Homeowners pawns in housing debate
Canadian households are on the verge of financial ruin. We’re up to our eyeballs in debt, and even our cute little houses with the white picket fences are about to crumble to dust in a U.S. style meltdown.
Then again; maybe not. A debate on the financial health of the average Canadian is raging and has rarely been so polarized. Even global analysts from outside the country have weighed in on the matter.
YEA
Housing slowdown to worsen, cost 150,000 jobs, says mortgage group
Canada’s housing market is slowing dramatically in terms of both sales and construction, dragging down economic growth and putting some 150,000 jobs at risk in coming years, a mortgage industry association warns in its spring report.
The Canadian Association of Accredited Mortgage Professionals stops short of calling the ongoing slide that began about nine months ago a crash, but chief executive Jim Murphy says policy-makers should stop trying to tighten lending rules further and start thinking about helping for first-time purchasers.
“They’ve gone enough in terms of regulatory changes and we’re seeing a real slowdown in the overall housing market. The federal government wanted that to happen, but the question is how much … and what is that impact on the overall economy,” Murphy said Wednesday.
“Some people thought the market would come back(this spring). Well it hasn’t come back. It is a definite trend.”
Murphy notes that his organization never agreed with the perception that Canada had a housing bubble problem, but any concerns on that front have been dispelled following last summer’s action by Finance Minister Jim Flaherty and the bank regulator to tighten mortgage rules and loan underwriting practices.
Since then, home resale activity has fallen 8.3 per cent and housing starts by 15 per cent. They are likely to fall further, the report says.
CAAMP predicts that by mid-2015, national home construction will fall to about 150,000 units annually, or about 25-30 per cent less than the 205,000 average for 2011-2012. That will result in about 150,000 fewer construction and indirect jobs, such as in the real estate sector and support industries.
In the Toronto area, the tumble will be even more dramatic, with starts dropping 50 per cent to about 22,000, leading to a loss of about 35,000 jobs.
Vancouver — the other municipality known for its hot housing market — starts are expected to fall by a third to about 13,000, resulting in a loss of about 7,500 jobs.
Quebec urban areas are projected to lose about 15,000 starts and 20,000 jobs.
Among the major markets, Calgary and Edmonton are expected to buck the trend. The report says the two Alberta cities will see home construction activity increase, generating 2,500 additional jobs each.
“Until now, housing has played a major role in the recovery from the 2008/09 recession,” CAAMP chief economist Will Dunning notes. “That economic driver is disappearing as we see housing related jobs dry up and consumer confidence erode at a time when the national recovery is struggling to pick up steam.”
Last week, the Office of Superintendent for Financial Institutions gave notice it is looking into whether it needs to lower the amortization period to 25 years for homeowners with over 20 per cent equity, so-called conventional mortgages that do not require government-backed insurance.
“You question why all these things need to be done in an environment where the market is slowing dramatically,” said Murphy.
Instead, Murphy said he has asked Ottawa to consider indexing the RRSP homebuyers plans, or giving more flexibility to qualifying first-time buyers in terms of amortization periods to lower monthly payments.
There is also some good news in the report, including that most Canadian homeowners are having little difficulty meeting mortgage payments and are in fact paying off their debts faster than required.
Almost seven in 10 homeowners responding to an online survey said they have fixed mortgages and are paying a lower interest rate (3.52 per cent) than last year (3.64 per cent). Some 18 per cent of respondents said they had increased their payments in the past year and 16 per cent said they had made lump sum payments.
As well, most mortgage holders said they expect to repay their loan 3.4 years earlier than the 25 year amortization period.
The Canadian Association of Accredited Mortgage Professionals based its estimates and projections on a number of sources, including raw data and an online survey of about 2,000 homeowners and renters that was conducted in April by Maritz.
NAY
Canada’s Flaherty: No ‘doom and gloom’ in Canada housing market
There’s no “doom and gloom” in Canada’s housing market, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said on Monday, suggesting he sees a soft landing rather than a U.S.-style collapse as demand and prices cool.
“When I look at the housing market, I’m looking for the ‘doom and gloom.’ I don’t see the ‘doom and gloom,'” Flaherty told reporters, referring to market players who predict Canada has a housing bubble on the verge of bursting.
“I see some moderation in demand. This is a good thing,” Flaherty said.
Canada’s housing market was red hot in the years following the 2008-09 recession. But it began cooling in the middle of 2012 in the wake of government moves to tighten mortgage lending rules.
Flaherty wished “bad luck” to any big U.S. hedge funds betting short-selling the Canadian market in the belief the housing market will crash, in hopes of making a profit.
Most economists in Canada are forecasting a gradual downturn in housing but there are a few outliers warning of a pending disaster given the record-high debt load of Canadian households at a time when interest rates can only go up.
Maybe the bubble is an entirely different one after all ?
We’re in a Bubble and It’s Not the Internet. It’s Higher Education.
Canada in Housing Bubble
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