Tag Archives: housing market
Spring housing market could trigger mortgage rate wars as Bank of Montreal lowers rate
Garry Marr – Financial Post
The spring housing market is expected to bring on a new battle from mortgage lenders as they compete for what has become a shrinking pie in the form of lower real estate sales.
Bank of Montreal struck first on Friday with a five-year closed mortgage rate of 2.99% – down from 3.09% and now the lowest published rate among the big banks – with sources indicating the financial institution’s mortgage specialists are armed with discretionary power to go as low as 2.89%.
As the banks battle it out for consumers skittish about jumping into what more than one analyst sees as an inflated housing market, lenders know their costs have dropped in the past few weeks. The Bank of Canada’s five-year bond rate is in the 1.3% range after being almost at 1.6% at the end of January.
Comment: One analyst. One. And we are giving him equal weight against the entire real estate industry with 100,000x more opinions to the contrary?
“Perhaps there is pressure to lower rates,” said Gregory Klump, chief economist with the Canadian Real Estate Association, about banks trying to capture customers in a slowing market. “It remains to be seen how much [the real estate market] is going to slow.”
While some predict a collapse in the housing market, so far prices have remained firm and sales have dipped only in the single-digit range from a year ago.
CREA said last month that January prices were up 2% year-over-year, while sales were down 5.2% during the same period. On a seasonally adjusted basis, sales actually climbed 1.3% from December to January.
Comment: Amazing, how the prediction of another ONE analyst of a market collapse did not come true. And the thoughts of 100,000 real estate professionals were shown to be correct. Why do we listen to the single crackpots anymore, seriously?
It’s unclear whether a new round of mortgage rate cuts will have an impact on consumers already used to a prime rate of 3% and long-term mortgage rates even below that.
“I don’t think low rates change their mind on whether they are going to buy or not,” Mr. Klump said. “What it does change is how much property they can afford. The most important thing at this point in the cycle is how confident consumers are of economic prospects going forward.”
The Bank of Montreal may catch some headlines with its new rate, but mortgage brokers have been offering deals as low as 2.84% on a five-year mortgage without any of the restrictions of the BMO mortgage. The rate on a 10-year mortgage is as low as 3.64%, say industry sources.
Comment: The rate change is not such a big deal. For a couple making $100,000 with $50,000 to put down, the drop from 3.09% to 2.99% increases their purchase amount by $3,000. Even dropping from 3.09% to 2.84% only adds $9,000 to the purchase price.
“You can’t break the BMO mortgage and transfer to another lender,” said Rob McLister, editor of Canadian Mortgage Trends, adding a customer can make a prepayment for only 10% of the value of the mortgage per year instead of the standard 20%.
Mr. McLister said if the bond market continues to go down, he can see rates falling even below the 2.99% threshold BMO establishing.
“They are going to try to keep rates as high as they can for as long as they can,” he said.
As bond rates have dropped, it is has allowed lenders who fund mortgage brokers to lower their rates, making them more competitive with the big banks.
The last time banks started cutting rates in a competitive battle, they drew the wrath of Finance Minister Jim Flaherty, who has repeatedly expressed concerns about the housing market getting overheated.
Mr. Flaherty has indicated he wants to avoid a crash and has brought in new restrictions – including limiting amortization lengths to 25 years today from as high as 40 years during the housing boom – to cool the market and ensure a soft landing.
“There is uneasiness at the federal level with banks competing on rates. [Ottawa is stepping in], but behind the scenes,” Mr. McLister said.
BMO warned that rates could be going up in the future, making locking in a priority. “There is always competition out there,” said Sameh Elrefaei, head of BMO’s home financing products. “The reason we are doing this now is essentially our customers have been telling us they like this product and they want the certainty of a lower payment and a better rate.”
Others banks appear poised for battle, with one industry source indicating customers can already get a six-month rate hold as low as 2.99% from one major lender.
Farhaneh Haque, director of mortgage advice and real estate-secured lending at Toronto-Dominion Bank, said her financial institution is ready to be competitive.
“There is a lot of margin pressure, but the reality is there is a spring rally and the reality is customers are out there shopping,” Ms. Haque said.
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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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Don’t rush into housing market just for a low mortgage rate
Rob Carrick – The Globe and Mail
The sucker’s bet on housing is to pounce on that five-year, 2.99% mortgage deal offered so controversially by Bank of Montreal.
Oh, it’s a great rate. There’s next to no chance over the next five years that you’ll kick yourself for having chosen to lock in such a historically low cost of borrowing. But the low-rate argument for getting into the housing market for the first time just isn’t compelling enough to jump in right now.
Comment: Except that rates will not go lower, they will only rise. And prices are also going to rise. Even if they stay flat, then rates stay flat or rise. The future will only even cost the same as now, at best. Most likely, with prices and rates rising, you will pay more. Heck, a $500,000 house now at 2.84% (which you can get from BMO) with 20% you are paying $1,879 or so per month, mortgage only. Say prices keep rising, but at 4% rather than the 10-year average of 6.09%. Let’s say mortgage rates rise to a not-very-high 4.09%. That means that in 3 years that same house would cost $546,363 – and now cost $2,344 per month to finance with 20% down (never mind your down payment rose $9,273). By waiting, with very minor increases, you just wound up paying $465 per month more – for the exact same thing. Never mind 3 years of rent down the toilet…
For one thing, no one expects rates to move higher any time soon. The Canadian economy, not to mention the global economy, simply can’t handle higher rates right now. They’d smother growth.
Second, there is a very real chance that housing prices could decline further. On Monday, the analysis firm Fitch Ratings said Canada’s housing market is overvalued by about 20% across Canada. Fitch isn’t saying housing prices will necessarily drop by that much, but its view does suggest caution for those who think the housing market will rise like daffodils when spring comes.
Comment: What do you mean decline further? They have not declined at all so far… And who the heck is Fitch Ratings? And why do they carry equal weight against the entire real estate industry with a different opinion.
Note that we’re talking about a pullback in prices, not a crash. The debate over the housing market is too often framed as being crash or boom. There is a middle ground possibility of price stagnation or modest declines.
Comment: Try flattening or modest increases. That is the most likely outcome for Toronto over the next few years.
The smart play for a first-time buyer right now: Start checking out what’s available in your price range in the neighbourhood or community you like. Get a sense of pricing and then wait to see what happens through the spring.
Don’t worry about missing that 2.99% rate while you’re on the sidelines. A quick survey of rates shows that it’s possible to set up a five-year mortgage for as little as 2.79% from the sort of lenders that mortgage brokers deal with. Looking ahead, rates may move around a bit, but a big surge higher from current levels seems unlikely.
Comment: Contrary to the naysayers who predict mortgage rates of 15% by this fall.
BMO’s rate isn’t quite the lowest out there, but the bank has been taking all kinds of guff over its decision to lower its five-year rate from 3.09%. Finance Minister Jim Flaherty even warned the banks to engage in “prudent lending,” which is odd because aggressively low rates are a benefit to borrowers.
Mr. Flaherty has already urged Canadians to engage in prudent borrowing, and it seems people have listened. Growth in borrowing rates has tapered way down and the numbers from late last year suggest we’re back to levels last seen in 1993. This is a big part of the reason why the housing market has slowed in some parts of the country.
First-time home buyers, this trend is your friend. Don’t rush into the market just because a big bank is stirring things up with a great mortgage rate.
Comment: But don’t wait too long and price yourself out of the market. With the price increases and mortgage increases from above, if your income stays the same, all of a sudden the houses you liked are now out of your price range range. Truly, in this market, waiting is not your friend. Any clients of mine that hve waited have either paid more, or not bought at all as they were priced out of the market.
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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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Will nervous first-time buyers make this spring housing market bloom?
Tara Perkins – The Globe and Mail
With the spring selling season approaching, all eyes are on a crucial segment of the real estate market – the first-time home buyer.
It’s a group that includes people such as Tyler Padley and his wife Jamie McGovern, who have been renting in the west end of Toronto and are now looking to buy their first house and start a family. Like many prospective homeowners, they are struggling to find what they want at a price they can afford – even though they’ve saved up a sizable down payment. With the average home price hovering at around $510,000, they’re realizing they may have to settle for a place that’s smaller or further from the city’s core than they wanted – assuming they take the plunge at all.
Whether this couple, or others like them, choose to wade into the market will determine whether Canada’s housing market begins to recuperate or continues to weaken this spring. New entrants are a critical part of what makes the market tick: For every first-time buyer, there’s an owner who’s looking to sell and trade up, and for every upgrade, there’s a retiree looking to cash out. The “trickle-up” effect can make the difference between hot and cold in the market.
This year, the big question is: Will the first-timers come back? Many were driven away last summer by Ottawa’s new rules on home loans, which banned mortgage insurers from covering any mortgage with an amortization period of longer than 25 years. It was an effort to cool the market amid fears that house prices and consumer debt levels were growing at alarming rates, and it worked: Property sales have been sinking ever since.
Comment: And there was a hit on the low $1 million market as well. Suddenly if you had $150,000 you could not buy a $1 million house because you could not get mortgage insurance. Amazing that a couple making $200,000/year with $150,000 cash to put down would not be able to buy a house for $1,000,000. Couple that with the dent in the bottom of the market and you had a problem. Sorry, have a problem.
Data from seven large cities suggest that last month’s sales nationally are about 12% lower than a year ago, BMO Nesbitt Burns economist Douglas Porter said in a research note this week. “It still seems that the much greater risk is that sales weaken further, not that they surprise to the high side,” he wrote.
Comment: No, the mortgage changes immediately changed things. The market can only rise from here, as people save more money. Things will stabilize, but sales will stay in the 80–85,000/year range, rather than pushing 100,000. This is totally in line with the 10-year average, so it is not a big deal. Welcome to the new normal, a little less crazy than before.
Prices remain stubbornly high in most urban markets. Fitch, a ratings agency, said this week that prices nationally are about 20% too high. Such headlines add to the fear among first-time buyers that, even if they can afford to get into the market, now might not be the time.
Comment: They are nobody and one opinion carries no weight against 100,000 that are different. Ignore it and carry on.
It’s tough to gauge exactly how many first timers are staying away. “There’s no real hard statistics on the number of first-time buyers that are in the market,” says Shaun Hildebrand, senior market analyst in Ontario at Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. But one of the ways the housing agency attempts to track it in Toronto is to look at the share of sales that are below $400,000. That was 45% in 2012, down from 52% in 2011, “so that’s one of the indicators that we use to suggest that first-time buying has slowed down,” Mr. Hildebrand says.
Comment: That is just dumb. Most investment purchases are condos in the $250–350,000 range – and investors are certainly not first time buyers. There are only 300 detached houses in the 416 for less than $500k – I would suggest that $500k is the new starter home price. That is what my first time buyers are spending, generally in the $450-600k range. They are using a completely arbitrary value that has no basis in reality.
Another is the rental market: Canada’s most populous city saw more condos rented out over the Multiple Listing Service than sold over MLS during 2012, he notes. And the trickle-up effect is under way in that city.
Comment: This is where many of the under-$400k sales come from, investors buying condos to rent them out.
“The first segment of the market to begin to slow was the lower end of the market, where first-time buyers tend to be a bit more active,” he says. “It then started to slow in the $400,000-to-$600,000 price range, the next step up. That range has kind of flattened out in terms of sales, whereas it was one of the strongest areas of the market in recent years.”
Comment: That is the range I would be concerned with, the $400–600,000 range. That is the meat of the Toronto real estate market.
But “even though we’ve seen first-time buying reduced, it doesn’t mean that first-time buyers have been inactive,” Mr. Hildebrand says. Yes, many potential buyers are instead renting. But some are choosing to readjust their expectations and live in cheaper locations or smaller houses. For instance, more affordable areas in and around Toronto, such as Scarborough and Ajax, are attracting a larger share of buyers.
Comment: The 905 did see a bump in sales. For $500,000 you can get a 3,500sf 4-bedroom palace in Ajax. Or, a run down semi with 1 washroom and a damp basement – no parking – in Leslieville.
And with interest rates remaining low for a long period of time, it’s quite possible the housing market could regain strength once again. Experts such as CIBC World Markets economist Benjamin Tal are arguing that the spring season is likely to be stronger than expected.
“Market activity over the past two or three weeks seems to have been picking up quite nicely,” says Andrew Charles, CEO of Canada Guaranty Mortgage Insurance Co. “It hasn’t shown up in the February numbers, but I think you’re going to see it in the March numbers.”
Comment: I sure hope so! I have been predicting it and I hate to be wrong. Probably on the 18th we will have mid-March numbers… I am actually anxious about the data, which never happens. This is a turning point, up or down from here.
Large marketing campaigns and incentives on the part of mortgage lenders are likely to play a significant role in driving the market this spring. “PEOPLE BUY PAYMENTS, THEY DON’T BUY HOUSE PRICES,” says Toronto-based mortgage planner Calum Ross. “There is a huge psychological impact of five-year mortgage rates dropping below 3%.” Mr. Ross adds that he’s now seeing “massive” amounts of marketing by mortgage lenders.
Mr. Charles at Canada Guaranty says he is now seeing more applications for mortgage insurance from buyers with a down payment of less than 20%, suggesting the start of an uptick among first-time buyers.
David Resnick, who deals with financial institutions for Google Canada, said the number of searches for the word “mortgage” jumped by 50% after Bank of Montreal cut the advertised price of its five-year fixed-rate mortgage from 3.09% to 2.99%. “That’s huge,” he said. “And home insurance searches spiked more than 80% in the 24 hours following the announcement, suggesting that people are looking at actual purchases.”
Phil Soper, CEO of real estate agency Royal LePage, said the slowdown is a good thing, because the market was too hot, but he thinks that the changes that Mr. Flaherty made in July went too far. “It pushed things for young people, for first-time buyers, to a place it didn’t need to be,” he said.
Now, he says, the impact of the change has largely been felt. “Young people have had eight months to either save up a larger down payment or look farther afield for a home,” he says. “As long as the cost of mortgage financing remains very low, we’re going to attract financially stable young people, first-time buyers, into the housing market. The desire to own one’s home hasn’t changed one bit.”
Comment: We really have to wait until 12 months have passed since the rule changes. That will really tell the tale. In the end, things have slowed down – which is good. They are unlikely to drop furter. Sales will stabilize, prices will slow to increases in the 1–3% range. Mortgage rates will stay in the 3% range. Normal, basically, less crazy.
TORONTO: EXPENSIVE, WITH EVEN RENTAL PRICES MOVING UP
Prospective Toronto first-time buyers Mr. Padley and Ms. McGovern are coming to terms with the fact that the house they want probably isn’t the house they can afford.
Comment: No, buyers will never come to grips with what they want versus what they can afford.
“A semi-detached would be ideal, but for our price range it’s going to have to be a townhome and it’s going to have to be outside of the area that we want to live in,” says Mr. Padley, 31.
Mr. Padley works in software development and his wife in pension administration, and the couple has managed to save up a 20% down payment. They want to spend no more than $350,000 to $400,000, but their bank preapproved them for a mortgage of about $900,000. “It’s ridiculous.”
Comment: No, it is simply what you can afford if you spent every penny on housing. They must make around $150,000 combined with some $100,000 to put down. They are exactly what the banks want. If they spent $900,000 they would be on the hook for a payment of around $3,800 a month – 30% of their gross monthly income if I am right about their pay. Completely and totally within all prudent guidelines for mortgage lending. But I understand wanting to keep payments at $1,500 as they would be with a $400,000 purchase. Trust me, I spent a lot less than the bank would have given me. And I am quite happy not eating Kraft Dinner every night!
The couple currently expect that they will remain renters for much or all of the year. They looked into renting a larger place, one big enough to start a family in, but balked at the costs of those as well.
Comment: Well there isn’t much you can do if you are just cheap. Housing costs are high, simple as that. Rent or buy, both are expensive. I am showing little shoebox condos in the 550sf range for $1,650 a month. If you get into a 2-bedroom, you really are better off buying.
Such are the challenges of many young prospective first-time buyers in the country’s most populated city. Home prices in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) rose by 6% in just the first six months of 2012, reducing affordability, said Shaun Hildebrand, senior market analyst in Ontario at Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. They then nudged down about 2% during the fall, and have since essentially stabilized.
Comment: Prices always rise in the spring, then drop in the summer, rise again in fall and drop again in winter. Happens. Every. Year.
Given the high prices, many people are choosing to rent. Rental vacancies are at one of the lowest levels of the past decade and rent levels are rising.
Comment: Vacancy rates are now under 1%. Crazy… bidding wars for shoebox condo rentals…
“What’s been common is that an owner will list their property for both sale and rent at the same time, and then whatever is most appealing, they’ll go with that,” Mr. Hildebrand says.
Sales over the Multiple Listing Service in February fell 15% in the GTA. Sales of condos in the downtown region covered by the 416 area code dropped 20%, with prices falling 4.7% from a year ago to $352,614 on average. Sales of detached homes in that same downtown area fell 17%, while the average price held roughly flat, rising 0.1% to $823,329.
Comment: Sure, but the overall average price rose 2%, which you fail to mention.
But the Toronto Real Estate Board is still forecasting that the average price for all types of homes in the GTA will rise from its current $510,580 to $515,000 during the year. That’s a phenomenon that’s helped in part, the home-building industry says, by the restriction of the supply of detached homes created by regulations and land constraints including the greenbelt.
Comment: That is less than 1%, I think that is low. I think we will see something closer to 2%, to $520,000. Not that that is a very big difference, I know.
And a number of observers speculate that the market is already beginning to bounce back from the softening.
“We’ve seen sales levels slow down since the summer, but since January, February, we’ve actually seen the monthly trend begin to stabilize,” Mr. Hildebrand says. “When you look at things on a monthly basis, you start to see a bit of momentum actually being added back into the market.”
Condo developers are luring buyers into buildings that are about to undergo construction with incentives such as lower down payment requirements, free initial maintenance fees, or even guaranteeing that they’ll find a tenant to rent the unit – or else pay the rental costs – for the first two years.
Despite that, Oliver Baumeister von Bretten, a broker with Re/Max who specializes in Toronto condos, has yet to see a significant resurgence among first-time buyers in the lower end of the market. “They’re coming back, but very cautiously,” he says. “I had a guy ready to buy in Queen West and then he said, ‘with the condo bubble coming I think I’ve got to rent for another year,’ ” adding that this segment of the market appears to be more highly influenced by comments from policy makers and economists.
Comment: Condo bubble? Seriously… And once the year passes, he will say the same thing. Prices will be no lower a year from now. And he will keep doing that, putting off buying because of his perceived “bubble”. Five years from now, the $300,000 condo he had his eye on will now be $330,000 and mortgage rates will have risen to 4.09%. He will not be able to buy that condo anymore, as it will cost too much. That is with mortgage rates rising only 0.33% per year and prices rising only 2% per year. Hardly a bubble… but certainly the enemy of waiting.
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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.
—————————————————————————————————–
Incoming search terms
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