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Tag Archives: bank of canada governor

Canadians getting the message on debt load, Carney says

Jeremy Torobin – Globe and Mail

Cana­dian house prices are now almost five times higher than incomes, the lat­est illus­tra­tion of why pol­icy mak­ers are wor­ried about parts of the hous­ing market.

Com­ment: Yes, the monthly mort­gage cost on an $800,000 house is $2,800 – the same as a $200,000 mort­gage at 21.5% inter­est in 1981. But that is $7,100 in 2012 dol­lars! For­get price to income, monthly costs have dropped by 2/3rds in the past 30 years, even as prices have risen four-fold.

The aver­age price is roughly 4.75 times the aver­age income, Bank of Canada Gov­er­nor Mark Car­ney said Tues­day, not­ing that the his­tor­i­cal norm is closer to 3.5.

Speak­ing to the House of Com­mons finance com­mit­tee, he said “val­u­a­tions are firm” in some cities and seg­ments of hous­ing, such as Toronto’s condo mar­ket, pos­ing “more down­side risk than upside risk.”

While “extremely attrac­tive” mort­gage rates linked to excep­tion­ally low over­all bor­row­ing costs are a key rea­son, he said, bor­row­ers need to make sure they’ll be able to afford any loans once inter­est rates start rising.

Com­ment: But we have been hear­ing about ris­ing rates for years now. I remem­ber 3–4 years ago, when rates dropped below 5% – and every­one screamed and wailed about ris­ing rates. Now the best 5-year rates sit at 3.29%. Even with a 2% jump (an increase of almost 61%) we are only back where we were in 2008. Not really some­thing to be scared of…

Prices in the biggest hous­ing mar­kets, Toronto and Van­cou­ver, are mov­ing in oppo­site direc­tions of late, some­thing econ­o­mists say could keep the over­all sec­tor from over­heat­ing and, there­fore, pre­vent a nasty drop in prices that rip­ples across the coun­try. Still, Mr. Car­ney has indi­cated he is think­ing about when to start rais­ing inter­est rates, and higher rates will likely mean a hous­ing cor­rec­tion as buy­ing a home becomes less affordable.

Mr. Car­ney warned again last week that the use of home-equity lines of credit to finance con­sump­tion exploded over the past decade as prices rose, sug­gest­ing that if val­u­a­tions were to drop sharply, mil­lions of fam­i­lies would lose the con­fi­dence and capac­ity to keep spending.

On Tues­day, he said Cana­di­ans are absorb­ing his “mes­sage of pru­dence and caution.”

The annual growth of house­hold debt – now 153 per cent of dis­pos­able income – has slowed in the past two years to around 4 per cent from almost 10 per cent, he told law­mak­ers. Also, more and more bor­row­ers are tak­ing on fixed-rate mort­gages instead of variable-rate loans, leav­ing them less exposed to fluc­tu­a­tions in inter­est rates.

Com­ment: So we are pay­ing down our debt, just like Car­ney asked. Is that not a good thing? We are tak­ing steps, as a nation, to min­i­mize that risk.

Still, he repeated that house­hold debt is the No. 1 domes­tic risk to the recov­ery, and reit­er­ated that if the econ­omy con­tin­ues to improve it “may become appro­pri­ate” to lift his bench­mark inter­est rate from 1 per cent, where is has been since Sep­tem­ber, 2010.

The del­i­cate chal­lenge fac­ing Mr. Car­ney and other pol­icy mak­ers, how­ever, is to wean Cana­di­ans from debt-fuelled pur­chases with­out eras­ing the con­sumer spend­ing that is being counted on for more than half of eco­nomic growth both this year and next, or caus­ing a jar­ring cor­rec­tion in housing.

There has to be an ele­ment of pru­dence in bal­anc­ing the pace of slow­ing of this phe­nom­ena, with the under­ly­ing growth of the econ­omy,” Mr. Car­ney told the panel, not­ing that mea­sures to tighten eli­gi­bil­ity require­ments for mort­gages, and greater scrutiny of appli­cants for home-equity lines of credit, are helping.

The com­bi­na­tion of mea­sures that have been taken and a clear-eyed per­spec­tive of Cana­di­ans, which I think they have … will do much to man­age the issue.”

Still, it’s clear the cen­tral bank is crunch­ing num­bers and assess­ing just how much any num­ber of sce­nar­ios could slow the hous­ing mar­ket, con­sumer spend­ing, or the econ­omy as a whole.

When Lib­eral MP Scott Bri­son asked whether the cen­tral bank – which has been pro­lific over the past year in its stud­ies and reports on hous­ing – has explored how over­val­ued house prices may be, Mr. Car­ney sim­ply smiled and said, “Not publicly.”

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Con­tact the Jef­frey Team for more infor­ma­tion – 416−388−1960

Lau­rin & Natalie Jef­frey are Toronto Real­tors with Cen­tury 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these arti­cles, they just repro­duce them here for peo­ple
who are inter­ested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.

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  • Home prices show signs of easing

    John Morrissy – Financial Post

    Homes prices edged down 0.2% in February from the month before but were still 6.1% higher than a year ago, according to a well-watched housing index.

    The month-over-month decline was the third such retreat in the past four months for the Teranet-National Bank National Composite House Price Index, released Wednesday, which measures price changes for repeat sales of single-family homes.

    In January, prices rose 0.1%.

    Teranet’s report showed prices falling from the previous month in six of the 11 metropolitan markets surveyed.

    In Canada’s two hottest real-estate markets, prices in Vancouver fell 0.3%, the fifth consecutive decline, while prices in Toronto rose by just 0.1%. On a yearly basis, however, Toronto prices were 10% higher.

    Nationally, prices were 6.1% higher than a year ago. In January, prices were 6.5% higher.

    The data is likely to show up on the radar of Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney, who has repeatedly warned that Canadians are piling on too much debt as they buy homes whose prices keep rising.

    At a House of Commons finance committee meeting Tuesday, Carney warned that house prices in relation to income levels are now running 35% above historical norms.

    Last week, the Canadian Real Estate Association reported that seasonally adjusted sales in March rose 1.6% from year-earlier levels, although the national average home price declined 0.5% to to $369,677.

    “It is a fact that according to CREA (the Canadian Real Estate Association) data for March, five of the 11 markets covered were rather favourable to sellers (Toronto, Hamilton, Winnipeg, Halifax and Quebec City). Overall, the Canadian market is nevertheless balanced,” said National Bank senior economist Marc Pinsonneault.

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    Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information – 416-388-1960

    Laurin & Natalie Jeffrey are Toronto Realtors with Century 21 Regal Realty.
    They did not write these articles, they just reproduce them here for people
    who are interested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.

    —————————————————————————————————–


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  • Canadians slash spending to tackle debt

    The Cana­dian Press

    More Cana­di­ans acknowl­edge they may be reach­ing the upper lim­its on bor­row­ing, even though they believe they are in the safe zone now, a new sur­vey shows.

    The annual sur­vey, released by account­ing firm PwC and con­ducted by Leger Mar­ket­ing, found that almost two-thirds of respon­dents believed their cur­rent debt lev­els were about right.

    But a sim­i­lar num­ber, 63%, said they wanted to decrease their debt lev­els over the next year – up 4.5% from a year ear­lier – and many indi­cated they were ready to cut back on dis­cre­tionary spend­ing to do it.

    This com­fort is likely due to our high real estate val­ues and low inter­est rates, which make the debt seem minor in rela­tion to the value of the prop­erty and easy to carry month to month,” PwC said in a release.

    Cen­tral bank warning

    In a recent inter­view, Bank of Canada gov­er­nor Mark Car­ney warned pre­cisely of such a dynamic, where house­holds count on home val­ues and low inter­est rates to ratio­nal­ize their debt loads.

    Cit­ing a house­hold debt to income ratio of over 150%, Car­ney noted that Cana­di­ans have never been more in debt. That’s OK as long as home val­ues remain sky high and inter­est rates floor low, he said.

    If house prices fall, how­ever, Cana­di­ans could find them­selves in a sit­u­a­tion where their net assets decline as inter­est rates and hence their mort­gage pay­ments rise. Even a return to nor­mal­ized rates would ren­der 10% of house­holds finan­cially vulnerable.

    If a point comes where house prices adjust down­wards, the ques­tion is how is that going to impact con­sump­tion behav­iour,” Car­ney said.

    Com­ment: But there is noth­ing to sug­gest that house prices, on the whole, will decrease. Mak­ing sup­po­si­tions about the unlikely ben­e­fits no one. Worry more about ris­ing inter­est rates…

    There is his­tory in other juris­dic­tions where this has a big­ger impact on con­sump­tion on the way down than it does on the way up.”

    A his­tor­i­cal analy­sis from econ­o­mist Daniel Leigh of the Inter­na­tional Mon­e­tary Fund found that hous­ing busts and reces­sions tend to be more severe and pro­longed when pre­ceded by a run-up of house­hold debt.

    Car­ney said he believed house­hold debt is now the num­ber one domes­tic risk to the econ­omy, say­ing that’s why he has been hec­tor­ing Cana­di­ans to ensure they can afford their debt long-term.

    The PwC sur­vey sug­gests more Cana­di­ans are heed­ing the message.

    Com­ment: Which is aweome! Seri­ously, peo­ple are pay­ing attenti0n and try­ing to fix things.

    Pur­chases delayed

    Over­all, 69% said they would be will­ing to delay the pur­chase of a new car, up from 64% last year, the sur­vey found.

    Mean­while, 62% would delay buy­ing a new house or upgrad­ing to a big­ger home (up from 56%) and 61% would forgo buy­ing new elec­tron­ics (up from 59%).

    Across the board, we are see­ing a new desire by Cana­di­ans to cut back on major expen­di­tures from our sur­vey a year ago,” said John MacKin­lay, leader of PwC’s national finan­cial ser­vices con­sult­ing and deals practice.

    MacKin­lay said the top rea­sons cited for want­ing to reduce debt were fear of not being able to pay off debt (47%), the frag­ile econ­omy (46%) and uncer­tainty in the finan­cial mar­kets (33%).

    As a result, PwC con­cluded that Cana­dian banks will likely expe­ri­ence a slow­down in loan growth over the next 12 months, increas­ing com­pe­ti­tion among the lenders.

    Given the pro­longed low inter­est rate envi­ron­ment, banks may not have much lee­way to com­pete for cus­tomers on price so they will have to focus their atten­tion on cus­tomer expe­ri­ence and prod­uct inno­va­tion as means of dif­fer­en­ti­a­tion,” it said.

    The sur­vey also found that a big major­ity of respon­dents felt that the respon­si­bil­ity of keep­ing debt lev­els under con­trol isn’t theirs alone and that banks have a role to play.

    Com­ment: What? Uh, no, you are solely respon­si­ble for your own bad behav­iour. Please do not try to shift respon­si­bil­ity elsewhere.

    In fact, 82% said they believed banks should play a role in deter­min­ing the max­i­mum debt lev­els and then hold them to that limit. That was espe­cially true of those mak­ing $100,000 or more a year (85%) ver­sus those mak­ing less (71%).

    Con­sumer lend­ing is a cor­ner­stone of Canada’s banks, account­ing for 27% of their assets and 26% of rev­enue, PwC said, adding that the largest dri­ver of the per­sonal lend­ing mar­ket is real estate lend­ing in the form of mort­gages and home equity lines.

    —————————————————————————————————–
    Con­tact the Jef­frey Team for more infor­ma­tion – 416−388−1960

    Lau­rin & Natalie Jef­frey are Toronto Real­tors with Cen­tury 21 Regal Realty.
    They did not write these arti­cles, they just repro­duce them here for peo­ple
    who are inter­ested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.

    —————————————————————————————————–

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