Tag Archive for consumer confidence

Flaherty warns of even higher mortgage rates

The Canadian Press

The Royal Bank of Canada became the third major Canadian bank to hike its five-year mortgage rate, and Finance Minister Jim Flaherty is warning of further increases in the months ahead.

RBC joined TD Bank and CIBC in raising its posted rate for a five-year closed mortgage by one quarter of a percentage point to 5.44%. The bank also raised a number of its other posted and special mortgage rates.

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said the hikes are “exactly what we expected.”

Speaking outside the House of Commons Tuesday, Flaherty told reporters that with lending rates at historic lows, there is nowhere for the cost of borrowing to go but up.

“We’re likely to see higher interest rates as we go forward because interest rates are still very low,” Flaherty said.

The banks pin the hikes on a rebound in the stock market that has led to rising government bond yields, signs the economy is continuing its slow but sure recovery from the recession.

“It’s gaining some traction and as the economy recovers, interest rates begin that process of returning to more normal levels,” Derek Burleton, TD Bank deputy chief economist told CTV News.

While experts have predicted a cooling in the housing market after tighter mortgage rules come into effect in mid-March, a new report predicts that growing consumer confidence may offset the expected negative effects of higher interest rates.

The Canadian Real Estate Association released a revised forecast Tuesday for Canadian home sales in 2011, which the agency predicts will be higher than it first predicted last year.

Its new forecast estimates that 439,000 existing homes will be sold in 2011, down 1.6% from 2010 but an improvement on the nine-pet-cent decline predicted in December.

And unlike some economists, who predict that home prices will level off, or drop sharply, as rates shoot up, the CREA predicts that the average home price will rise by 1.3% in 2011 to $343,000. In its earlier forecast, the agency predicted that the national average home price would fall by 1.3% compared to 2010, to $326,000.

“Even though mortgage interest rates are expected to rise later this year, they will still be within short reach of current levels and remain supportive for housing market activity,” said Gregory Klump, the CREA’s chief economist. “Strengthening economic fundamentals will keep the housing market in balance, which will keep home prices stable.”

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Interest rate rise could trigger house price collapse

By Julian Beltrame, The Canadian Press

A new report predicts that Canada’s housing market is poised for a collapse and is only waiting for the trigger of rising interest rates expected for later this year — a view that flies in the face of many other forecasts.

Capital Economics calculates Canadian home prices could fall by about 25% — and even as much as 35% — over the next three years once the Bank of Canada begins tightening monetary policy.

Most economists expect the central bank will begin doing just that in late spring or early summer, with the trendsetting rate rising from the current 1% to over 2% by the end of the year.

And the Bank of Canada is expected to keep hiking the policy rate next year until it returns to normal levels — about 3.5% — by the end of 2012.

That would have profound implications both for home values and the economy, says David Madani, Canadian chief economist of Capital Economics.

“Even small rises in official interest rates have been shown to have a big effect on homeowner confidence in other countries under similar circumstances,” Madani said Thursday.

“If the Bank of Canada does resume its monetary tightening this year, this could easily prove to be a tipping point for a house price collapse.”

The knock-on effects of homeowners seeing the value of their biggest asset crash could see consumer confidence and spending plunge, damaging the economy, he added.

And if prices fall 35%, the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corp. that insures higher risk mortgages could suffer losses of $10 billion as about 10% of mortgages default.

Capital Economics is not the only, or first, private-sector group that has warned about Canada’s hot housing market, which defied all odds in rebounding strongly while the country was still in recession, thank’s to super-low interest rates.

But so far, all predictions of doom have been unfulfilled.

The Bank of Canada and the majority of private sector forecasters are instead calling for a “soft landing” in the housing market, where prices flatten or fall at most a few percentage points. That slowdown has already begun in terms of both resales, prices and building permits for new homes.

The CIBC, for one, estimates home prices are inflated by between 5% and 10% at most and judges most homeowners will be able to shoulder modest interest rate increases.

As well, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty has stressed he does not believe Canada has a housing bubble, while taking modest steps tighten rules for mortgage borrowing to prevent one from occurring.

Madani believes the confidence is misplaced, however. He says not only have prices risen as quickly as the U.S. before the collapse there, but Canadian prices are way out of whack with traditional markers, such as incomes and the cost of renting.

“A lot of the debate has focused on what affordability looks like today. They have not looked at longer term affordability,” Madani said.

“We conclude that housing prices have formed a bubble and are at risk of falling substantially over the next few years.”

Since 1999, home prices in Canada have risen by 7% each year to about $314,000 — or 125% — using an index that averages resale values of two-storey homes and two-bedroom condos. That puts home prices at about 5.5 times the average disposable income per worker of $58,347, well above the historical average of 3.5 times.

As well, the price ratio of ownership to the cost of renting has almost doubled in 10 years.

Add to those markets that excess supply of new housing units is high by historical norms, and home ownership is already at record levels, and the recipe for a major correction are in place.

Those conditions have been there for some time, however, dissenters note, which causes some private sector forecasts, such as Merrill Lynch Canada, to sound the alarm three years ago.

Ironically, Merrill Lynch’s current chief economist Sheryl King disagrees with her predecessor, and the Capital Economics analysis.

She says Canada does not have the same underlying issues as the U.S., even if the run-up in prices is similar. Particularly, lending practices are tighter in Canada, dampening speculation, and homeowners are not allowed to walk away from their homes without penalty.

“You need a rise in the unemployment rate and you need a wave of defaults from speculators,” she said. “But defaulting is not an option in Canada, and we have an unemployment rate that is headed lower, so I disagree.”

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Nanos Poll Shows Canadian Consumer Confidence At A New Low

Property Wire

According to a recently released report from Nanos Research, consumer confidence has dropped to a new post-recessionary low.

The Nanos Economic Mood Index, which is a random phone sampling of Canadians, is derived from quarterly a survey that asks Canadians about their personal finances and outlook for the economy, job security and real estate. The index fell to 110.3 from 111.4, in a poll taken Nov. 29 to Dec. 2.

Two years later, despite stark economic differences from November 2008 to November 2010, when the recession was pounding most of the globe,  the numbers of Canadians who feel that Canada is heading the “right direction” economically is relatively unchanged- from 52.2% in 2008 to 53.6% in 2010. This in itself a marker of consumer confidence, and if these numbers reflect the common feeling of Canadians, then they have not gained a great deal of confidence in the last couple of years.

Regionally, Quebec reported the lowest “right direction” answer, dropping from 52% in 2008 to 38.5 % in 2010. Confidence was highest on the Prairies, where 66.2 % thought the country was on the right track direction, while the Atlantic Provinces (57.4 %), Ontario (51.1 %) and British Columbia (54.8 %) represented the middle of the scale.

In responding to the question, “How would you rate Canada’s reputation in the world in the last year?”, 31.7 % replied that it had not improved or somewhat not improved, up from 22.6 % a year ago. According to Nanos, this is likely because of Canada’s failure to win a non-permanent seat on the UN Security Council in October, just weeks prior to the survey being taken.

Generally speaking, according to the numbers produced in the Nanos poll, the economic mood of Canadians is not bright and positive.

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