Renewal-Shock Concerns are Fading for Canadian Mortgage Holders
Renewal-Shock Concerns are Fading for Canadian Mortgage Holders - Bloomberg
Canadian homeowners set to renew their mortgages this year can rest a little easier about having to pay higher rates.
Rates to renew a five-year mortgage aren’t much higher than they were when the mortgages were taken out, according to National Bank research. That means “no payment shock” for the 17.4% of mortgages renewing in 2019, Matthieu Arseneau, deputy chief economist at the Montreal-based bank, said by phone.
Financial conditions have eased since January to the point where the renewal rate for five-year mortgages is barely above the current 3% “effective,” or average, rate for all mortgages coming due this year, he said. Back in January, Arseneau estimated there would be a 70- to 90-basis-point payment shock for mortgage renewals.
A drop in government bond yields and lower funding costs for financial institutions have led to a decline in rates to about 3.1% for insured mortgages and 3.2% for uninsured, Arseneau said. The lower rates along with a stellar jobs market means “we can expect a rebound in consumption,” after a weak reading in the fourth quarter, he said.
National Bank’s estimates jive with those from Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz, who said in a speech this month mortgage payments didn’t rise for most borrowers who recently renewed a five-year, fixed rate mortgage, in spite of interest rate increases from the central bank and tougher eligibility criteria for home loans.
It remains to be seen whether consumers will face a payment shock in 2020 and 2021. Arseneau estimates 24.1% and 26.8% of mortgages in those years will face renewal, with effective rates of 2.8% and 2.6%, respectively.
Courtesy of Bloomberg https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-05-14/renewal-shock-concerns-are-fading-for-canadian-mortgage-holders