Housing Crash Worsens
FULLSTÄNDIGT TRANSKRIPT
Thanks for clicking. Canada's crashing
real estate market just got another
great big headwind. Rising fixed
mortgage rates stemming from the war
with Iran.
>> You don't know nothing.
>> As we'll see today, inflation adjusted
home prices are back to 201617 levels.
In constant terms, back to where they
were about 5 years ago, while Toronto's
benchmark price is down 400,000 in a
period of 4 years. That by any
definition is a crash.
>> Shut up.
>> So, what I want to do today is go over
Canada's crashing real estate market.
take a look at what rising fix rates are
doing to affordability and then go over
some implications. As we'll see today,
while Canada's real estate market had
major major problems even before this
war began, rising mortgage rates are
only augmenting those problems. We will
obviously continue to track Canada's
real estate market on this channel. Make
sure you click like and subscribe if you
want to get those updates. But for now,
let's get into this data
onto Canada's crashing real estate
market. As mentioned, according to Beimo
Capital Markets, adjusted for inflation,
Canada's benchmark price has fallen back
to 2016 levels. And since we don't trust
anything the banks tell us on this
channel, I downloaded all of the raw
data myself from both the CRA and Stats
Canada, pasted them into Excel,
converted everything into 2026 prices,
and the chart looks the exact same as
the one provided by Beimo. Prices back
to 2016 levels. I also happen to have
Toronto's data dating back to 2014. So,
let's grab all of that. We'll delete all
of the CRA data heading back to 2005.
Paste in Toronto's. Do up a graph. And
look, also erasing all inflation
adjusted gains since 2016. So, for every
realtor that told you all of that home
price growth back in 2020, 21, and 22
was natural, stemming mostly from
supply. And for every central bank that
told you they weren't printing money,
well, as we've discussed before on this
channel, incompetent or greasy.
>> Yes. Regardless, given these massive
price drops, can we now label what's
happening to Canada's real estate market
as a crash? Well, let's take a look back
at the aftermath of the global financial
crisis when real residential property
prices in the United States, residential
property prices adjusted for inflation
lost at least 10 years worth of priced
gains 5 years after the peak. If the
global financial crisis constituted a
housing collapse than the United States,
which I think most would agree it would,
then I failed to see how what's
happening in Canada is any different.
>> Well, we're in Canada,
>> and it doesn't look like it's going to
be getting any better anytime soon given
what's happening to fixed mortgage
rates, with yields on the 5-year
Government of Canada bond up 60 basis
points, over 60 basis points in just the
last month alone. Yields jumped 60 basis
points or 6% in fixed mortgage rates
followed starting around 3.9 say about a
month ago moving to 4.2 by last week and
then jumping by another 30 basis points
on just Friday alone. So all in all
depending on the rates we went from
having a decent 5-year fixed of just
under three. Now we're sitting in that
mid 4% range. And that rise in mortgage
rates does do a fair amount of damage to
the average home payment. Let's take
Canada's benchmark price home of
$661,000.
We'll go with a minimum down payment of
411. We'll tack on that 4% CHC insurance
because the borrower had minimum down
payment and we get a total loan amount
of $644,800.
Using a 3.9% interest rate, we would
have had a payment of $3,350.
But when we use 4.4, we get a payment of
$3530,
a difference of about $200 per month.
That's not nothing for a firsttime home
buyer.
>> In all honesty, a very tiny amount of
money.
>> Speaking of that, very, very quickly for
first-time home buyers, if your
representative shows you that a variable
rate can save you an awful lot of money
in that your payment would be about $350
cheaper, which it would, and that
variable rate mortgages almost always
perform better than that of fixed, which
for the most part they do. Fire that rep
as soon as humanly possible. As even the
author of that widely cited and barely
ever read study, Moshmleski, will tell
you, variable rates are more for those
who have equity in their homes, those
who are refinancing, and not explicitly
not for firsttime home buyers who hardly
have any equity. Even more so right now
that you're in a declining home price
environment. As we just saw, you're only
going to have about $17,000 worth of
equity on the day of purchase, and home
prices are going down, meaning you don't
have a whole lot of room to maneuver.
That $350 a month in potential savings
is going to be heavily enticing as it
was back in summer of 2021 when fixed
mortgage rates started doing this and
the Bank of Canada still had rates at
zero. And some of the experts like Royal
Laage CEO Phil Soer told specifically
young people to consider a variable rate
mortgage. Fast forward six years and
asked those young people if they're
happy with their decision.
>> Are you scared?
>> Regardless, that additional $200 per
month in mortgage payments is not going
to be inconsequential to first-time home
buyers at a time when the real estate
industry tells us that it's going to be
first-time home buyers doing the heavy
lifting in the spring market. If you're
a first- time buyer, you've been waiting
around so long, I think we we're going
to see a lot of them start to to show up
and and start to pick some of these
listings off uh any day now.
>> Pent-up demand from first-time buyers in
particular, uh disproportionately
represented in the market.
>> And to understand what's happening with
that prediction on higher mortgage rates
that first-time home buyers are going to
be the ones entering the market, we can
consult with one Shonathan Kathkart from
May of 2023 when interest rates were
right about where they are right now.
slower market. There's less competition
from first-time buyers because interest
rates are up so much.
>> So, there we have it. According to the
Canadian Real Estate Association and
their worldrenowned economist Sean
Kathkart, the rapidly rising rates
stemming from the war will most likely
keep first-time home buyers out of the
market.
>> No need to thank me.
>> But seriously, the higher rates will
definitely have an impact on
affordability. If we consult with
Beimo's home affordability tool using
$100,000 income, the difference between
buying power on 3.9 and 4.4 is about
$20,000. And again, like we just talked
about, the difference on a variable rate
is about $40,000. I remember it was like
January 2021, and I had a borrower call
me who told me that a bank told them
they have to get that variable right
now. They have to close right now as
rates are about to go up. You
>> know, what are your alternatives? So,
with these rising mortgage rates for
those first-time home buyers, for any
buyers really that were planning on
getting into the market, and although we
do have very little evidence that that
was the case, well, those higher
mortgage rates are definitely going to
have an effect. They're going to make
buying power even worse. And for those
that do decide to get in the market,
those payments are going to be much,
much higher than they were just a few
weeks ago. Meaning, as we usually
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