Bruce Coleman Mortgage Brokers

604-688-6002

Canada housing starts cool in August, seen slowing further

Canadian Mortgage News

CMI 101 Series

Dreyer Group 101 Series

Financial FYI Series

First Time Buyers

Home Buying 101

Home Insurance

Latest News

Mortgage Rates

Refinancing

Retirement Planning

Self Employed

TORONTO — Canadian housing starts cooled more than expected in August, while the previous month was also revised slightly lower, data showed on Tuesday, setting the stage for what is widely expectimageed to be a slowing housing market as 2014 draws to a close.

A report from the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp showed the seasonally adjusted annualized rate of housing starts slipped to 192,368 last month from a downwardly revised 199,813 units in July.

That was shy of analysts’ forecasts for 195,000. July was originally reported as 200,098.

Related CMHC could force banks to pay deductibles on mortgage insurance Canada building permits soar to record on Toronto, Vancouver condos Thinking about a move-up buy? Forget it, new study says you can’t afford it The small drop brought the six-month moving average to 189,837, little changed in the last 12 months despite a big slowdown in the harsh winter months and a roaring bounce-back in the spring and early summer.

“The persistence of unsustainably lean mortgage rates has likely bolstered housing demand in recent months, and even with the dip in August, starts remain elevated relative to the rate of household formation,” Laura Cooper, an economist at Royal Bank of Canada, said in a research note.

Canada’s housing market has defied expectations for a slowdown or crash but most economists expect homebuilding and sales to slow when mortgage rates rise. Mortgage rates remain low and borrowers are taking on near record levels of household debt to get into the market.

“The Bank of Canada may be looking for a rotation away from housing and the consumer, but low rates continue to support residential investment,” CIBC World Markets economist Nick Exarhos said in a research note.

“But despite recent resiliency, we still expect housing’s contribution to growth to slowly wane as we progress through this business cycle, with affordability concerns and a weak labor market putting pressure on the building sector going forward.”

The drop was nearly across the board, as single-unit starts fell 3.3% and multiple units, typically condominiums, dipped 4.0%. Both rural and urban starts declined.

July’s softness was led by a big drop in starts in Ontario and the Atlantic, with a smaller decline in Quebec. Starts rose sharply in the Prairie provinces and in British Columbia.

Despite the small drop in August, economists are penciling in a strong year for home building in 2014.

“On account of the robust readings for housing starts so far this year, we have revised our forecast up to 188,000 units for 2014, a pace matching that of 2013, before underlying conditions shift and slow activity to 177,000 next year, with a similar moderating trend anticipated in the resale market,” Cooper said.

© Thomson Reuters 2014

Find FP Personal Finance on Facebook

Canadians expect to be mortgage-free later than previously thought

Canadian Mortgage News

CMI 101 Series

Dreyer Group 101 Series

Financial FYI Series

First Time Buyers

Home Buying 101

Home Insurance

Latest News

Mortgage Rates

Refinancing

Retirement Planning

Self Employed

A new survey says Canadians, on average, expect to be mortgage-free by age 58, one year later than in a similar poll a year ago.

imageBut the survey, conducted for CIBC by Angus Reid, found some big discrepancies across the country.

For example, homeowners in British Columbia thought they wouldn’t be able to pay off their mortgages until they hit 66, while those in Alberta expected to be mortgage-free more than a decade earlier at 55.

MORE RELATED TO THIS STORY

Household debt worries ease as pace of mortgage borrowing slows in May: study MORTGAGES Mortgage rules may be tighter for the self-employed, but options remain Survey finds third of first-time home buyers prefer long amortizations

CARRICK TALKS MONEY Video: Carrick Talks Money: Don’t get stuck in the mortgage penalty box

CARRICK TALKS MONEY Video: Carrick Talks Money: Why variable mortgages are the way to go this spring The survey also found that just over half of those polled were taking advantage of the current low interest rate environment to pay down their mortgages faster.

Fifty-five per cent said they were putting in extra effort into repaying their mortgages, although that was down from 68 per cent last year.

Of those paying off their mortgages quicker than necessary, 32 per cent said they were making payments more often, 28 per cent were increasing the amount they pay while 18 per cent said they had made either an additional prepayment or a lump sump payment.

Beyond Alberta and British Columbia, the survey found the average age respondents expected to be mortgage-free ranged from 56 years in Quebec to 57 years in Atlantic Canada and Ontario and 58 years in Manitoba and Saskatchewan.

CIBC says even small efforts can lead to big savings for homeowners in the long run.

For example, someone paying 4.99 per cent interest on a $250,000 mortgage with 25-year amortization can expect to save nearly $35,000 of interest if they add $147 to their $1,453 monthly payments.

The same homeowner can save as much as $30,000 on interest if they make $726 payments every two weeks, instead of waiting until the end of the month to make a payment.

The bank pointed out that even making a lump sum payment every year – for instance, putting the average $1,600 tax refund towards the mortgage – would shave off $33,103 of interest.

“Employing one or more of these strategies does take some planning and discipline,” said Barry Gollom, vice-president of secured lending and product policy at CIBC.

“If becoming mortgage-free sooner is something you want to achieve, it’s important to look at your mortgage as part of your overall financial picture and to balance your mortgage payment plan against your other goals.”

The online poll was conducted by Angus Reid Forum with 1,509 Canadian adults between May 21 and May 22.

The polling industry’s professional body, the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error as they are not a random sample and therefore are not necessarily representative of the whole population.

Follow us on Twitter: @GlobeMoney

Paying off your mortgage faster can pay huge dividends

Canadian Mortgage News

CMI 101 Series

Dreyer Group 101 Series

Financial FYI Series

First Time Buyers

Home Buying 101

Home Insurance

Latest News

Mortgage Rates

Refinancing

Retirement Planning

Self Employed

image
Image Copyright – Darren Callabrese – https://nationalpost.com/author/darrencalabrese

Paying down your mortgage faster. It’s one of those boilerplate suggestions that financial advisers love to make to their clients. After all, throwing extra money at the biggest debt most Canadians have can result in big interest savings and being mortgage-free years sooner.

So why isn’t everyone doing that?

According to a spring analysis by the chief economist at the Canadian Association of Accredited Mortgage Professionals, only 35 per cent of Canadians with mortgages took some kind of action in the past year to speed up the date of their “burn the mortgage” party. That suggests that almost two-thirds of those mortgage holders paid off their mortgages as the contract dictated, at least over the previous year.

Mortgage debt growth slows, Statscan says Canadians carrying debt into retirement A recent survey (carried out on May 21-22) commissioned by CIBC and carried out by Angus Reid found that only 55 per cent of 1,509 online respondents with mortgages had taken some kind of action to repay their mortgages faster since they’d originally bought their homes.

Since mortgage payments are made with after-tax dollars, putting extra money down on a debt with an interest rate of 3.49% is equivalent to getting a guaranteed, risk-free return of over five per cent for most taxpayers. If your mortgage rate is higher, your return would be higher too.

Why not?

So why the seeming reluctance by many to do this?

Mortgage experts say personal circumstances are often at the top of the “why not” list.

“Young families or first-time buyers are in an expensive period of life and are unlikely to have much free cash to put towards their mortgage,” points out Jason Scott, a mortgage associate with TMG The Mortgage Group in Edmonton and author of Approved! Mortgage Advice for all Stages of Life.

Others, he says, may be sensibly tackling other debts first. “If they have more expensive debt, like credit cards, it’s better if they pay off the more expensive debt first,” Scott told CBC News.

Industry players say it’s also true that, in these days of lower mortgage rates, it may be a tougher sell to persuade consumers that it’s worth tackling mortgage debt at all.

You also won’t have to dig too deeply to find people who tell you that, regardless of today’s lower rates, they just don’t have the extra money to tackle their mortgage debt.

I owe, I owe…

After all, we’re repeatedly told we’re in hock up to our eyeballs. We’ve all seen the comments tut-tutting Canadians about their debt levels.

The governor of the Bank of Canada scolds us. Bankers, regulators and politicians wag their fingers in warning. We’ll be sorry, they say, when interest rates go up if we still have these big debts.

The debt stats do seem daunting: The level of household debt relative to disposable income was a near record 163.2 per cent in the first quarter of this year, Statistics Canada says. That means Canadians owe just over $1.63 for every $1 in disposable income they earn in a year.

That can make it tough to whittle away at the $1.1 trillion (that’s trillion, with a “t”), that we owe on our mortgages, especially when we have another $507 billion in higher-interest consumer credit debt on top of those mortgages.

Viewed against this backdrop, it may then be somewhat of a minor miracle that, in the midst of such a supposedly bleak financial landscape and the competing demands for our extra money (like saving for retirement and the kids’ education), many Canadians are actually taking steps to pay down their mortgage debt faster than their mortgage contracts dictate.

And make no mistake. Paying off your mortgage faster can pay big dividends.

How much money can you save? It depends on which strategy you use.

Here are four that can put a surprising amount of extra money in your pocket over time:

Strategy 1: Increase the amount of your payments

Throwing just $100 a month extra at your mortgage can result in formidable savings. Let’s assume a $250,000 mortgage at 3.49%, amortized over 25 years. Monthly payments would be $1,247.

Boost that payment by $100 to $1,347, and something magical happens. You’d save $15,400 in interest charges over the life of the mortgage (assuming a constant interest rate of 3.49%) and you’d pay it off three years sooner.

Strategy 2: When you renew, keep your monthly payments the same

Let’s assume you took out a $250,000, five-year fixed mortgage in 2009 at an interest rate of 5%. Your monthly payments have been $1,454. Now, it’s time to renew and your bank is offering you 2.99% for the next five years. As a result, your monthly payments would drop to $1,224.

Great! But what if you keep on with the $1,454 payments you’re used to? That extra $230 a month over the remaining life of the mortgage will allow you to pay off your mortgage four years sooner and you’ll save $15,700 in interest. Not bad for just maintaining the status quo.

Strategy 3: Choose an accelerated payment option

This is almost painless. Let’s use the example of the $250,000 mortgage described in strategy one. Your monthly mortgage payment is $1,247. Divide that by two, and you get $623.50. Now arrange to pay this amount every two weeks. Because a pay-every-two-weeks strategy results in 26 payments of a half-month’s mortgage payment, you end up paying the equivalent of 13 monthly payments a year – or an extra monthly payment every year.

This is what’s known as an accelerated bi-weekly payment. Don’t just opt for bi-weekly – you want the method that forces you to pay the equivalent of an extra monthly payment each year.

This strategy alone would save the borrower more than $16,300 in interest over the 25-year life of the mortgage. And that 25-year mortgage would also be paid off in a little more than 22 years.

Strategy 4: Make a lump-sum payment

Most closed mortgages (but not all) allow borrowers to pay off up to 10%, 15% or 20% of the original principal in each calendar year without penalty.

Thanks for nothing, you say. “I don’t have $50,000 to throw at my mortgage.” The good news is that you don’t need to pay down the entire 20 per cent. Throwing even a few hundred dollars at it here and there can make a big difference.

One popular suggestion is to put your tax refund to work this way. Assuming we have the $250,000 mortgage described in strategy one, and applying a $1,600 annual payment that the Canada Revenue Agency says is the size of the average refund, that manoeuvre alone would see that mortgage paid off three and a half years early and the mortgage holder would save $20,000 in interest.

TIP:

When using an online mortgage calculator, make sure it’s a Canadian one. American mortgages are calculated differently.

Combining two or more of these strategies would result in even bigger savings.

Fortunately, it’s easy to virtually play around with various payment scenarios. Most financial institutions, banks, and mortgage brokers have online mortgage calculators that can spit out the savings for you.

Here’s a particularly useful one.

And another one.

And here’s a good one from the federal government’s Financial Consumer Agency of Canada:

Report Typo

Send Feedback

Toronto home prices still growing, with more gains to come

Canadian Mortgage News

CMI 101 Series

Dreyer Group 101 Series

Financial FYI Series

First Time Buyers

Home Buying 101

Home Insurance

Latest News

Mortgage Rates

Refinancing

Retirement Planning

Self Employed

housesaleA lukewarm summer didn’t cool off Toronto’s red hot housing market which remains in sellers’ territory, according to the city’s realtors.

The average price of a home in the country’s largest market continued to rise, reaching $546,303 for the region — an 8.9% increase from a year ago. In the much sought-after detached home segment of the market, the average sale price reached $902,428 in the city of Toronto proper, a 14.7% increase from a year ago.

“The number of listings in August was down in comparison to last year while the number of sales increased. This means the sellers’ market conditions remained in place with a lot of competition between buyers, said Jason Mercer, director of market analysis with the Toronto Real Estate Board, in a release.

Mr. Mercer expects sales growth to continue to outpace listings growth which will lead to ongoing increases in year-over-year average sale prices.

For the first eight months of the year, sale prices across the GTA averaged $562,504, an 8.5% increase from a year ago.

New listings for August were 11,733, down from 12,103 a year earlier. Sales were up to 7,600 from 7,391 during the period.

Sales growth was experienced in all segment of the market and across the greater Toronto area. Condominiums experienced the weakest price growth but the average sale price in the GTA still climbed 4.4% from a year ago to $352,942.

Toronto’s stellar results come on top of data released from Vancouver and Calgary which show prices continue to rise in those cities, indicating national averages will likely climb when those numbers are released mid-month.

twitter.com/dustytwallet

Is it time to downsize your home, sweet home?

Canadian Mortgage News

CMI 101 Series

Dreyer Group 101 Series

Financial FYI Series

First Time Buyers

Home Buying 101

Home Insurance

Latest News

Mortgage Rates

Refinancing

Retirement Planning

Self Employed

imageThe Globe and Mail Downsize Your Home Worksheet is designed to help people think through some of the financial considerations involved in selling the family home and moving to something smaller. Sure, there are lifestyle factors in deciding when to sell. But there’s also the state of the real estate market to consider. Should you lock in your gains, or wait and run the risk that the housing market could fall? To crunch the numbers, try the Downsize Your Home Worksheet.

THE GLOBE AND MAIL DOWNSIZE YOUR HOME WORKSHEET

Question: Should you wait to sell the family home, or should you take advantage of today’s high real estate prices and sell now?

Edit the values in the right column to reflect your scenario. The red values are calculated automatically.

I am hoping to have this much left over after I sell my house and move to something smaller 1) How much might my house grow in value if I stay? Estimated value of your house today. For illustration purposes, we’ve used a number close to the average national resale house price in summer 2014

Number of years until you sell Your expected annual house price gain (if you’re unsure, try using the long-term average inflation rate of 2.5%)

Bottom Line: Estimated value when you’re ready to sell 2) What if I stay and prices fall? Estimated value of your house today Your estimated percentage decline from current value Bottom Line: Projected value after decline Which scenario would you like to use to calculate the following questions? The current value of your house Estimate value when you’re ready to sell Projeced value after a decline 3) What will it cost me to move to a smaller house or condo? Value of your home or the bottom line home value from either parts one or two Percentage real estate commission for selling Real estate fees Legal fees + Reimbursements A default estimate of $2,500 could be used to cover a downsizer’s sale of the family home and purchase of a smaller dwelling.

Land transfer tax on purchase of your next home, if applicable Click here to calculate what you’ll owe, if anything

Mover Furnishings and upgrades for your new home Total 4) Net gain from selling The value of your home or the bottom line home value from either parts one or two Actual or anticipated balance owing on your line of credit (or remaining mortagage balance) Net gain after subtracting total moving costs in Part Three and LOC or mortgage balance Cost of new home (leave blank if you plan to rent)

Funds remaining after you buy your next home Surplus or shortfall compared to your targeted net gain after downsizing 5) What if I invest the gains from selling my house? Funds remaining after you buy your next home (from Part Four) Your expected annual investment return after fees (%) Your pre-tax annual gains Future plans: Part Two of the Downsize Your Home Worksheet will help you compare the month-to-month living costs at your family home against a condo, smaller house or rental.

Follow Rob Carrick on Twitter: @rcarrick

MORE RELATED TO THIS STORY

PORTFOLIO STRATEGY Downsizing? A plan to invest the proceeds carefully THE LONG VIEW A rental property for retirement income: Is it worth it? ROB CARRICK Downsizing to condoland? Why it’s best to rent, not own

Canada house prices expected to rise further, fuelling fears of meltdown

Canadian Mortgage News

CMI 101 Series

Dreyer Group 101 Series

Financial FYI Series

First Time Buyers

Home Buying 101

Home Insurance

Latest News

Mortgage Rates

Refinancing

Retirement Planning

Self Employed

imageThe risk of a property market crash in Canada has not ebbed, according to an increasing number of analysts polled by Reuters who said chances of a steep fall in prices have increased in the past year.

Still, the survey medians showed house prices will likely rise more than earlier expected at least until 2017, reflecting ongoing reluctance by forecasters, many of whom work for mortgage lenders, to predict negative returns on property.

This year Canadian home prices on average will appreciate by 5% followed by a 2% rise in 2015 and then again in 2016 after doubling in value over the past decade.

Related House prices keep going up but they are more affordable thanks to cheap debt How fears of overheating are driving Canadian homebuilders to look south Canada’s housing market on course for soft landing, says CMHC But seven of 20 respondents in the poll conducted Aug 19-26 said the threat of a property market meltdown had intensified over the past year, especially in Toronto and Vancouver, up from five of 21 in the May poll.

“(The) risk has increased due to house price increases significantly exceeding income growth and the oversupply of condos in downtown Toronto,” said John Andrew, professor at Queen’s University.

Canadian households on average hold debt worth over 1.5 times their income and when mortgage costs increase once the Bank of Canada begins raising benchmark interest rates, it will make that burden even heavier.

The BoC will probably raise rates in the third quarter of 2015, a Reuters poll showed on Tuesday. [CA/POLL]

“Lower mortgage rates in the spring and summer have enticed more marginal home buyers who ultimately won’t be able to carry heavy debt load in the future when rates rise,” said David Madani, Canada economist at Capital Economics.

Still, the medians suggest prices will not decline nationally, at least not until 2017 — the end of the polling horizon. Even in Toronto and Vancouver, two of the country’s most expensive markets, prices are not expected to fall.

Many are of the view that prices will only cool, dodging a U.S.-style nosedive where property prices fell by more than a third, leaving millions of Americans in negative equity.

Thirteen of 20 participants said Canada’s housing boom is different from other real estate booms and is therefore unlikely to end in a crash.

“The risk of a crash is negligible, based on my expectation that any sustained increase in mortgage interest rates will be minimal – at most half a point by the end of 2015,” said Canadian housing economist Will Dunning. © Thomson Reuters 2014

Single-family homes for under $400,000 drying up in Calgary

Canadian Mortgage News

CMI 101 Series

Dreyer Group 101 Series

Financial FYI Series

First Time Buyers

Home Buying 101

Home Insurance

Latest News

Mortgage Rates

Refinancing

Retirement Planning

Self Employed

imageMove over Toronto and Vancouver, Calgary’s condominium sector is red hot.

The oilpatch set a new record for condominium resale activity for the month of August with a 14% increase in sales from a year ago. Townhouse sales were even stronger with a 20% jump from a year ago.

Meanwhile, single-family home sales declined during the period as listings for lower-priced property shrank during the period.

“The record pace of August sales in the condominium sector is related to the relative affordability of this product combined with a tight rental market and low lending rates,” said Ann-Marie Lurie, chief economist with the board, in a release. “More than 76% of condominium new listings are priced below $400,000 and represent more than 68% of the total inventory within city limits.”

The board said “apartment-style” new listings are up 40% year over year over the past three months, pushing up the inventory levels in Calgary and keeping the market balanced despite the strong sales.

Related Tracking foreign buyers in Canada’s housing boom: Can we do it? Should we even care? Canada house prices expected to rise further, fuelling fears of meltdown Single-family sales declined by 2.4% in August to 1,477 units. “The decline in single-family sales is mostly due to the shrinking supply in the under-$400,000 sector,” said Bill Kirk, president of the board, in the release. “Overall, sales activity has improved compared to last year for product priced over $400,000.”

The average single-family home in the city of Calgary sold for $542,238 in August, a 5.4% increase from a year ago. On the condo side, the average sale price was $332,006 last month, an 11.5% increase from a year ago.

“The composition of apartment sales shifted toward the higher-end segment this month compared to last month, resulting in higher monthly gains,” said Ms. Lurie.

Housing figures for Toronto and Vancouver are due out later this week.

Tracking foreign buyers in Canada’s housing boom: Can we do it? Should we even care?

Canadian Mortgage News

CMI 101 Series

Dreyer Group 101 Series

Financial FYI Series

First Time Buyers

Home Buying 101

Home Insurance

Latest News

Mortgage Rates

Refinancing

Retirement Planning

Self Employed

imageA third of people buying homes in Canada may be foreigners, says one real estate company. A leading economist says the number isn’t even 5%. The country’s housing agency says it has no idea what the actual number is.

CMHC leaves out question of foreign condo investors, but economist says it’s only 5%


A survey of Canada’s two largest condominium markets by the country’s housing agency has failed to answer the question many observers have been asking: How many foreign buyers are in the market?

Read more
There is no definitive answer to the persistent question about how much of the current Canadian housing boom is being driven by overseas buyers — as some eyes focus sharply on Mainland China.

Even at Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., the percentage of foreign ownership in the Canadian housing market is a deep mystery. CMHC avoided the issue entirely this month, when it released a massive survey of more than 42,000 Canadian condominium households in Vancouver and Toronto.

“At this point in time, it is still very difficult to identify [overseas investors] as part of the survey,” said Bruno Duhamel, manager of economic and housing analysis at CMHC. “We are exploring what type of method could be used.”

The real issue may be even if we can pinpoint the number of people from outside Canada buying residential property, should we care? Canada has no restrictions on foreign property ownership and the federal government said as recently as last year it has no plans to implement any restrictions.

“If we are talking about people with connections to another country, it’s meaningless. I’m surprised it’s only 33% if it’s just a connection,” says Benjamin Tal, deputy economist with CIBC, referring to a survey by Vancouver brokerage Macdonald Realty that found of its 531 single family sales in 2013, 178 or 33.5%, were to buyers from Mainland China.

The Macdonald Realty results were produced by someone going through the transactions and identifying names the the company identified as Chinese, meaning the buyers may very well have been established Canadian citizens.

Mr. Tal’s own analysis, which he based on the CMHC data, information obtained from developers and his own bank’s business, suggests foreign investment is less than 5% of the condominium market in Toronto and Vancouver.

Related
Housing market 10% overvalued in Canada amid condo risks, data uncertainty: TD executive
Foreign buyers shore up high-end housing in Canada with Montreal top destination
Canada house prices expected to rise further, fuelling fears of meltdown
“It’s a solid market,” said Mr. Tal about the overseas buyers. “We are talking about people who are putting down 45%-50%. They are not getting CMHC mortgage insurance [backed by the federal government].”

So why all the fear and loathing about overseas buyers?

“I think ‘foreign’ sounds risky,” said Mr. Tal. “You ask people about them and it’s like ‘they’re the bubble, there is going to be a crash when they leave’.”

But demand can fuel price increases. If you feel housing prices are rising too fast, a high percentage of overseas buyers driving the market may be a legitimate gripe, concedes the economist.

Brian Johnston, chief operating officer of home builder Mattamy Homes, says the so-called foreign buyer fear has always been overstated. “A lot of the capital comes from overseas, but the buyers are residents. There is also the phenomenon whereby someone (generally from Asia) gets their Canadian passport and then returns to their country of origin to make the real money (and taxed at much lower rates). Meanwhile, they have bought real estate here.”

I think ‘foreign’ sounds risky… You ask people about them and it’s like ‘they’re the bubble, there is going to be a crash when they leave’
But even if you wanted to “crack down” on foreign buyers it would not be easy.

“You may buy a place for family members or for investment purposes or for both reasons,” says Finn Poschmann, vice-president of the Toronto-based C.D. Howe Institute. “When you’re buying for family members, who are potential future residents, it may look like foreign ownership and in practice the person is going to be there. How one makes sense of that in a statistical context is not at all obvious.”

The only agency that tracks foreign money is FINTRAC, the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada. The agency, which reports to the the Minister of Finance, is geared to towards policing money laundering.

“That [money laundering] is not necessarily an issue at all when it comes to new home or condo buyers,” said Mr. Poschmann. “We haven’t devised in Canada a system for aggregating this information [on foreign ownership], and under the current system I’m not sure it can be done. And, if we did have it, I’m not sure what we would do.”

Tsur Somerville, an associate professor with the University of British Columbia Centre for Urban Economics and Real Estate, said his worry is the people who buy units and then don’t occupy them.

How fears of overheating at home are driving Canadian homebuilders to look south


Overheating worries at home are driving Canada’s builders south, where they buy up rural land, betting on a recovery in the U.S. suburban housing market
“That really pushes up the demand for land without satisfying the people who reside here,” said Mr. Somerville. “Then you get people who occupy, but do it sporadically; it’s essentially a vacation property.”

Taken to its extreme, you can end up with the complaint you might hear in a resort town such as Whistler, B.C.: People who work there can’t live there because it’s so expensive.

One method to try to determine how many people are living in the units they own might be to track hydro use, said Mr. Somerville. “It was done in the past and it was found, it was not as high as people thought.”

He concedes the percentage of people who can afford to own a unit in city such as Vancouver and leave it empty is likely small. “I think it’s a huge percentage of relatives of the top end of the Communist Party in China, but not a huge percentage of the market,” said Mr. Somerville.

Restricting this type of activity could be controversial because it would mean the government is effectively forcing you to live in your home. “You know from a municipal standpoint nothing could be better than these people. They pay taxes and don’t demand any services,” said Mr. Somerville.

It may possible to do something akin to what Florida has whereby non-state residents pay higher property taxes. You could then turn around and tell people if you show you’re renting the property, you get a tax break.

Dan Scarrow, vice-president of Macdonald Realty, said his company’s survey found few people who had no connection to the city — meaning they were neither an immigrant or citizen.

“There is very, very little pure foreign investment where the people have no connection to the city whatsoever,” said Mr. Scarrow. “The worry is these are new immigrants who made their fortunes back in China and bring their fortunes to Vancouver.”

There is also a fear the whole debate is just an example of xenophobia, he said.

“I think it’s been blown out of proportion because there has been an impact in certain pockets of Vancouver,” said Mr. Scarrow. “Even so, the issue is there no realistic solution I can see.”

Mortgage rate drop means housing more affordable this spring RBC study finds Vancouver and Toronto still the least affordable

Canadian Mortgage News

CMI 101 Series

Dreyer Group 101 Series

Financial FYI Series

First Time Buyers

Home Buying 101

Home Insurance

Latest News

Mortgage Rates

Refinancing

Retirement Planning

Self Employed

real-estate-for-sale-sign-20140616Housing across Canada became more affordable in the second quarter of this year because mortgage rates dropped, according to a report from RBC.

Even with prices moving higher, homes became more affordable in nearly every market across Canada, according to RBC’s Housing Trends and Affordability Report.

The least affordable markets were Toronto and Vancouver, where hot competition for properties kept home ownership out of reach for most buyers, despite a marginal improvement in the quarter. Vancouver is the least affordable market with sky-high prices, especially for single family homes.

Most other cities saw housing affordability remain around historic averages, RBC said.

But new buyers in the quarter were treated to lower fixed-rate mortgages than they could have found a year ago, as banks reacted to falling bond yields.

That’s not a situation that will remain, RBC warns. Long-term rates are expected to move higher later this year in anticipation of the Bank of Canada’s move to tighten policy in 2015.

Rising rates would erode housing affordability across Canada and reduce demand, said Craig Wright, senior vice-president and chief economist. However he expects a slow rise in rates will lead to soft landing for housing.

“We remain of the view that any rise rates will be gradual and unlikely to unhinge either overall affordability levels or the market — we expect a cooling in activity, not a crash,” Wright said in a statement.

Wright points to the rebound in sales activity in May and June that resulted in a 9.4 per cent seasonally adjusted advance in the volume of sales for the quarter. It was the strongest quarterly gain in nearly four years.

“We had anticipated a rebound in activity from earlier this year when the harsher than normal winter weather took hold, but the biggest drop in fixed mortgage rates in almost four years and resulting improvement in affordability also gave the Canadian housing market a boost of extra energy,” he said.

New listings also surged by eight per cent.

The RBC Housing Affordability measure, which has been compiled since 1985, is based on the calculated costs of owning a detached bungalow at market value, but also is used to measure the cost of condos and two-storey homes.

Is inflating income, lying on credit applications OK? – Consult with a Vancouver Mortgage Broker

Canadian Mortgage News

CMI 101 Series

Dreyer Group 101 Series

Financial FYI Series

First Time Buyers

Home Buying 101

Home Insurance

Latest News

Mortgage Rates

Refinancing

Retirement Planning

Self Employed

mortgage.jpg.size.xxlarge.letterboxTen per cent of Canadians surveyed say it’s okay to inflate your income when applying for a mortage, according to a new survey by credit reporting agency Equifax. DREAMSTIME

Ten per cent of Canadians surveyed say it’s okay to inflate your income when applying for a mortgage, according to a new survey by credit reporting agency Equifax.

And 9 per cent say they have lied on credit card or mortgage applications.

The numbers came as a shock to Equifax officials, given that the July survey of 1,500 Canadians was really aimed at gauging their concerns about protection of personal data.

“We hadn’t asked the question before,” says Tim Ashby, vice president of personal solutions for Equifax Canada.

“It’s a bad strategy,” stressed Ashby, noting that lying on any credit applications is a form of fraud. “Obviously it’s not sustainable. It means that people are concerned about their ability to get a mortgage. We definitely want to counsel Canadians to work within their means and approach their debts with financial responsibility.”

The survey also disclosed that only 23 per cent of Canadians know their credit score, and just 26 per cent knew their credit rating at the time they applied for a mortgage. That’s despite the fact a good credit score can be a major negotiating tool in getting lower interest rate mortgages from financial institutions.

A bad score — especially one you find out unexpectedly, as you’re down to the wire trying to close an offer on a house — can be crippling.

“We hear story after story of people who pull their credit report and find there are things on there (such as unpaid bills that belong to others) that shouldn’t be on there. To find that out in front of your mortgage broker can be a really unpleasant surprise.”

Mortgage broker Joe Sammut called the fact anyone would inflate their income “disturbing” and stressed that Canadian lenders have “multiple layers of safety caches in place” to make sure such claims are caught, especially in the wake of the U.S. housing meltdown, much of which was caused by overlending and applicants not even having to file proof of income.

“I’ve had people call me and say, ‘I make $80,000, but my employer is willing to write a letter saying I make $120,000.’ There are websites where you can get fake employment letters and pay slips. There are people out there willing to commit fraud, but it’s very minimal and I suspect it’s on the decline.”

Here in Canada, where lending rules are tougher than they have been in the States, mortgage applicants have to hand over T4 tax slips, employment letters and other documentation as proof of income before money changes hands, said broker Jake Abramowicz.

“Most people who call me say, ‘I don’t know what I can afford. Here’s what I make.’ I’ve never had anyone say, ‘Here’s what I want to afford, how much do I need to make?’

“It’s impossible to lie on your income these days — it would boggle my mind that someone would think they could do it.”

Abramowicz said he’s had the odd new doctor or lawyer come to his office, saying they make $80,000 today and will be making $400,000 in a few years.

“I just tell them to come back and see me then.”

The Equifax survey also found that 79 per cent of respondents are more concerned than ever about protection of their personal information.

Some 81 per cent believe that lenders should be doing more to protect their personal information, so they aren’t at risk of fraud and identity theft, one of the fastest growing crimes.

According to police, identity theft costs the Canadian economy about $2.5 billion in losses every year and the total number of victims grew by 14 per cent in 2013, says Ashby.

It’s become such big business that Equifax now has a suite of products which, for about $15 a month, will provide regular credit scores and reports to consumers so they can track if anyone is applying for credit cards or mortgages in their name.

(By law, Canadians are entitled to a credit report as often as they like, but it can take two weeks to come by mail. To get it immediately from Equifax costs $23.)

Equifax Canada is even considering whether to join its U.S. counterparts in offering family credit rating protections to try to curtail the growing trend of identity theft among children — fraudsters who are using children’s social insurance and other sometimes easily obtainable information.

It’s known in the industry as “synthetic fraud” — using a child’s real name, but altering their age and other details so an 8-year-old may appear to be a 35-year-old, says Ashby.

It can take years until parents even realize their child’s ID has been used to fraudulently obtain credit cards or other loans.


SEO Powered By SEOPressor