Canada’s brewing debt storm
Filed Under Main Content · Tagged: Bank Canada, Bank Of Canada, Borrowers, Canadians, Caution To The Wind, Cheap Money, Consumers, Day Of Reckoning, Disposable Income, Free Money, Globe And Mail, Household Debt, Low Interest Rates, Mortgage Rates, Recession, Slump, Spur, Trillion
The Globe and Mail-Canadian borrowers are fast approaching a day of reckoning.
Lured by cheap money to buy up, buy in, expand and make over, families have pushed credit levels to a record high.
Now, mortgage rates are beginning to creep up and the Bank of Canada is poised to retreat from the record-low interest rates it adopted to fight the recession and spur recovery.
The end of the free-money era has left consumers more vulnerable than ever, and those who threw caution to the wind could soon face costs they can’t handle.
Household debt has surged three time faster than income in recent years and now stands at a record high of more than $1-trillion. Put another way, Canadians owe about $1.47 for every dollar of disposable income. Even more remarkably, they took on more debt during the slump – a first for a recession – because borrowing was so cheap…
Canada’s brewing debt storm – The Globe and Mail
Should you be concerned about new mortgage rules?
Filed Under Main Content · Tagged: Borrowers, Federal Reserve, Fixed Mortgage, Fixed Rate Mortgage, Home Buyers, Interest Rates, New Mortgage, Principal Residence, Quarter Point, Short Answer, Speculators, Variable Rate Mortgages, Year Fixed Rate Mortgage
The Gazette- As of April 19, home-buyers will have to meet tougher standards to get a mortgage. Among the new rules is a requirement that borrowers be able to afford a five-year, fixed-rate mortgage,
even if they plan to stay short and variable. It will also be tougher for speculators to jump into the market as they’ll now have to make a 20% down payment on any property they don’t live in.
For those of us who simply own a home as principal residence the new rules don’t mean much. The real question is whether today’s tempting variable-rate mortgages offer a good value. The short answer is, they aren’t. After the U.S. Federal Reserve raised its discount rate a quarter point in mid-February, the writing is on the wall: Interest rates are about to rise, so you better lock in to a fixed term quickly, ideally before July…
Should you be concerned about new mortgage rules?
Should I be concerned about Ottawa’s new mortgage rules?
Filed Under Main Content · Tagged: Borrowers, Federal Reserve, Fixed Mortgage, Fixed Rate Mortgage, Home Buyers, Interest Rates, New Mortgage, Ottawa, Principal Residence, Quarter Point, Short Answer, Speculators, Variable Rate Mortgages, Year Fixed Rate Mortgage
Financial Post- As of April 19, home-buyers will have to meet tougher standards to get a mortgage. Among the new rules is a requirement that borrowers be able to afford a five-year, fixed-rate mortgage,
even if they plan to stay short and variable. It will also be tougher for speculators to jump into the market as they’ll now have to make a 20% down payment on any property they don’t live in.
For those of us who simply own a home as principal residence the new rules don’t mean much. The real question is whether today’s tempting variable-rate mortgages offer a good value. The short answer is, they aren’t. After the U.S. Federal Reserve raised its discount rate a quarter point in mid-February, the writing is on the wall: Interest rates are about to rise, so you better lock in to a fixed term quickly, ideally before July…
Should I be concerned about Ottawa’s new mortgage rules?
CMHC Mortgage Regulations to Restrict Real Estate Investment
Filed Under Main Content · Tagged: Borrowers, Cmhc Mortgage, Debt Service, Household Income, Invest, Kicker, Kitchener Waterloo, Mortgage Investment, Mortgage Regulations, People, Real Estate Investment, Real Estate Investment Properties, Rental Property, Waterloo Real Estate
Kitchener Waterloo Real Estate Investment Properties- Currently when you buy a rental property, CMHC will allow you to use a 80% rental offset, which means that they used to take 80% of the gross rental income that the income property generated, and subtract that from the borrowers total debt, to establish the total debt service (TDS) ratio.
What that means is that you don’t have to have the household income to cover 100% of the value of the rental property, like you do with a home you live in, because the bank will let you offset the debt using 80% of the revenue the rental produces (does that make sense?).
They’re changing this amount to 50%, which makes it much tougher for people to qualify for investment properties, but the real kicker is that…





