27 Feb

The latest in mortgage news: BC government unveils details of its proposed home-flipping tax

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Posted by: Dean Kimoto

The British Columbia government today unveiled additional details of its proposed house flipping tax that was first introduced in last week’s budget.

The government said it plans to introduce the legislation in the spring. If passed, the new tax will take effect starting January 1, 2025.

The legislation would impose a tax on any home sold within two years from its purchase date, but includes exemptions for people facing “unavoidable life changes,” including death, divorce and job relocation or loss.

According to government figures, 7% of homes bought between 2020 and 2022 were resold within two years.

Homes sold within the first year that don’t fall under any of the exemptions would face a tax of 20% on the profits, with that rate falling progressively to zero over the second year.

“We know that people are struggling to find homes to rent or buy in areas that are close to work and their families,” Minister of Finance Katrine Conroy said in a statement. “That’s why Budget 2024 takes further steps to deliver more housing for people faster and make sure homes are lived in.”

The proposed new tax accompanies other measures introduced in last week’s budget, including:

  • Expansion of the First Time Homebuyers’ Program: First-time buyers of homes valued up to $835,000 will benefit from a property transfer tax exemption on the first $500,000 of their purchase price, with potential savings reaching $8,000. The government said this new exemption will benefit approximately 14,500 people, or about twice as many under previous exemptions.
  • Newly built home exemption: To encourage the purchase of new constructions, buyers of homes valued up to $1.1 million will benefit from the newly-built home exemption. This is an increase from the current $750,000 limit.
  • Rental home construction exemption: To lower the cost and encourage the construction of more rental units, eligible purpose-built rental buildings of four or more units will also receive a property transfer tax exemption that will run from January 1, 2025, until 2030.

Desjardins no longer offering mortgages for homes in certain flood zones

Desjardins Group has made changes to its underwriting guidelines and will no longer offer mortgages for properties that fall within certain flood zones.

According to media reports, parts of Île-Bizard and Île-Mercier in Quebec, which saw severe flooding in 2017 and 2019, will be impacted by the credit union’s decision.

“The impacts of climate change, including water damage, are growing in importance and causing substantial damage,” Desjardins said in a statement.

Buyers of properties where the seller already has a Desjardins mortgage will still be able to obtain financing for up to 65% of the loan if proper flood-protection measures are in place, according to media reports.

Quebec homebuying intentions remain strong despite economic challenges: survey

Homebuying intentions remain high in Quebec despite high interest rates and a challenging economy, according to the results of a new survey by Léger for the Société d’habitation du Québec (SHQ) and the Québec Professional Association of Real Estate Brokers (QPAREB).

The survey found that 22% of Quebecers are planning to purchase a property within the next five years, up slightly from the previous year. For younger households between the ages of 18 and 34, 49% say they expect to purchase in the next five years, up from 47% in 2022 a year earlier.

The expected average purchase price is $440,000, up 34% since 2020. “Households are therefore very aware of rising property prices in Quebec, but are nevertheless resigned to dealing with these prices and are hoping for a drop in interest rates before they consider taking action,” Charles Brant, QPAREB’s Market Analysis Director, said in a release.

However, the sharp rise in interest rates has made it more challenging to remain a homeowner, the survey found, with just 72% of Quebecers feeling they could meet their financial obligations in 2023, down from 86% in 2021.

Single-family homes are the preferred property choice, representing 81% of buying intentions. Intentions to purchase condos remain stable at 14%, despite a rise in purchase prices and a sharp 20% increase in condo fees over the past two years.

The survey of 4,162 people found that only 14% of homeowners are looking to sell in the next five years, pointing to a continued tightening of the already limited supply of housing.

This supply-demand imbalance has also trickled into the rental market, pushing average rent prices to $963 in 2023 from $862 in 2021, according to the survey.

Mortgage arrears held steady in November

Canada’s national arrears rate held steady in November, according to data from the Canadian Bankers Association.

The arrears rate, which tracks mortgages that are behind payments by three months or more, was unchanged at 0.17%. That works out to just over 8,560 mortgages in arrears out of a total of over 5.05 million.

This is well below the highs seen during the pandemic, when the arrears rate reached a peak of 0.27% in June 2020. The rate is highest in Saskatchewan (0.57%) and Alberta (0.33%), and lowest in British Columbia (0.13%) and Ontario (0.11%).

Real estate professionals saw revenues plunge in 2022: StatCan

Revenue from real estate agents and brokers fell by over 20% in 2022 in the wake of higher borrowing costs brought on by the Bank of Canada’s rate hikes, which took the key overnight target rate from 0.25% in January to 4.25% in December.

Recent figures from Statistics Canada show operating revenues from real estate agents and brokers fell to $20.9 billion in 2022, down 22.8% from $26.7 billion in 2021.

The declines in revenue were seen in almost all provinces, led by British Columbia and Ontario, which saws declines of 25.9% and 27.3%, respectively. Alberta was the only province to see revenues rise, which were up 5% from 2021 to 2022.

“Operating revenue in the real estate agents and brokers industry is expected to continue to decline in 2023, as most real estate associations reported continuing weakness in both residential home resale transactions and home prices across Canada,” the StatCan report noted. “The industry also faced affordability challenges because the cost of borrowing continued to increase in 2023.”

 

This article was written for Canadian Mortgage Trends by:

26 Feb

Unexpected inflation drop won’t hasten Bank of Canada’s rate cut plans, economists say

General

Posted by: Dean Kimoto

The Bank of Canada is still likely to wait until mid-year before delivering its first rate cut, despite January’s downside surprise in inflation, economists say.

Headline inflation came in below expectations with a 2.9% reading in January against expectations of 3.3% and December’s 3.4% pace. It’s the first time the headline CPI reading has fallen below 3% since June 2023 when it dipped to 2.8%.

The slowdown was driven largely by lower energy prices, specifically a 4% annual decline in gas prices, and a cooling of grocery prices, which came in at 3.4% compared to 4.7% in December.

“There is little debate on this one—it’s a much milder reading than expected, especially given the high-side surprise seen in last week’s round of U.S. inflation reports, a nice contrast,” wrote BMO chief economist Douglas Porter.

“Importantly, January can set the tone for inflation,” Porter added, “since firms often take the opportunity to adjust prices for the year in this month—and there was little sign of a big January bump this year.”

The Bank of Canada’s preferred measures of core inflation, which strip out food and energy prices, also trended downward. CPI-median eased to 3.3% (from 3.5% in December), while CPI-trim fell to 3.4% from 3.7%.

Shelter costs keeping upward pressure on inflation

Unsurprisingly, shelter costs continue to exert upward pressure on inflation, and actually rose in the month to an annualized +6.2% from +6% in December.

An ongoing supply-demand imbalance is also keeping upward pressure on rent inflation, which picked up to 7.8% from 7.5% in December. As we reported last week, average asking rents were up another 0.8% month-over-month to a record $2,200.

The Bank of Canada’s own interest rate hikes are also continuing to work their way through the economy, with the mortgage interest cost component of the CPI basket up 27.4% year-over-year.

“Shelter inflation has become the biggest hurdle preventing the Bank from cutting interest rates,” TD economist Leslie Preston wrote in a research note.

“Shelter inflation will remain sticky as higher interest rates feed through to mortgage interest costs with a lag, and undersupply of housing continues to boost rent prices,” RBC economists Nathan Janzen and Abbey Xu wrote. However, “the most likely path for inflation going forward is still lower with per-capita GDP and consumer spending continuing to decline,” they added.

What the inflation figures mean for Bank of Canada rate cuts

Most economists say the first Bank of Canada rate cut is still on track for its June 5 meeting, believing the central bank will want to see additional signs of easing inflation pressures.

“While no doubt welcome news, the Bank of Canada will likely remain cautious in the face of still-strong wage gains, firm services prices, and the reality that core inflation is still holding above 3%,” Porter wrote. “But clearly today’s result makes rate cuts much more plausible in coming months.”

RBC’s Xu and Janzen pointed out that stronger-than-expected job gains in January are another factor that will likely keep the Bank on the sidelines for now.

“A strong start to 2024 for labour markets gives the BoC more leeway to wait for firmer signs that inflation is getting back under control before pivoting to interest rate cuts,” they wrote. “As of now, our base case assumes the BoC starts to lower interest rates around mid-year.”

Earlier this month, Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem told a parliamentary finance committee that the central bank doesn’t need to wait until inflation is all the way back to its neutral target of 2% before it starts cutting rates.

However, he added that “you don’t want to lower them until you’re convinced…that you’re really on a path to get there, and that’s really where we are right now.”

Following today’s inflation release, bond markets raised their rate-cuts odds slightly. They are currently pricing in a 29% chance of a quarter-point cut in March, and an 11% chance of 50 bps worth of easing by June.

 

This article was written for Canadian Mortgage Trends by:

 

23 Feb

Canadian Home Sales Continued to Rise in January as Markets Tightened

General

Posted by: Dean Kimoto

Canadian home sales continued their upward trend in january as prices fell modestly

The Canadian Real Estate Association announced today that home sales over the last two months show signs of recovery. National sales were up 3.7% between December 2023 and January 2024, building on the 7.9% gain in December. The chart below shows that despite the two-month rise, sales remain 9% below their ten-year average. According to Shaun Cathcart, CREA’s Senior Economist, “Sales are up, market conditions have tightened quite a bit, and there has been anecdotal evidence of renewed competition among buyers; however, in areas where sales have shot up most over the last two months, prices are still trending lower. Taken together, these trends suggest a market that is starting to turn a corner but is still working through the weakness of the last two years.”

National gains were once again led by the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), Hamilton-Burlington, Montreal, Greater Vancouver and the Fraser Valley, Calgary, and most markets in Ontario’s Greater Golden Horseshoe and cottage country.

The actual (not seasonally adjusted) number of transactions was 22% above January 2023, the most significant year-over-year gain since May 2021. While that sounds like a resounding rise in activity, January 2023 posted the weakest transaction level in nearly twenty years.

There is pent-up demand for housing, and recent buyers are lured back into the market by the recent price decline and the fear that prices could rise significantly once the Bank of Canada starts cutting interest rates.

New Listings

The number of newly listed homes increased 1.5% month-over-month in January, although it remains close to the lowest level since last June.

“The market has been showing some early signs of life over the last couple of months, probably no surprise given how much pent-up demand is out there,” said Larry Cerqua, Chair of CREA.

With sales up by more than new listings in January, the national sales-to-new listings ratio tightened further to 58.8% compared to under 50% just three months earlier. The long-term average for the national sales-to-new listings ratio is 55%. A sales-to-new listings ratio between 45% and 65% is generally consistent with balanced housing market conditions, with readings above and below this range indicating sellers’ and buyers’ markets, respectively.

There were 3.7 months of inventory on a national basis at the end of January 2024, down from 3.8 months at the end of December and 4.1 months at the end of November. The long-term average is about five months of inventory.

Home Prices

The Aggregate Composite MLS® Home Price Index (HPI) fell by 1.2% month-over-month in January 2024, adding to the 1.1% price decline in December.

Price descents of late have been predominantly in Ontario markets, particularly the Greater Golden Horseshoe and, to a lesser extent, British Columbia. Elsewhere in Canada, prices are mostly holding firm or, in some cases (Alberta and Newfoundland and Labrador), continuing to rise.

The Aggregate Composite MLS® HPI was up 0.4% year-over-year in January 2024, similar to readings over the past six months.

Bottom Line
Sales in December and January generally run at about half the peak spring season pace. That could be especially true this year, with interest rates likely to begin falling by mid-year. A strong housing rebound is coming. Housing markets have bottomed, buyer sentiment is improving and fixed mortgage rates have started declining.

Housing markets in Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal are relatively balanced again, and with the spring season, we will see a rise in new listings.

In other news, the inflation data released yesterday in the US were higher than expected, pushing rate-cut forecasts further out. With the strength in the US economy, the 5-year government of Canada bond yield has quietly risen more than 50 basis points this year.

Canada’s Housing Minister, Sean Fraser, said he expects the fall in interest rates this year to encourage builders to ramp up their activity, helping to alleviate some of the country’s crunched housing supply. At a news conference yesterday, the minister said, “My expectation is if we see a dip in interest rates over the course of this year, a lot of the developers that I’ve spoken to will start those projects that are marginal today.”

Sean Fraser, asked whether he’s concerned that Bank of Canada rate cuts will unleash pent-up demand and higher home prices, said lower borrowing costs should also lead to an increase in supply. Fraser said whatever happens with rates, the government’s course of action will remain the same. “We need to do everything we can as quickly as we can to build as many homes as we can. And that’s going to be true today and six months from now, regardless of what may happen in the interest rate environment that we’re dealing with.”

At a news conference last week, Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem said that while he’s heard from developers who’ve indicated higher rates are delaying projects, lowering rates would have a more significant impact on demand.

“It’s very clear in the data that the effects of interest rates on demand are much bigger than those on supply,” he told reporters.

Please Note: The source of this article is from SherryCooper.com/category/articles/
20 Feb

Great News On The Inflation Front Cause Big Bond Rally

General

Posted by: Dean Kimoto

Canadian inflation falls to 2.9% in january, boosting rate cut prospects

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 2.9% year-over-year in January, down sharply from December’s 3.4% reading. The most significant contributor to the deceleration was a 4% decline in y/y gasoline prices, compared to a 1.4% rise the month before (see chart below). Excluding gasoline, headline CPI slowed to 3.2% y/y, down from 3.5% in December.

Headline inflation of 2.9% marks the first time since June that inflation has moved into the Bank of Canada 1%-to-3% target band and only the second time to breach that band since March 2021.

Grocery price inflation also decelerated broadly in January to 3.4% y/y, down from 4.7% in December. Lower prices for airfares and travel tours also contributed to the headline deceleration. Prices for clothing and footwear were 1.3% lower than levels from a year ago, potentially reflecting the discounting of winter clothing after a milder-than-usual winter in much of the country.

The shelter component of inflation remains by far the largest contributor to annual inflation. The effect of past central bank rate hikes feeds into the CPI with a lag. The y/y growth in mortgage interest costs edged lower in January but still posted a 27.4% rise and accounted for about a quarter of the total annual inflation. Inflation, excluding mortgage costs, is now at 2.0%. Home rent prices continue to rise, but another component under shelter – homeowners’ replacement costs inched lower on slower house price growth.

On a monthly basis, the CPI was unchanged in January, following a 0.3% decline in December. On a seasonally adjusted monthly basis, the CPI fell 0.1% in January, the first decline since May 2020.

The Bank of Canada’s preferred core inflation measures, the trim and median core rates, exclude the more volatile price movements to assess the level of underlying inflation. The CPI trim slowed three ticks to 3.4%, and the median declined two ticks to 3.3% from year-ago levels, as shown in the chart below.

Notably, the share of the CPI basket of goods and services growing at more than 5% has declined from the peak of 68% in May 2022 to 28% in January 2024.

Bottom Line

The next meeting of the Bank of Canada Governing Council is on March 6. While January’s inflation report was better than expected and shows that the breadth of inflation is narrowing, it is still well above the level consistent with the 2% inflation target.

Shelter inflation will remain sticky as higher mortgage rates over the course of last year filter into the index and the acute housing shortage boosts rents.

The Bank of Canada will remain cautious in the face of still-high wage gains and core inflation measures above 3%. I hold to my view that the Bank will begin cutting rates in June.

Please Note: The source of this article is from SherryCooper.com/category/articles/
16 Feb

Housing supply gap worse than first thought: 5 million extra homes needed by 2030, CIBC says

General

Posted by: Dean Kimoto

When the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) announced that Canada would need an extra 3.5 million homes by 2030 to keep up with demand, the figure was already staggering.

But a new report from CIBC deputy chief economist Benjamin Tal suggests the housing supply gap is even worse than first thought.

In his research note entitled, ‘The housing crisis is a planning crisis,’ Tal argues that the total number of homes needed by 2030—above and beyond the current pace of construction—is actually closer to five million homes.

He said the discrepancy is due to a lack of proper planning around population, with growth targets consistently falling short of reality. The biggest reason for this, he explains, is an under-estimate of non-permanent residents, which he says make up more than 90% of the forecasting gap.

“You cannot build an adequate supply of housing for population growth that you fail to forecast,” Tal wrote.

“That significant forecasting/planning gap is a direct result of the fact that currently there are no credible forecasts, targets, or capacity plans across governments for non-permanent residents—the population which accounts for the vast majority of the planning shortfall,” he added. “That must change.”

Can’t plan for what’s not in the plan, Tal says

Tal notes that the planning process for municipalities to accommodate future growth is a lengthy process, taking up to a decade to “identify, service and allocate land for housing, then [to] auction that land for developers to construct and sell housing units on.”

“Therefore, accurate forecasts of population growth are key for adequate housing supply.”

But past forecasts have regularly missed the mark.

When Statistics Canada and CMHC estimated population and housing demand 10 years ago, they expected the country’s population would reach 38.7 million people. Instead, Canada’s population passed the 40-million mark as of June 2023.

“That was a big miss,” Tal said. “The reality is that today municipalities are facing 1.4
million more people than they were told they needed to plan for— in total that’s a shortfall of almost three years of housing supply.”

Even more recent population forecasts have failed to keep up with the rapid pace of population growth, with Statistics Canada’s August 2003 projections falling short by roughly 700,000 people.

What can be done?

Last month, Immigration Minister Marc Miller announced a national cap on the number of international students accepted into the country, which is expected to reduce intake by about 35% to a total of 364,000 students in 2024.

While Tal called the measure a “bold move in the right direction,” he says more still needs to be done.

“Even if the cap works as designed, the strong pace of growth of other non-permanent residents would keep Canada’s population growth closer to 2% annualized growth,” Tal says, which is above CMHC’s current 1.5% annual growth projections for the next seven years, or about six million additional international arrivals beyond what is forecast.

What is most needed, Tal argues, is “meaningful forecasting and integrated planning” that is applied to all permanent and temporary visa approvals.

“A full matrix of targets by application type and year, as exists for permanent residents, is an essential step to assist planning at all levels, for the Ministry of Housing, provinces/territories, municipalities, as well as for the development industry,” Tal says. “Transparent, timely, and vetted [forecast] sourcing is key.”

 

This article was written for Canadian Mortgage Trends by:

12 Feb

Latest in mortgage news: 50% of Canadians say high interest rates are negatively impacting their love life

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Posted by: Dean Kimoto

As Cupid readies his arrows for Valentine’s Day, a new survey has uncovered that high interest rates are taking their toll on Canadians’ romantic life.

Nearly half of respondents said higher mortgage or rent payments have (35.2%) or may have (14%) negatively impacted their love life in the past 12 months, according to the survey commissioned by 360Lending.

And it’s not just romance that higher shelter costs are impacting. Asked how they’re able to afford their mortgage, a quarter of respondents (24%) said they aren’t travelling and 17% said they aren’t going out. Another 11% said they have cancelled their streaming services, such as Netflix.

“We’re seeing that higher mortgage rates are seriously costing Canadians love, relationships and generally joy,” said Ringo So, mortgage agent and managing partner of 360Lending.

However, the survey also found many are willing to spend less on romance if it meant being able to afford a down payment on a house or condo, with almost half of Canadians (45%) prioritizing homeownership over ‘being in love.’

Mortgage arrears rate held steady in November

Canada’s national arrears rate was unchanged in November, according to data from the Canadian Bankers Association.

The arrears rate, which tracks mortgages that are behind payments by three months or more, was 0.17%, unchanged from October. That works out to just 8,560 mortgages in arrears out of a total of over 5.05 million.

This is well below the highs seen during the pandemic, when the arrears rate reached a peak of 0.27% in June 2020, but also up from the all-time low of 0.14% reached in 2022.

 

With interest rates still at record-high levels and an estimated $600 billion worth of mortgage rates coming up for renewal this year and next, expectations are for arrears to continue rising to more historical levels.

Improving consumer outlook suggests GDP rise in 2024: Nanos

Consumer confidence moved upward this week along with forward-looking expectations, according to a weekly survey by Bloomberg and Nanos.

The Expectations Sub-indice, which projects into the future, reached 51.46—its highest level since May 2022. Four weeks ago it was at 49.25.

“Based on the past track record of the index as a leading indicator, this suggests a likely GDP lift in the latter part of 2024,” noted Nik Nanos, Chief Data Scientist.

Looking at specific measures of consumer confidence, sentiment on the Canadian economy deteriorated compared to last week, while sentiment towards personal finances, job security and real estate all improved.

 

This article was written for Canadian Mortgage Trends by: