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Tag Archives: mortgage insurer

New Mortgage Rules

* All borrowers will be required to meet the standards for a five-year fixed rate mortgage even if they choose a mortgage with a lower interest rate and shorter terms.

* Reduced maximum amount that can be withdrawn in refinancing a government-backed insured mortgage to 90% from 95% of the value of the home.

* Require a minimum down payment of 20% for government-backed mortgage insurance on non-owner occupied properties purchased for speculation. Borrowers purchasing owner-occupied residential properties will still be able to access government-backed mortgage insurance with a 5% down payment.

Canada’s housing market remains healthy and stable. According to the International Monetary Fund, our housing market is fully supported by sound economic factors, such as low interest rates, rising incomes and a growing population. Moreover, mortgage arrears – overdue mortgage payments – have also remained low.

Today’s announcement is part of the Government’s policy of proactively adjusting to developments in the housing market that could take root and cause instability. These steps are timely, targeted and measured, and will reinforce the importance of Canadians borrowing responsibly and using home ownership as a savings mechanism.

Mortgage Insurance

Mortgage insurance (which is sometimes called mortgage default insurance) is a credit risk management tool that protects lenders from losses on mortgage loans. If a borrower defaults on a mortgage, and the proceeds from the foreclosure of the property are insufficient to cover the resulting loss, the lender submits a claim to the mortgage insurer to recover its losses.

The law requires federally regulated lenders to obtain mortgage insurance on loans in which the homebuyer has made a down payment of less than 20% of the purchase price (also called high loan-to-value ratio loans). The homebuyer pays the premium for this insurance, which protects the lender if the homebuyer defaults.

The Government ultimately backs most insured mortgages in Canada. It is responsible for the obligations of Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) as it is an agent Crown corporation. In order for private mortgage insurers to compete with CMHC, the Government backs private mortgage insurers’ obligations to lenders, subject to a deductible equal to 10% of the original principal amount of the loan.

In October 2008, the Government adjusted its minimum standards for government-backed, high-ratio mortgages, including:

* Fixing the maximum amortization period for new government-backed mortgages to 35 years.
* Requiring a minimum down payment of five% for new government-backed mortgages.
* Establishing a consistent minimum credit score requirement.
* Requiring the lender to make a reasonable effort to verify that the borrower can afford the loan payment.
* Introducing new loan documentation standards to ensure that there is evidence of reasonableness of property value and of the borrower’s sources and level of income.

Measures Announced Today

Today, the Government announced three changes to the standards governing government-backed mortgages.

Qualifying at a Five-Year Rate

Current interest rates are at record low levels, which has improved the affordability of housing for Canadians. It is important that Canadians borrow prudently and are able to manage their debt loads when interest rates rise.

Lender and mortgage insurers look at two key ratios when assessing the ability of a borrower to make payments on a mortgage loan:

* Gross Debt Service (GDS) ratio—the ratio of the carrying costs of the home, including the mortgage payment, taxes and heating costs, to the borrower’s income.
* Total Debt Service (TDS) ratio—the ratio of the carrying costs of the home and all other debt payments to the borrower’s total income.

Currently, the interest rate used to determine the mortgage payment for these calculations is either the rate fixed for the term of the mortgage or, in the case of a variable-rate mortgage and mortgages with terms of less than three years, the greater of the contract rate and the prevailing three-year fixed rate.

The adjustments to the mortgage framework will require mortgage insurers to ensure that borrowers qualify for their mortgage amount using the greater of the contract rate or the interest rate for a five-year fixed rate mortgage when calculating the GDS and TDS ratios.

This measure is intended to protect Canadians by providing them with additional flexibility to support mortgage payments at higher interest rates in the future.

Limit the Maximum Refinancing Amount to 90% of the Loan-to-Value Ratio

Borrowers seeking financial flexibility can currently refinance their mortgage and increase the amount they are borrowing on the security of their home up to a limit of 95% of the value of the property. This type of refinancing lowers the borrower’s equity in their home. The adjustments today will lower the maximum amount of the mortgage loan in a refinancing of a government-backed high ratio mortgage loan to 90% of the value of the property, consistent with the principle that home ownership is a tool for savings.

Discouraging Speculation by Requiring a Minimum Down Payment of 20% for non-owner-occupied properties

This measure will require a minimum down payment of 20% for government-backed mortgage insurance on non-owner-occupied properties purchased for speculation. Currently, borrowers may purchase a residential property with a 5% down payment. Today’s change will require a 20% down payment for small (i.e., 1- to 4-unit) non-owner-occupied residential rental properties. Borrowers purchasing owner-occupied residential properties which also include some rental units (e.g., borrowers purchasing a duplex to live in one unit and rent out the other) will still be able to access government-backed mortgage insurance with a 5% down payment.

Moving to the New Framework

These adjustments to the mortgage insurance guarantee framework are intended to come into force on April 19, 2010. Exceptions would be allowed after April 19 where they are needed to satisfy a binding purchase and sale, financing, or refinancing agreement entered into before April 19, 2010.

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

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Is the hot housing market a boom, bust or bubble?

Stephen Dupuis – Yourhome.ca

I can’t believe how often I have heard the B-word of late. No, I’m not talking about “B” as in real estate “boom,” I’m talking about “B” as in real estate “bubble.”

Considering that we are barely six months out of what was looking like a prolonged real estate “bust,” it’s hard to fathom how the “experts” can already be warning that the real estate market is too hot for its own good.

I’ll be the first to admit surprise at just how buoyant the real estate market has been. Then again, should there be any surprise that after six months of paralysis during the height of the global economic crisis, homebuyers would react to a reprieve by rushing back into the real estate market.

Frankly, I’m delighted the real estate market is doing so well because a healthy real estate market drives renovation as well as new home sales as all boats rise with the tide. That said, I have a lot of empathy for the homebuyers who are getting caught up in bidding wars. That’s a situation that will be resolved when listings increase, as they always do.

To the homebuyers that find bidding wars distasteful, I would note that at least with new homes and condos, the price is the price and right now, new home prices are extremely competitive.

Although it took a little longer than the real estate market to recover, the lowrise new housing market picked up in late spring while the highrise market came back to life this fall. On an overall basis, it looks like total new home sales in 2009 will end up just slightly ahead of 2008, with last year ending on a down note and this year ending on an up note.

Is the new housing market booming? Far from it! So where are the “bubble” theorists coming from? For the most part it seems they are concerned with the extent of mortgage insurance in the market as well as the potential impact of higher interest rates down the road.

The concern with the prevalence of mortgage insurance ignores the fact that it has always been a major and important part of our housing finance system. Frankly, so long as banks are prevented from lending to anyone with less than 20% down, mortgage insurance will continue to be a growth industry.

The irony is that we have mortgage insurance to thank for the fact that our banks are lending to homebuyers, enabling the recovery we have been experiencing in our real estate markets.

That said, homebuyers still have to qualify for mortgage insurance and if anything, that’s become more difficult since federal finance Minister Jim Flaherty clamped down on mortgage insurers.

In July 2008, Flaherty imposed a number of restrictions on mortgage insurers including a prohibition on insuring mortgages with amortizations longer than 35 years, a minimum 5% down payment, minimum credit score requirements, maximum debt ratios and new loan documentation standards, all good things as far as I’m concerned.

As for low mortgage rates, it seems the experts are concerned that homebuyers might have difficulty carrying their mortgages should interest rates be higher at renewal time. This ignores the reality that most homebuyers these days are smartly locking in their mortgages for five years during which they will increase the equity in their homes and/or enjoy income growth.

To be on the safe side, homebuyers that pay down as much as they can during those all-important first five years will be in a far better position to ignore the experts as well as the columnists.

Stephen Dupuis is president and CEO of the Building Industry and Land Development Association. The views expressed are those of the president.

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

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Genworth launches massive TSX offering

Andrew Willis – Globe and Mail

The battered U.S. mortgage insurance industry is getting back on its feet in part by tapping Canadian investors for $850-million, as Genworth MI Canada Inc. prepares for one of the largest IPOs this decade.

Genworth, the domestic arm of a U.S. life and mortgage insurer, set the price yesterday on a massive initial public offering that will see the company sell 44.7 million shares at $19 each, with underwriters holding an option to sell an additional $127-million of stock. If $977-million of stock is sold, this will be the largest IPO seen this year on the Toronto Stock Exchange, and the fourth-largest IPO on the TSX since 2001.

The New York Stock Exchange-listed parent, Genworth Financial Inc., (GNW-N5.35-0.28-4.97%) is rebuilding its own balance sheet by selling a minority stake in its profitable Canadian subsidiary. Dutch insurer ING Group did much the same by selling a stake in its Canadian unit several years ago, then selling the entire company into public markets earlier this year for $2.16-billion.

The proceeds of this share sale will be split, with $753-million going to the U.S. parent, and $97-million earmarked for paying down all outstanding debt and building the business of the Canadian unit.

As U.S. mortgage defaults mounted over the past year, Genworth Financial shares tanked, as did those of its peers. The stock plunged from a high of $37 in 2007, at the height of the U.S. real estate boom, to 84 cents in March, when the company was denied access to the Troubled Asset Relief Program or TARP bailout. Chief executive officer Michael Fraizer said at the time he would pull other “strategic levers,” including asset sales.

Analysts pushed Mr. Fraizer to split the U.S. company into separate life and mortgage insurance units, and sell one line of business, to rebuild the balance sheet. Instead, he is raising money by selling a minority stake in the lucrative Canadian unit.

Where the U.S. company is struggling with an imploding real estate market and weak portfolio, Genworth MI Canada is consistently profitable, earning $322-million on revenue of $722-million in 2008, for a sky-high 17-per-cent return on equity. The company was spun out of General Electric in 1995.

In Canada, Genworth holds a 30% share in what amounts to a two-player residential mortgage insurance sector. Its only competitor of note is the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., a Crown corporation. Genworth Canada insures mortgages sold by 180 lenders, including the big banks. The company backs homeowners in every province, with 49% of its mortgages on homes in Ontario.

CIBC World Markets, Goldman Sachs and Scotia Capital led the Genworth IPO.

Assuming the underwriters do exercise their $127-million option, which they usually do, this IPO will result in the U.S. parent owning 56 per cent of the company, and public shareholders holding a minority stake. Shares are expected to start trading on the TSX after the IPO closes on July 7.

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

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