Canada's Bank Boss Sees Stress
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Thanks for clicking. Canada's regulator
is warning about more stress coming to
Canadians renewing their mortgage over
the next few years. This as mortgage
rears are already starting to pop up to
near 15-year highs. And yeah, with home
prices continuing to decline and Peter
Rudelage saying that it could be a tough
couple of years and that the regulator
is worried about this cohort. The
warning is definitely not great for
Canada's real estate outlook.
>> You are in so much trouble.
>> So, what I want to do today is look at
the warning coming from Canada's banking
regulator. take a look at some of the
data and why declining home values are a
self-reinforcing loop and then discuss
what to look for next. It is the
beginning of a new month and with that
we are eagerly awaiting the release of
April's real estate data coming out from
the local boards any day now and we'll
obviously have an update out on that
data on this channel. Make sure you
click like and subscribe if you want to
get those updates. But for now, let's
get into the banking regulator.
Onto the warning coming from OIE. As
mentioned, Canada's banking regulator is
warning about potential stresses coming
to the between 30,000 and 150,000
borrowers who are renewing their
mortgages over the next few years. The
regulator says that due to higher
interest rates and declining home
values, borrowers could have a problem
refinancing their mortgage as this
renewal wave drags on. Now, I just want
to be very clear about what exactly
we're talking about here. as I think it
was about 6 months ago a rumor went
around that banks were refusing to renew
borrowers mortgages and that had
absolutely zero basis in reality. I'm
not exactly sure where that rumor came
from but just patently untrue.
>> Love to have you on the show. Any chance
you could fly out tonight?
>> No. What Oie is talking about is
declining home values because home
values are much much less than they were
before. Borrowers could have a problem a
switching lenders at renewal and b
refinancing their mortgage. taking money
out of their home. So, just as a brief
example, let's say you bought Canada's
benchmark price home in January of 2022
for $827,000
and you put 20% down. You had a mortgage
of 661K.
You did a 30-year amortization at 2.81%.
At the end of that 5 years, you owe
$585,000.
But the problem is over the past four
years, that benchmark price home has
dropped to 661,000.
meaning your loan to value, your loan
amount compared to how much your house
is worth is now sitting at about 88%.
And that means that you could have a
problem switching lenders at renewal. As
in order for any lender to take on a new
mortgage, that mortgage has to either a
have mortgage default insurance, which
that mortgage wouldn't, as there was the
20% down payment, or b have 20% in
equity. And as we just saw, those
borrowers would not. Meaning upon
renewal, those borrowers are essentially
trapped. I own you now. And if you
refuse,
>> yeah, those borrowers will be offered a
renewal rate coming from the bank, but
those banks very well know that those
borrowers can't leave. So, they don't
really need to be overly competitive.
Remember that the next time one of our
news networks features a bank giving us
advice, presenting it as though the
bank's interest and the interest of
homeowners are aligned.
>> He's very smart man.
>> But these declining home values also
mean that homeowners won't be able to
refinance their homes either. they won't
be able to take out any equity to pay
off debts, etc. As again, you can only
refinance up to 80% of your home's
value. So, not only are a lot of
homeowners stuck at renewal time and
that they won't be able to switch their
mortgage, they also won't be able to
refinance to pay off debt, something
that Canadians have very much relied on
over the past few years. And as to
exactly who this is going to affect,
let's take a look at the data. I
gathered up all of the benchmark price
data from the CRA as well as the 5-year
fixed interest rates from Stats Canada.
Found out how much would be owed as of
today's date, subtracted it from 80% of
the current benchmark price, and we can
see that anyone who bought after October
of 2021 is going to have a problem if
they want to refinance. And that's just
for all of those borrowers that took
fixed rates with 20% down. For those who
put less than 20% down, it's going to be
even worse. and even worse, further for
those who took variable rates and didn't
pay down much equity, of which there
were plenty at the beginning of 2022 and
beyond. Fun fact, while on this data,
here is your remaining equity if you
listen to the CBC in March of last year.
Here's your remaining equity if you
listen to TD in February of last year.
Here it is. If you listen to CBC in the
summer of last year, well, you get the
idea.
>> I had little formal education, no real
skills,
>> and it's not just Canadawide either. In
Toronto, it's even worse with anything
purchased after August of 2021. Also
unable to refinance, also having a hard
time switching lenders at renewal. Now,
obviously, these are all averages. It's
going to differ and be dependent upon
how much down payment was put down, the
amortization, etc. But you get the idea.
Now, as to how many people this is going
to actually affect, well, between 21 and
22, there was an awful lot of newly
advanced mortgage funding as people
tried to get into the market before they
were priced out forever. So, yeah, the
data supports that. Of definitely isn't
wrong. There's an awful lot of people
that are a going to have a problem
switching their mortgage and b have an
even bigger problem refinancing their
mortgage or taking money out of their
home. and that inability to pay off debt
is showing up in the mortgage arars
data. Those mortgages, they're behind
three months or more on their payments.
Now, Canada's aren't as bad as Ontarios,
now back to 201516 levels, but
Ontario's. Ontario's a rears rate is now
back to where it was in 2020. And
obviously, it makes sense why. And it's
not just the weak economy. Canada had a
weak economy back in 2016 as well. It's
because house prices are falling. We now
have about 5 years worth of people that
cannot refinance their home, cannot pull
out equity to pay off their
everinccreasing debt loads now sitting
around $3.2 trillion. And not being able
to refinance, not being able to rely on
that option is fairly new for Canada.
Let's go back and get Toronto's data
back to 2014. We'll plug that into our
previous calculator, get the mortgage
balance and house price after 3 years,
add the accessible equity, and scroll.
And we can see that between 2014 and
2021, if you bought a home in Toronto,
three years later, you could pull out
equity and pay off your debt. It was a
cycle that worked great. Buy a house,
put 20% down, you can spend over the
next 3 years. The house prices always go
up, refinance after 3 or 4 years, pay
off all of that debt, rinse and repeat.
It was a cycle that worked great so long
as we had continual new entrance
willing/able
to bid up the prices of houses. It's
called a Ponzi scheme.
>> But when the music stops, when house
prices stop growing at infinitum, like
they were always going to do that, well,
that's when you can no longer hide all
of that consumer debt in the home. And
then you get the resulting negative
implications thereafter. A decrease in
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