New rules cuff some mortgages to banks

The Gazette- A headlock would be the wrestling term to describe the hold Canadian banks will have on some consumers because of new, more strict mortgage rules.

We are already seeing the impact of the changes that came into effect on April 19, but were put in place well in advance by Canadian financial institutions. Consumers are increasingly selecting fixed-rate mortgages of five years or more because it’s easier to qualify for them.

On mortgages for terms of four years or less, including variable-rate mortgages, consumers must be able to pay based on the five-year fixed posted rate, which is now 6.1%. Go longer and you can use the rate on your contract, as low as 4.6%. No more than 32% of your gross income can cover principal and interest, property taxes and heat…

New rules cuff some mortgages to banks

Are Big Banks jumping the gun?

The Globe and Mail- Interest rates are rising – we all get that – but it looks like the Big Banks are pushing things a bit with mortgages.

After a pair of increases in the past two weeks, the posted Big Bank five-year fixed mortgage rate now stands at 6.25 per cent. Does that seem high? In fact, it’s just half a percentage point below the average level for the past decade.

We’re supposed to be in the early phase of what could be a long cycle of rate increases. The Bank of Canada hasn’t even started raising its overnight rate, which sets the trend for borrowing costs other than fixed-rate mortgages. The overnight rate could very well start rising June 1 (that’s the central bank’s next rate-setting date), but even then it’s not dead certain that rates will move…

Are Big Banks jumping the gun? – The Globe and Mail

Canadian mortgage rates on the rise

Times Colonist- Mortgage rates are on the upswing in Canada, signaling an end to historically low rates and an indication that the country’s housing market is finally poised to cool off.

Royal Bank, TD Canada Trust and Laurentian Bank announced Monday they are raising rates they charge on certain fixed mortgages, including the benchmark five-year mortgage, which will jump 60 basis points to 5.85 per cent effective Tuesday.

"This is actually a fairly large increase reflecting what’s happening in the bond market lately," said Benjamin Tal, senior economist with CIBC World Markets.

Anticipation over the Bank of Canada raising its overnight lending rate, possibly ahead of schedule, is pushing up bond yields, Tal said. And rising yields puts pressure on fixed-rate mortgages…

Canadian mortgage rates on the rise

Canadian banks boost mortgages

The Globe and Mail- Two of Canada’s largest banks are raising rates on some fixed-rate mortgages, a reminder that mortgage rates can go up before the central bank’s key interest rate does.

The move comes as many Canadians with variable-rate mortgages have been anxiously watching for signs of exactly when the Bank of Canada will begin hiking interest rates, in a bid to wait and lock into a fixed-rate mortgage at what they hope will be the ideal time.

Royal Bank of Canada (RY-T59.24-0.58-0.97%) , the country’s largest bank, said Monday morning that it is raising the rate on three-year closed fixed-rate mortgage by 0.20 percentage points to 4.35 per cent. The four-year closed rate will increase by 0.40 to 5.34 per cent, and the five-year closed rate will rise by 0.60 percentage points to 5.85 per cent.

Canadian banks boost mortgages – The Globe and Mail

Next Page »