Post by Sapphire Capital on Jul 17, 2008 6:12:54 GMT 4
Mortgage crisis may be looming for Canada
Homebuyers advised to save down payments, accept smaller starter homes
Ray Turchansky
Freelance
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
Lost amid concern over United States government agencies moving in to support mortgage lenders Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae plus IndyMac Bankcorp, was a warning that Canada could soon face its own mortgage crisis.
Peter Hall, vice-president and chief economist with Export Development Canada, said in a report that in addition to U.S. housing woes, housing starts were down 56 per cent year-over-year during May in the United Kingdom, 18 per cent during the first quarter of the year in Spain and 17 per cent year-over-year in May in France.
Hall noted that housing starts in Canada are "soaring on the strength of the domestic economy and a huge dollop of very sell-timed fiscal stimulus," and that a continuing excess of housing starts over requirements means "Canada's turn may come soon" for a housing crisis.
The report came in the wake of the Canadian government's attempt to avoid a housing crisis by no longer insuring mortgages with less than 35-year amortization periods and less than five-per-cent down payments as of Oct. 15.
Homebuyers with less than 20-per-cent down payment are required to have their mortgage insured through the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, a crown corporation, or a handful of private firms that have entered the mortgage insurance market.
In 2006, the government extended the maximum amortization period from 25 to 40 years, adding hundreds of thousands of dollars in interest costs. Last year 37 per cent of mortgages taken out were for longer than 25 years.
Soon after the Canadian changes were announced, the United States Federal Reserve Board tightened up its mortgage lending policies. As of Oct. 1, the Fed will require lenders to verify a borrower's income in determining repayment ability, to take a lender's ability to repay a loan from income into consideration, to establish escrow accounts for property taxes and homeowners insurance in certain cases, and basically to advertise rates and payments with clear notice if a rate is not fixed.
One reason U.S. lenders were willing to give mortgages to people with an unproven ability to make payments was that the lenders were able to package the loans with others and sell them to other institutions. Had the lenders been forced to hold the debt themselves, which is somewhat the case in Canada, lending would have been less reckless.
Rather than abating, the U.S. housing problem grows worse by the day. Resets from low-interest "teaser" rates to market rates that are higher are just now peaking, with foreclosures expected to flood the market with homes for sale early in 2009.
People unable to afford mortgage rates reset at five or six per cent never should have been allowed to take on house payments in the first place.
It was quite another thing when the Alberta government established the Heritage Fund Mortgage Interest Protection Program in 1982, to compensate homeowners for payments greater than 12.5 per cent.
Back then first mortgages were running at 16 to 18 per cent, causing many families to take on second mortgages at 22 per cent.
Things have deteriorated so badly in the U.S. that the Treasury department will extend credit if needed to prop up Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, two government-sponsored enterprises that hold nearly half of all American mortgages.
The GSEs each include a debt component and an equity component, with the latter falling in value as investors sold off shares due to concern over rising mortgage defaults.
Famed U.S. commodities investor Jim Rogers called the Treasury plan an "unmitigated disaster," saying the mortgage lenders are "basically insolvent," and taxpayers will be left footing the bill.
At the same time, U.S. government agencies stepped in to take over IndyMac Bankcorp, after helping to bail out Bear Sterns. That leaves about 90 financial institutions, out of about 7,500 in the U.S., on a watch list to go under.
The government intervention to save mortgage lenders was expected to boost stock markets, but the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell, and that deepened investor fears.
Meanwhile, portfolio manager Adrian Mastracci of Vancouver-based CKM Wealth Management offers some sound tips for homebuyers:
- Consider a condominium or townhouse as a starter home, before buying a detached house.
- Remember that in addition to the purchase price of a home, you may have legal and realtor costs, expenses for moving, renovations, furniture, repairs, maintenance, property taxes, insurance and utilities.
- Save 20 per cent for a down payment to reduce extra fees, consider taking money from your registered retirement savings plan through the Home Buyers Plan, and forego making non-registered investments because you would need an 8.9 per cent return to do better than paying down a 5.75-per-cent mortgage if you're in the 35-per-cent tax bracket.
Ray Turchansky, a freelance writer and income tax preparer, may be contacted at turchan@telusplanet.net.
Homebuyers advised to save down payments, accept smaller starter homes
Ray Turchansky
Freelance
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
Lost amid concern over United States government agencies moving in to support mortgage lenders Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae plus IndyMac Bankcorp, was a warning that Canada could soon face its own mortgage crisis.
Peter Hall, vice-president and chief economist with Export Development Canada, said in a report that in addition to U.S. housing woes, housing starts were down 56 per cent year-over-year during May in the United Kingdom, 18 per cent during the first quarter of the year in Spain and 17 per cent year-over-year in May in France.
Hall noted that housing starts in Canada are "soaring on the strength of the domestic economy and a huge dollop of very sell-timed fiscal stimulus," and that a continuing excess of housing starts over requirements means "Canada's turn may come soon" for a housing crisis.
The report came in the wake of the Canadian government's attempt to avoid a housing crisis by no longer insuring mortgages with less than 35-year amortization periods and less than five-per-cent down payments as of Oct. 15.
Homebuyers with less than 20-per-cent down payment are required to have their mortgage insured through the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, a crown corporation, or a handful of private firms that have entered the mortgage insurance market.
In 2006, the government extended the maximum amortization period from 25 to 40 years, adding hundreds of thousands of dollars in interest costs. Last year 37 per cent of mortgages taken out were for longer than 25 years.
Soon after the Canadian changes were announced, the United States Federal Reserve Board tightened up its mortgage lending policies. As of Oct. 1, the Fed will require lenders to verify a borrower's income in determining repayment ability, to take a lender's ability to repay a loan from income into consideration, to establish escrow accounts for property taxes and homeowners insurance in certain cases, and basically to advertise rates and payments with clear notice if a rate is not fixed.
One reason U.S. lenders were willing to give mortgages to people with an unproven ability to make payments was that the lenders were able to package the loans with others and sell them to other institutions. Had the lenders been forced to hold the debt themselves, which is somewhat the case in Canada, lending would have been less reckless.
Rather than abating, the U.S. housing problem grows worse by the day. Resets from low-interest "teaser" rates to market rates that are higher are just now peaking, with foreclosures expected to flood the market with homes for sale early in 2009.
People unable to afford mortgage rates reset at five or six per cent never should have been allowed to take on house payments in the first place.
It was quite another thing when the Alberta government established the Heritage Fund Mortgage Interest Protection Program in 1982, to compensate homeowners for payments greater than 12.5 per cent.
Back then first mortgages were running at 16 to 18 per cent, causing many families to take on second mortgages at 22 per cent.
Things have deteriorated so badly in the U.S. that the Treasury department will extend credit if needed to prop up Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, two government-sponsored enterprises that hold nearly half of all American mortgages.
The GSEs each include a debt component and an equity component, with the latter falling in value as investors sold off shares due to concern over rising mortgage defaults.
Famed U.S. commodities investor Jim Rogers called the Treasury plan an "unmitigated disaster," saying the mortgage lenders are "basically insolvent," and taxpayers will be left footing the bill.
At the same time, U.S. government agencies stepped in to take over IndyMac Bankcorp, after helping to bail out Bear Sterns. That leaves about 90 financial institutions, out of about 7,500 in the U.S., on a watch list to go under.
The government intervention to save mortgage lenders was expected to boost stock markets, but the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell, and that deepened investor fears.
Meanwhile, portfolio manager Adrian Mastracci of Vancouver-based CKM Wealth Management offers some sound tips for homebuyers:
- Consider a condominium or townhouse as a starter home, before buying a detached house.
- Remember that in addition to the purchase price of a home, you may have legal and realtor costs, expenses for moving, renovations, furniture, repairs, maintenance, property taxes, insurance and utilities.
- Save 20 per cent for a down payment to reduce extra fees, consider taking money from your registered retirement savings plan through the Home Buyers Plan, and forego making non-registered investments because you would need an 8.9 per cent return to do better than paying down a 5.75-per-cent mortgage if you're in the 35-per-cent tax bracket.
Ray Turchansky, a freelance writer and income tax preparer, may be contacted at turchan@telusplanet.net.