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Tag Archives: real estate professionals

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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  • Realtors blame Flaherty as slump deepens

    Tara Perkins – Globe and Mail

    The mar­ket for home sales is chill­ing fur­ther after months of decline – and it’s putting Finance Min­is­ter Jim Fla­herty on the hot seat.

    New data show sales dete­ri­o­rat­ing in Novem­ber, and the asso­ci­a­tion that rep­re­sents Cana­dian real­tors says sales will fall, not rise, this year and next.

    Mr. Fla­herty, who sought to cool the mar­ket this sum­mer by tight­en­ing mort­gage insur­ance rules, says his actions are only one part of the story and that Cana­di­ans are vol­un­tar­ily curb­ing their appetites for mort­gage debt.

    The stricter rules that took effect in July included cut­ting the max­i­mum length of an insured mort­gage to 25 years from 30, a move that indus­try play­ers say knocked a num­ber of poten­tial first-time buy­ers out of the mar­ket or pushed them into lower-priced homes. In addi­tion to the rule changes, Mr. Fla­herty and Bank of Canada Gov­er­nor Mark Car­ney have been try­ing to talk down the mar­ket by warn­ing Cana­di­ans about the per­ils of tak­ing out large loans while inter­est rates are low. Their fear has been that too many bor­row­ers were tak­ing on exces­sive mort­gage debt that would be unaf­ford­able if rates were to rise. Parts of the mar­ket were get­ting frothy so, to mit­i­gate the risks of a hous­ing down­turn they’ve sought to slowly take some steam out of the mar­ket and steer it toward a soft landing.

    While econ­o­mists say that so far it appears to be work­ing, a num­ber of real estate pro­fes­sion­als and orga­ni­za­tions argue that the changes went too far and pose a threat to the economy.

    Com­ment: Oh now that is just silly. There is no threat to the econ­omy. It just weeds out those on the cusp, serv­ing only to make our real estate mar­ket stronger.

    On Mon­day the Cana­dian Real Estate Asso­ci­a­tion reported that sales over the Mul­ti­ple List­ing Ser­vice fell 1.7% from Octo­ber to Novem­ber, with activ­ity com­ing in 11.9% lower than last November.

    As a result it has cut its fore­casts for this year and next, which it had just revised down­ward in Sep­tem­ber, say­ing “lower than pro­jected third-quarter sales have down­graded the prospects for activ­ity this year in almost every province.” And the asso­ci­a­tion made it clear that, as far as it can see, there is only one rea­son for the cooling.

    Com­ment: There is a direct cor­re­la­tion. Sales vol­ume fell in each of the months fol­low­ing the new mort­gage rules. In the first half of the year, each month saw a lit­tle increase over the same month on 2011. After the new rules, every­thing changed. Like some­one flipped a switch. So yeah, there is one big main rea­son for the sales drop.

    Inter­est rates have remained low and the eco­nomic back­drop has remained sup­port­ive for hous­ing activ­ity, so that should leave lit­tle doubt that recent changes to mort­gage reg­u­la­tions are respon­si­ble for hav­ing cooled activ­ity,” CREA chief econ­o­mist Gre­gory Klump stated in a press release.

    Com­ment: When only one thing changes…

    But Mr. Fla­herty, when asked about that asser­tion dur­ing a press con­fer­ence in Meech Lake, Que., where he was meet­ing with provin­cial finance min­is­ters, said “the cause and effect is not that simple.”

    Com­ment: Yes, it is.

    I cer­tainly believe that the steps we took to tighten the mort­gage insur­ance rules had some effect,” he said. “The Office of the Super­in­ten­dent of Finan­cial Insti­tu­tions tight­ened guide­lines as well. And I think there’s an increas­ing aware­ness among the Cana­dian pub­lic that exces­sive debt is unwise in a time of his­tor­i­cally low inter­est rates.”

    Com­ment: Yet debt lev­els are not falling.

    OSFI, the nation’s bank­ing reg­u­la­tor, released mort­gage guide­lines this sum­mer that push lenders to be more cau­tious in areas such as credit checks and appraisals. It also capped the amount that an indi­vid­ual can bor­row on a home equity line of credit at 65% of the home’s value. The big banks were required to fol­low those guide­lines as of the start of November.

    CREA now expects resales of exist­ing homes to come in at 456,300 units this year, down 0.5% from last year and nearly 1% below the 10-year aver­age. In Sep­tem­ber, it said it expected resales to rise by 1.9% this year to 466,900 units, a fig­ure that it had already revised down.

    CREA now expects 447,400 sales next year, down 2% from this year. In Sep­tem­ber it had esti­mated 457,800 units – again, a fig­ure that it had already cut.

    The con­tin­u­a­tion of mod­er­ate eco­nomic, job, and income growth will tem­per the impact of recent mort­gage rule changes, which are not expected to dampen activ­ity much more than has already been felt until inter­est rates are expected to begin ris­ing in late 2013,” the asso­ci­a­tion stated in its new forecast.

    Com­ment: But ris­ing inter­est rates sig­nal a strong econ­omy, mean­ing there are jobs and money.

    The slow­down is begin­ning to show up in prices, which have lost their momen­tum. The national aver­age price of houses that sold in Novem­ber was 0.8% lower than a year ago. The MLS Home Price Index, which seeks to account for changes in the type of houses sold, rose by 3.5%, its small­est increase since May, 2011.

    Sales have con­tracted in eight of the past 11 months, Toronto-Dominion Bank senior econ­o­mist Sonya Gulati said in a note.

    The slow­down is most notice­able in Toronto, Mon­treal and Van­cou­ver, she added, say­ing those cities “are more vul­ner­a­ble to expe­ri­ence a greater-than-average hous­ing adjustment.”

    Com­ment: Van­cou­ver fell more than 30%, a rather seri­ous drop. Toronto saw sales fall only 4%.

    Nation­wide, TD expects mar­ket con­di­tions to sta­bi­lize early next year “as tighter mort­gage rules loosen their grip on mar­ket trends and low inter­est rates lure home­own­ers back into the market.”

    Com­ment: And those on the edge save up more to be able to get past those new mort­gage rules. This is only a tem­po­rary slump, things will pick up again in the spring.

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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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  • Toronto condo market to moderate in 2012

    Shane Buckingham – Canadian Real Estate Magazine

    Excess supply in the Toronto condominium market will likely push prices down next year, making preconstruction condo speculation more of a gamble, according to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation’s leading economist in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA).

    “More units are going to be listed for sale and that’s going to inevitably slow down price appreciation, particularly in the condominium market,” Shaun Hildebrand, a senior market analyst at CMHC, told a crowd of real estate professionals at the CMHC’s 2011 Housing Outlook Conference in Toronto on Thursday. “So those looking to bank on a 20% or 30% return in a few years probably should be doing their due diligence and not be buying.”

    The number of projected GTA condo sales in 2011, which  is at 25,000, also “seems worrisome,” Hildebrand said.

    Add to that the glut of new units coming onto the market in 2011 and 2012 (about 18,000 each year) and it’s only a matter of time before the market begins to adjust, he told the gathering, at the Metro Convention Centre.

    “It’s not really a question of whether or not the level of development is going to slow; it’s how it’s going to happen,” he said. “If it happens into next year, if we start to see some moderation, the transition will be pretty smooth. If not, if buyers and investors continue along their current ways, then the transition a few years from now is obviously going to be a lot more abrupt.”

    While Hildebrand warned of a near-term correction, he stressed that any adjustment in condo values in the GTA would be moderate, adding that he does not foresee a condo market crash similar to the one Toronto experienced in the early 1990s.

    There were many more investors in the market two decades ago, he said. While CMHC does not have figures pinpointing the number of investor-owned condos, Hildebrand pegs that figure at roughly 25% of the GTA’s condominiums.

    Given the prices of condos in many parts of the GTA, with the October average at $341,571 — or 9% above the year-ago period — more Torontonians will look to rent, he said. And that’s good news for buy-and-hold investors.

    Hildebrand said in downtown Toronto investors could still find condos for $380 a square foot, costing $1,400 to maintain. Those units rent for about $1,500, generating $100 a month in cash flow.

    Comment: As long as there is positive – or close to positive – cash flow in renting out condos, then there will be investors. Make a bit of money every month while someone pays down your mortgage and you reap price appreciation.

    Rental vacancy rates are around 1.6% right now in Toronto, so there is still a ton of demand for rental condos.

    And when first time buyers cannot afford houses, they have only one place to turn – buying a condo.

    This is what is keeping – and will keep – the condo market afloat.

    P.S. The economic conditions are no worse than they have been for the past 2 years. We are in a middle ground, not really rising but not declining. But we should have no national debt by 2014-2015 and our Bank of Canada head has been trusted to run a major world bank arm. We are doing just fine around the GTA – look at housing sales, watch all the big screen TVs heading out of Best Buy.

    ———————————————————————————————————————
    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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