Tag Archive for british columbia

No housing crash for Canada: BMO

The Canadian Press

Canada will likely avoid a crash or serious correction in its “somewhat pricey” housing market, with the possible exception of Vancouver, says a new paper from Bank of Montreal.

The analysis by BMO economists suggests alarms about Canada’s housing market by international observers, from the International Monetary Fund to The Economist magazine, are exaggerated or simplistic.

“The main takeaway is that the national housing market appears somewhat pricey, but is far removed from a bubble,” said economists Sherry Cooper and Sal Guatieri in the report released Monday.

“In our view, the [market] is more like a balloon than a bubble. While bubbles always burst, a balloon often deflates slowly in the absence of a ‘pin’.”

Even Toronto’s hot condo market – one of the subjects of many of the warnings – is more likely to cool rather than collapse, BMO said, noting that a sharp decline in construction for rental units is stimulating demand for condos.

The report estimates that half of new condos in the Toronto area are purchased by investors, and about 22% are rented.

The one exception to the sanguine view appears to be Vancouver and parts of British Columbia, where home prices and demand from an influx of non-resident Chinese investment is elevating prices and construction. Home prices in Vancouver have climbed 159% over the past 10 years, more than 50% higher than the national average.

“Bottom line is, we expect the Canadian housing market to cool down rather than bust over the next couple of years, with the possible exception of Vancouver and parts of B.C. which will likely experience further correction,” Mr. Guatieri said in an interview.

By cooling, he predicted that prices, sales and startups will essentially be flat this year and likely next.

Housing has become an area of concern for policy makers over the past few years as Canadians continued to dip into the mortgage market to take advantage of historically low interest rates. As a consequence, household debt to disposable income has shot to more than 153%, the highest ever and close to the levels reached in the United States before the subprime crash.

Earlier in the month, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said he was prepared to intervene for the fourth time in six years if there is no let-up in borrowing.

The BMO economists say the government and Bank of Montreal are correct to worry about a continuation of the trend, but that is not likely. In fact, except for a few hot spots, that cooling trend has already begun with prices rising only 0.9% last year. Home starts have also dipped well south of the over 200,000 level.

Nor is it likely that Canada will fall into another recession, or that interest rates would rise so quickly that a significant number of households would be unable to meet mortgage payments.

Canadian households are not as vulnerable as their American counterparts, the economists say.

Canadian home ownership equity is 67% in Canada, compared with 39% in the U.S., and even debt-to-income ratios are far better in Canada when the cost of health care that U.S. households must pay is factored in.

The report argues that many of the measures used by alarmists to suggest housing is due for a severe correction are exaggerated or simplistic.

On the important measures that gauge affordability, households are on firm ground. House prices to family incomes are elevated from 10 years ago, but not excessively so, at a ratio of 4.9 versus 3.2 a decade ago.

The exception again is Vancouver at 10, nearly double what it was a decade ago. Also elevated is Toronto at 6.7 versus 4.3.

“Let’s assume the worst case scenario and house prices fall by 10%, would that affect anything?” Mr. Guatieri asked. “There has been such an increase in house values, that I don’t think it would pose a serious problem for Canadians or the economy.”

Mr. Guatieri said the situation would become a problem if home prices and household debt continued to outstrip income growth, but trends on both fronts are moderating.

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Laurin & Natalie Jeffrey are Toronto Realtors with Century 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these articles, they just reproduce them here for people
who are interested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.

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More homebuyers turn to mortgage brokers

By Mario Toneguzzi, Calgary Herald

The percentage of Canadians using mortgage brokers to buy their homes has increased significantly, according to a report released Wednesday.

The Deloitte report, Winning Strategies in the Brokered Mortgage Marketplace, said that in the 1990s mortgage brokers numbered in the hundreds and were “lenders of last resort” for borrowers unable to obtain a mortgage directly from a bank or credit union.

“Over the last decade, an increasing number of viable options for borrowers have surfaced,” said the report. “In addition to branch-based lenders, borrowers can now consult with the banks’ own mobile mortgage specialists as well as independent brokers — while also conducting their own research online.

“In this changing and information-abundant environment, the mortgage brokerage channel has emerged as a legitimate competitor.”

The report said share of origination transactions increased from 26% in 2003 to 38% in 2009 as mortgage brokers made particular inroads with first-time homebuyers and young Canadians.

“Overall, this channel has evolved from a fragmented ‘lender of last resort’ network to a legitimate option for prime customers.”

Jim Murphy, president and CEO of the Canadian Association of Accredited Mortgage Professionals, said the organization will be releasing its annual report in early November.

“Mortgage broker share overall is about 25% of the market,” said Murphy. “It’s higher for first-time buyers. First-time buyers are more likely to use a mortgage broker than those that renew their mortgage.

“The percentage of mortgage brokers is higher in Alberta and British Columbia overall.”

Murphy said the percentage of mortgage brokers has grown significantly although in recent years it has levelled off.

“We had big growth in the 1990s and in the first part of this decade,” said Murphy. “Brokers were very much seen in many ways 20 years ago as the lenders of last resort. So you couldn’t get a mortgage through a credit union or ATB or the bank and you went to a broker. Usually charged the higher rate. Usually charged you a fee in order to get a mortgage.

“That’s changed dramatically in the last 10-15 years. Brokers are seen in a much more positive light. They shop the market. They have access to different lenders including banks and credit unions and they really work on behalf of the customer.”

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Housing starts jump in March

CBC News

Canada’s house construction jumped in March helped mostly by an increase in rural building.

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation said 188,800 units were added in March on a seasonally adjusted annual rate, up 183,700 units in February 2011.

“Housing starts moved higher in March mostly because of increases in rural starts,” said Bob Dugan, chief economist at CMHC’s Market Analysis Centre. “Urban starts saw little change as the increase in Ontario’s multiples segment was off-set by a decrease in British Columbia’s multiples and a decrease in single housing starts in the Prairies.”

The seasonally adjusted annual rate of urban starts increased by 0.4 per cent to 163,500 units in March, while urban multiple starts were up by 6.6 per cent in the month to 101,400 units. Single urban starts decreased by 8.3 per cent to 62,100 units.

March’s seasonally adjusted annual rate of urban starts decreased by 23.4 per cent in British Columbia and by 19.3 per cent in the Prairies. Urban starts increased by 13.6 per cent in Ontario, by 11.5 per cent in the Atlantic region and by 8.6 per cent in Québec.

Rural starts were estimated at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 25,300 units in March.

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