information Form dated February 13, 2017 (see Cautionary Note Regarding Forward Looking Information and Risk Factors ) and Management s Discussion and Analysis for the periods ended December 31, 2016 and March 31, 2017 (see Part XII Forward Looking Information and Part X Enterprise Risk Management Risk Factors ). For more information on the risks, uncertainties and assumptions that could cause CT REIT s actual results to differ from current expectations, please also refer to CT REIT s public filings available on SEDAR at www.sedar.com and at www.ctreit.com. CT REIT cautions that the foregoing list of important factors and assumptions and those risks, uncertainties and assumptions referred to in CT REIT s public filings are not exhaustive and other factors could also materially adversely affect its results. Investors and other readers are urged to consider the foregoing risks, uncertainties, factors and assumptions carefully in evaluating the forward-looking information and are cautioned not to place undue reliance on such forward-looking information. Statements that include forwardlooking information do not take into account the effect that transactions or non-recurring or other special items announced or occurring after the statements are made have on CT REIT s business. For example, they do not include the effect of any dispositions, acquisitions, asset write-downs or other charges announced or occurring after such statements are made. The forward-looking information in this presentation is based on certain factors and assumptions made as of the date hereof. CT REIT does not undertake to update the forward-looking information, whether written or oral, that may be made from time to time by it or on its behalf, to reflect new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by applicable securities laws. 2

INTERNAL EXECUTIVE MANAGEMENT TEAM Ken Silver President & CEO Former President, Canadian Tire Real Estate Former SVP, Corporate Strategy & Real Estate, CTC Louis Forbes CPA, CA SVP & CFO Former CFO, Primaris Retail REIT Former Equity Analyst, Merrill Lynch Highly experienced with in-depth knowledge of portfolio Kevin Salsberg SVP, Real Estate Former EVP and CIO, Plaza Retail REIT Former COO, KEYreit 3

STRATEGIC OVERVIEW 4

INVESTMENT HIGHLIGHTS Exceptional cash flow predictability and reliable monthly distributions Investment grade anchor tenant Irreplaceable Canadian real estate portfolio Investment grade: BBB+ stable S&P BBB (high) stable DBRS Well-planned solid long-term growth Durable portfolio features 5

AN EXCEPTIONAL MAJOR TENANT ~10 0 % Brand Recognition 95 Years in business 80%+ of Canadians shop at Canadian Tire stores each year CTC family of brands: Sources: Ipsos Reid and Insignia 6

CANADIAN TIRE CORPORATION: NEVER STRONGER $10.8B Market Capitalization as at September 30, 2017 Investment Grade for Over 20 Years: BBB+ stable S&P BBB (high) stable DBRS $13.1B Revenue 12 month trailing (September 30, 2017) CTC provides 93.2% of CT REIT s annualized base minimum rent 1 (1) As at September 30, 2017 7

CANADIAN TIRE RETAIL SAME-STORE SALES GROWTH 4.5% 4.0% Same-Store Sales Consistent growth in same store sales 3.5% 3.0% 2.5% 2.0% 1.5% 1.0% 0.5% 0.0% 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 YTD* Canadian Tire Retail * Up to September 30, 2017 8

IRREPLACEABLE NATIONAL PORTFOLIO ~$5.2B 1 NORTHWEST TERRITORIES 1 YUKON Fair market value 1 25.2M BRITISH COLUMBIA 24 ALBERTA 48 MANITOBA 7 QUEBEC 67 NEWFOUNDLAND 7 Square feet of GLA 1 SASKATCHEWAN 10 ONTARIO 126 NOVA SCOTIA 17 TOTAL PROPERTY COUNT 1 325 NEW BRUNSWICK 15 PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND 2 (1) As at September 30, 2017 9

DIVERSIFIED PORTFOLIO BY GEOGRAPHY 1 % OF ANNUALIZED BASE MINIMUM RENT QUEBEC ATLANTIC CANADA 7% 21% 45% WESTERN CANADA 27% ONTARIO MIXED-USE COMMERCIAL PROPERTY 2% DISTRIBUTION CENTRES 10% BY MARKET SIZE 1,2 % OF ANNUALIZED BASE MINIMUM RENT SMALL 18% MEDIUM 13% BY PROPERTY TYPE 1 % OF ANNUALIZED BASE MINIMUM RENT LARGE URBAN 69% RETAIL 49% of Base Minimum Rent from: - Vancouver - Edmonton - Calgary - Toronto - Ottawa - Montreal 88% (1) Excludes development properties and includes Canada Square at the REIT s one-third share. (2) Large Urban: Population >100,000 Medium: Population 20,000 100,000 Small: Population <20,000 All figures as at September 30, 2017 10

HIGH TRAFFIC COMMERCIAL LOCATIONS Irreplaceable portfolio Conveniently located near high traffic arteries Highly visible and easy access Heartland Town Center, Mississauga, ON Ample parking 11

GROWTH STRATEGIES 12

GROWTH LEVERS Embedded Organic Growth CT REIT is uniquely positioned to leverage both its relationship with CTC and exploit third party opportunities to compliment its embedded organic growth 1.5% Rent escalations (on average) 1 12 years Weighted average remaining lease term 2 (1) Generally beginning January 1st on Canadian Tire store leases (2) Canadian Tire store leases as at September 30, 2017 13

INVESTMENT ACTIVITY Activating the growth strategy From IPO to Q3 2017 (announced) TRANSACTION NUMBER OF TRANSACTIONS GLA Weighted average going-in cap-rate 6.32% TOTAL (000 S) CTC Vend-ins 38 3,929,490 $784,884 Developments 11 932,031 $154,767 Intensifications 49 391,591 $87,490 Third party 11 1,920,078 $312,009 Total 109 7,173,190 $1,339,150 14

CASE STUDIES 15

VEND-INS Privileged relationship; ROFO on all CTC properties Toronto, ON Operating retail locations leased back to CTR on a long term basis Supply chain assets (e.g. Bolton distribution center) Redundant properties to be redeveloped Currently, there are ~35 properties owned by CTC expected to meet the vend in investment criteria 16

DEVELOPMENT Greenfield Developments CT REIT has a preferential right to participate in the development of CTC owned Canadian Tire related properties Charlottetown, PEI CT REIT is uniquely positioned to participate in the development of Canadian Tire stores and Canadian Tire anchored developments 17

DEVELOPMENT Redevelopment Project: Arnprior Mall Arnprior, Ontario BEFORE Acquiring and repositioning under-managed assets, leveraging brand relationships AFTER Acquired from a third party in 2015 Eliminated common areas and increased GLA by almost 20,000 square feet without expanding the building Occupancy increased from 53% at time of purchase to 100% as at September 30 th, 2017 18

INTENSIFICATIONS Incremental density on owned surplus lands Thunder Bay, ON Since IPO, CT REIT has funded 30 expansion projects for Canadian Tire and has intensified several other properties with ancillary tenants 19

THIRD PARTY ACQUISITIONS Consolidation of Canadian Tire Property Ownership Consolidating the ownership of Canadian Tire tenanted properties from third parties Winkler, MB Approximately 1/3 of Canadian Tire properties are owned by third parties. Opportunity to consolidate Canadian Tire stores and supply chain assets. 20

THIRD PARTY ACQUISITIONS Non-Canadian Tire Opportunities CIBC Portfolio Non-CTC related opportunities Leverage CTC s insight and market knowledge Banff, AB REIT has broader, yet more focused real estate mandate 21

THIRD PARTY ACQUISITIONS Urban Mixed Use Redevelopment Opportunity Canada Square One of Toronto s most prominent mid-town intersections Strong visibility along Yonge Street corridor 2200 2210 Yonge Street 2180 Yonge Street In 2014, CT REIT and Oxford Properties together acquired a 2/3 leasehold interest in Canada Square, a mixed-use property located at one of Toronto s most prominent midtown intersections Complex totals 844K SF of GLA, including 3 interconnected office towers, a multiplex cinema, a retail concourse and a 745 parking stall facility Leasehold from the Toronto Transit Commission and features direct access to Eglinton Subway Station and Bus Terminal (intersection of Crosstown LRT Line to be completed in 2021) Further potential upside from redevelopment/expansion opportunities in the mid-term. First public meeting for redevelopment held May 2017 22

THIRD PARTY ACQUISITIONS Strategic Investments Sears DC, Calgary, Alberta Well located assets that diversify the portfolio A. Sears Canada DC CT REIT owned B. Canadian Tire DC CTC Leased C. 11 Dufferin Place SE CT REIT owned/ctc Leased D. CP Intermodal facility 23

FINANCIAL OVERVIEW 24

LONG-TERM LEASES ENHANCE PREDICTABILITY 95.6% Of annualized base minimum rent from investment grade tenants 11.8 years Weighted average remaining lease term Property revenue is easy to forecast 1.5% Annual rent escalations 1 99.6% Occupancy (1) Canadian Tire stores only (on average) (2) As at September 30, 2017 25

LONG-TERM LEASE MATURITIES 16.0% 14.0% Initial Initial Term Initial Term Lease Term Lease Expiry Lease Expiry Lease Expiry by % by of Expiry by % Annualized of % Initial of by Initial Minimum Term Rent Rent and and GLA( GLA (1)(2)(3)(4) 14.5% Square Feet (millions) 5.0 4.5 Minimal lease rollovers for 5+ years 4.0 12.0% 10.3% 3.5 10.0% 8.4% 8.3% 3.0 8.0% 6.0% 4.0% 2.0% 0.0% 7.7% 7.3% 7.5% 2.5 7.0% 5.8% 2.0 5.1% 5.3% 4.4% 1.5 1.0 1.8% 2.1% 1.0% 1.4% 0.7% 0.5 0.5% 0.6% 0.0% 0.0% Series1 0.0 '17 '18 '19 '20 '21 '22 '23 '24 '25 '26 '27 '28 '29 '30 '31 '32 '33 '34 '35 '36 '37 Annualized Base Minimum Rent Canadian Tire Retail GLA Distribution Centre GLA Other GLA 8 19 20 21 Notes: (1) Excludes development properties (2) Total base minimum rent excludes future contractual escalations (3) Canada Square is included at the REIT's one-third share of leasehold interest (4) As at September 30, 2017 26

LEAN COST STRUCTURE Clear visibility into revenue and expenses CTC leases triple net; utilities, operating costs and capex paid by tenant G&A as a percentage of revenues is 2.5% 2 Continuity of property management by CTC real estate division on a cost recovery basis Majority of back office services provided by CTC Property Management and Services Agreement fees are on a cost recovery basis 1 No fees paid to CTC for acquisitions, dispositions, intensifications or financings (1) Pursuant to Property Management and Services Agreement with Canadian Tire Corporation for single tenant Canadian Tire retail store properties (2) As at September 30, 2017 27

DEBT TOTAL DEBT (000 S) 1 Class C LP Units (unsecured) $1,451,550 Debentures (unsecured) $869,238 Bank Indebtedness (unsecured) 2 $12,986 Capital Structure Mortgages 1% 16% Debentures Long-term debt Staggered debt redemptions/ maturities Mortgages (secured) $61,011 TOTAL $2,394,785 27% Class C LP Units High proportion of fixed rate debt Metrics: Debt/GBV ~46% as at September 30, 2017 1 Debt - Weighted average fixed interest/distribution rate of 4.08% during initial term 3 56% Equity 4 Weighted average term to debt maturity of 10.1 years 3 (1) Includes indebtedness and aggregate par value of Class C LP Units (2) CT REIT has a $300 million unsecured revolving credit facility maturing September 2022 (3) Excluding Bank Indebtedness (4) September 30, 2017 unit price used. 28

DEBT MATURITIES ($000s) $300 $250 $200 $150 Lease Debt Principal Expiry by Repayments Initial Term Interest Rate 6.00% 5.00% 4.00% 3.00% Amongst the highest weighted average term to maturity in the sector $100 2.00% $50 1.00% $0 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2036 2037 2038 Class C LP Units Line of Credit Mortgages Unsecured Debenture Interest Rate 0.00% 2017 capturtures the period of October 1, 2017 - December 31, 2017 Staggered debt maturity profile 97% of total debt is unsecured All unsecured debt is interest only 98% of total debt is fixed rate debt 29

INVESTMENT GRADE CAPITAL STRUCTURE BBB+ & BBB (high) Investment grade rating 1 ~46% Debt/Gross Book Value Predictable and durable Strong asset platform supports growth 3.5x $300M EBITFV interest coverage ratio Senior unsecured credit facility (1) Source: Standard & Poors and DBRS (2) As at September 30, 2017 30

DURABLE FFO AND AFFO $1.10 $1.05 FFO and AFFO per unit metric 1,2 $1.04 $1.07 Continuing record of solid per unit growth $1.00 $0.98 $0.95 $0.90 $0.85 $0.86 $0.80 $0.81 $0.75 $0.70 $0.74 2014 2015 2016 FFO/per unit AFFO/per unit (1) Total Units consists of REIT Units and Class B LP Units outstanding. (2) Diluted Units used in calculating non-gaap measures include restricted and deferred units issued under various plans and exclude the effect of assuming that all of the Class C LP Units will be settled with Class B LP Units. 31

DISTRIBUTION INCREASES EVERY YEAR SINCE IPO AND IMPROVED PAYOUT RATIO 90% 88% 86% 84% 82% 80% 78% 76% 74% 72% 88% 82% 79% 76% $0.7400 $0.7200 $0.7000 $0.6800 $0.6600 $0.6400 $0.6200 Growing distributions and conservatively managing payout ratio 70% 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 $0.6000 Annual Distribution Per Unit Payout Ratio Distribution increase of 2% in January 2015 Second distribution increase of 2.56% in January 2016 Third distribution increase of 3% in January 2017 Announced fourth distribution increase of 4% beginning January 2018 32

GOVERNANCE 33 33

MAJORITY INDEPENDENT EXPERIENCED BOARD TRUSTEES INDEPENDENT HIGHLIGHTS David Laidley FCPA, FCA Chair of Board Brent Hollister Chair of Governance, Compensation and Nominating Committee Anna Martini FCPA, FCA Chair of Audit Committee John O Bryan Chair of Investment Committee Yes Yes Yes Yes Former Chair, Deloitte Former Partner, Deloitte Former Lead Director, Bank of Canada Former President, CEO and Director of Sears Canada Inc. Honorary Life Member, CMA CFO and EVP of Finance, Club de Hockey Canadien Inc. Former President, Groupe Dynamite Inc. Former Partner, Deloitte Honorary Chairman, CBRE Limited Former Managing Director, TD Securities Stephen Wetmore CPA, CA No President and CEO, Canadian Tire Corporation Director, Canadian Tire Corporation Limited Dean McCann CPA, CA No CFO and EVP of Finance, Canadian Tire Corporation Former President, Canadian Tire Financial Services Limited Former Director, Canadian Tire Bank Ken Silver No CEO, CT REIT Former President, Canadian Tire Real Estate Limited Former SVP, Corporate Strategy & Real Estate, Canadian Tire Corporation All committees are chaired by independent trustees 34

NON-GAAP MEASURES FFO: AFFO: AFFO per Unit: CT REIT defines FFO consistently with the definition presented in the white paper on funds from operations prepared by the Real Property Association of Canada ( REALpac ). FFO is calculated as net income in accordance with GAAP, adjusted by removing the impact of (i) fair value adjustments on investment properties; (ii) other fair value adjustments; (iii) gains and losses on the sale of investment properties; and (iv) amortization of tenant incentives. The GAAP measurement most directly comparable to FFO is net income. CT REIT defines AFFO consistently with the definition presented in the white paper on adjusted funds from operations prepared by REALpac. CT REIT calculates AFFO by adjusting FFO for non-cash income and expense items, such as adjustments to (a) remove the impact of: (i) adjusting for any differences resulting from recognizing property rental revenues or expenses on a straightline basis; and (ii) initial one-time costs to establish the REIT; and (b) deduct a reserve for normalized maintenance capital expenditures, tenant inducements and leasing commissions. AFFO per Unit is defined as AFFO divided by the number of Units outstanding where the total Units consists of REIT Units and Class B LP Units outstanding. Total Units also includes diluted Units used in calculating non-gaap measures and include restricted and deferred units issued under various plans and exclude the effect of assuming that all of the Class C LP Units will be settled with Class B LP Units. FFO and AFFO are not measures defined under IFRS. FFO and AFFO are not intended to represent operating profits for the period nor should any of these measures be viewed as an alternative to net income, cash flow from operating activities or other measures of financial performance calculated in accordance with GAAP. Readers should be further cautioned that these measures may not be comparable to similar measures presented by other issuers. 35