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  • #16
    Re: Socialist Canadian Housing Market Surges Safely Ahead

    Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
    Thanks for digging that out and reminding everybody. Maybe we should tag you "The metalman of the North"? [Or is metalman the Fiat Currency of the South...;)].
    Thanks - I think I'll take that as a compliment

    I have read some of Aetius' articles before, and I'm impressed with his knowledge and style - but I still disagree with his assertion that we have stricter mortgage rules in Canada. I think we're just better at hiding the issues and kidding ourselves.

    Apparently - I'm not the only one who feels this way ...

    Ottawa weighs stricter mortgage rules

    Ottawa is considering new rules that would force banks to use tougher criteria to evaluate mortgage borrowers, a move to ensure that consumers aren't taking on more debt than they can handle when they buy a home.
    The key proposal under discussion would see the creation of new conditions the banks would have to follow when determining whether a customer can afford a mortgage, according to sources. Those rules would require banks to consider whether a person who takes out a variable-rate mortgage on a home can continue to make the payments if interest rates were to go up significantly.
    ...
    We're blowing bubbles too ...

    gdpit_com_55377760_129.gif

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    • #17
      Re: Socialist Canadian Housing Market Surges Safely Ahead

      Originally posted by lsa420 View Post
      We've had this Canadian housing bubble discussion a few times on the threads. I'm not sure what to think with all the various commentary. I was up in Vancouver in September and the housing market seemed pricey to me at best. In any case, here are the latest stats.

      Average weekly income in BC: $812 - assuming this is earned every week, that's $42,224 for the year.

      http://www.bcstats.gov.bc.ca/pubs/ee...ata.pdf#page=3

      As for the housing market, if my eyes are working correctly, the average price of a home in BC (4Q09) is about $500,000.

      http://www.bcrea.bc.ca/economics/trends/Province_lg.gif

      Does this seem problematic, or is just me?
      And who has an $812 per week reliable and steady income in BC? --- just a handful of feminists in the government, and no-one else. The sad truth is that very few people have jobs of any kind in BC. That is why the BC economy is dead: no-one has money.

      A handful of privileged people own the real estate in BC, but no-one else. Retired military, retired civil servants, and retired teachers own most of the best real estate in BC, especially in Vancouver and Victoria.

      Phoning my MLA last week about the sorry state of the BC economy, I felt like I was communicating from the Moon. Proposing the doubling of speed limits on roads, road improvements, building power plants, developing natural resources, opening up land for urban development, lowering land prices, easing the development process, lowering the cost of utilities, helping small business people, and giving homes natural-gas central-heating--- all of it was like talking to the Earth from the Moon. I was treated as if I were a mental case or an alien from another world.
      Last edited by Starving Steve; February 11, 2010, 01:08 PM.

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      • #18
        Re: Socialist Canadian Housing Market Surges Safely Ahead

        I have done a little more reading on the subject (which I suppose I should have done prior to posting, eh?) and while I'm not willing to agree completely, I certainly have abroad enough view now to understand your point.

        I do believe Canada is more tightly regulated...perhaps it's just a question of magnitude....but also, there is something to be said for that dull, unadventurous Canadian character as well. For a period of years I had homes in both the US and Canada from which I worked, and there really is a dramatic difference between Canadians and their stuff and Americans and their stuff.

        It would make an interesting paper, comparing the differences in home ownership and the effect those differences have on the respective national economies. The proximity of each would only amplify the result.
        ScreamBucket.com

        Comment


        • #19
          Re: Socialist Canadian Housing Market Surges Safely Ahead

          Originally posted by Aetius Romulous View Post
          It would make an interesting paper, comparing the differences in home ownership and the effect those differences have on the respective national economies. The proximity of each would only amplify the result.
          I had posted this in one of the Select Forums a little while ago which I found over at the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. It won't answer all the questions - but it's a start. In some ways it actually supports some of your thinking. I just happen to think that the last chapter hasn't been written yet - and time will tell. I have zero faith in Jim Flaherty & Mark Carney "stick handling" this into a positive outcome for us citizens of Canada.

          A number of us are still wondering what will be the trigger that bursts the Canadian Housing bubble. We're all here to learn from one another, and as free thinkers, determine our own conclusions and course of action.

          Quote:

          Economic Commentary

          Why Didn’t Canada’s Housing Market Go Bust?

          James MacGee
          Housing markets in the United States and Canada are similar in many respects, but each has fared quite differently since the onset of the financial crisis. A comparison of the two markets suggests that relaxed lending standards likely played a critical role in the U.S. housing bust.
          Despite their many points of similarity, housing markets in the United States and Canada have fared quite differently since the onset of the financial crisis. Unlike the U.S., Canada has not experienced a dramatic increase in mortgage defaults, nor has any Canadian bank required a government bailout. As a result, observers such as The Economist have pointed to Canada as “a country that got things right.”

          The different housing market outcomes in Canada and the U.S. can tell us something about the underlying causes of the housing boom and subsequent bust. In particular, they can be used to evaluate the roles that low interest rates and relaxed lending standards played in the boom and bust.

          Some observers blame monetary policy for lowering interest rates over 2002–2005, pushing up housing demand, increasing residential investment, and raising housing prices. In this view, the monetary-policy-induced housing boom thus set the stage for an inevitable housing bust.

          Others contend that relaxed lending standards, highlighted by the rise in subprime lending, played a critical role. This loosening of standards led to an increase in housing demand, as mortgages were issued to households that were likely to have trouble making the mortgage payments. This extension of credit to risky borrowers helped fuel a housing boom and set the stage for the resulting surge in defaults, which were a big factor in the housing “bust.”

          The Canada and U.S. housing market comparison suggests that relaxed lending standards likely played a critical role in the U.S. housing bust. Monetary policy was very similar in both countries from 2000 to 2008, but housing prices rose much faster in the U.S. than in Canada. This suggests that some other factor both drove the more rapid appreciation in U.S. prices and set the stage for the housing bust. A likely candidate is cross-country differences in the structure and regulation of subprime lending markets. That mortgage delinquencies began to climb before the recession in the U.S. but only began to rise recently in Canada (after the economic slowdown began), points to the significance of those structural and regulatory differences in explaining the U.S. housing crash.

          Canadian and U.S. Housing Market Trends

          Canada and the U.S. experienced significant increases in house prices and residential investment from 2000 to 2006, though prices in Canada appreciated more slowly. Figure 1 plots the S&P/Case-Shiller 20 city composite index and the (Canadian) Teranet-National Bank 6 city composite index. Both series are based on repeat sales, making these series a closer approximation to a “constant-quality” price index of nominal home prices than average house price sales. The Case-Shiller and Teranet series indicate that over 2000–2006, U.S. prices appreciated nearly twice as much as Canadian houses. However, Canadian house prices continued to appreciate until late 2008, and are now nearly 80 percent higher than in 2000.

          1. Housing Prices

          Sources: U.S.: S&P/Case-Shiller (20-city); Canada: Teranet (6-city).
          The counterpart to rapid house price appreciation has been an increase in the ratio of mortgage debt to disposable income. While the comparison is complicated by different definitions of the household sector and debt categories in the Flow of Funds accounts, the trends are similar to those of house prices. Between 2000 and 2006, the ratio of mortgage debt to disposable income in the U.S. increased by roughly 50 percent, jumping from two-thirds to over 100 percent. In Canada, the increase was roughly half as large, with the debt-income ratio moving from 70 to 90 percent.

          The potential risks of increased household mortgage debt depend critically upon its distribution across borrowers. To see how the distribution of mortgage debt has changed we examine the distribution of the ratio of the outstanding loan to house value (the LTV) of borrowers. A high LTV implies that a small decline in the house price would leave the owner with negative equity. Negative equity is problematic as it removes the option for a homeowner who is unable to meet their mortgage payments to sell their home to repay the mortgage.

          As figure 2 illustrates, Canada has significantly fewer households with LTV ratios above 80 percent than the U.S. Before the housing bust, roughly 21 percent of American households with mortgages had LTV ratios above 80 percent, versus 15 percent of Canadian households. Restricting attention to households with LTV above 90 percent the comparison is even more striking: roughly 12 percent in the U.S. versus just over 6 percent in Canada.

          2. Distribution of Mortgages by Loan-to-Value Ratio (percent)



          A surprising fact about these LTV ratios is how little the distribution of U.S. mortgages by loan-to-value changed during the housing boom. This is surprising given that the rapid house price appreciation acted to lower the LTV ratios of existing mortgages. Working in the opposite direction were two forces. First, some households undid the effect of higher house prices by extracting equity. Second, the rise in subprime and Alt-A mortgage originations from roughly 1.4 million in 2003 to 3 million in 2005 was accompanied by an increase in the median LTV of new subprime mortgages from 90 percent to 100 percent (as documented in Mayer, Pence, and Sherlund, 2009).

          While broadly similar trends were occurring in house prices and mortgage debt in the U.S. and Canada, very different patterns of mortgage delinquencies and defaults were emerging. The best available comparison is for delinquencies on prime mortgages (which account for the bulk of mortgage credit) in the two countries (figure 3). Prior to 2006, delinquencies were comparable in both countries (and were slightly higher in Canada). While delinquencies increased more than four-fold in the U.S. after 2007, as of mid 2009 there has been little sign of an increase in mortgage delinquencies in Canada. A similar story holds in the subprime market. Researchers Mayer, Pence, and Sherlund reported that 8 percent of the U.S. subprime mortgages originated in 2007 had defaulted after 12 months, as opposed to 1.5 percent over 2000–2004. The available Canadian data also features an increase in subprime mortgage delinquencies, but the delinquency rate in 2007 was still under 2 percent, according to the Financial System Review in June 2008.

          3. Mortgage Delinquency Rates (90+ days delinquent)

          Sources: U.S.: Mortgage Bankers Association. National Delinquency Survey; Canada: Canadian Bankers Association (converted to quarterly data from monthly by averaging).
          Notes: The U.S. delinquency rate is the number of mortgages past due 90 or more days as a percent of the total number of mortgages at the end of the period. It does not include loans in the process of foreclosure. The Canadian rate is the percent of total mortgages 3 months or more in arrears.
          These different patterns in delinquencies occurred during a period of similar macroeconomic performance. Unemployment rates were stable throughout 2007 and early 2008, at roughly 5 percent in the U.S. and 6 percent in Canada. The timing of the recent deterioration in labor markets has also been similar, with unemployment rates rising to 9.4 percent (U.S.) and 8.6 percent (Canada) by July 2009. What these data reveal is that mortgage delinquencies began to increase in the United States before the rise in unemployment, but in Canada they remained low and only began to increase after the rise in unemployment in 2008. That difference is a key clue to determining what caused the housing bust.

          Monetary Policy and the U.S. Housing Bust

          The low interest rate policy of the Federal Reserve over 2001–2005 is often cited as a key factor in the U.S. housing bust. The main narrative is that by lowering short-term interest rates, the Federal Reserve pushed down (longer-maturity) mortgage interest rates. This policy increased demand for housing, leading to upward pressure on housing prices, which encouraged builders to ramp up construction of new homes. This led to an “oversupply” of new homes, which triggered the housing bust.

          The claim that interest rates were too low over 2001–2005 is motivated by a couple of observations. First, the federal funds rate was low by historical standards: declining from over 6 percent in early 2001 to 1 percent in 2003 and remaining low until 2005 (see figure 4). Second, interest rates over this period were much lower than those predicted by the Taylor rule for monetary policy (which relates the Federal Reserve target rate to inflation and GDP) over 2002 to 2006.

          The Bank of Canada also made dramatic reductions in its target interest rate over 2001–2002. One might argue that Canadian monetary policy was not quite as “loose” as that in the U.S. as it maintained a higher overnight rate over 2002 to 2004. But a case can be made that Canadian and American monetary policy were very similar, at least in terms of the housing market. Ahrend, Cournede and Price (2008) estimate deviations from the Taylor rule for Canada and the U.S. over 2001–2006 and find that the cumulative deviations were nearly identical.

          4. Central Bank Target Rates

          Source: International Monetary Fund,International Financial Statistics. U.S.: federal funds rate; Canada: bank rate (−0.25).
          In addition, mortgage interest rates—the main direct channel through which monetary policy impacts the housing market—tracked each other closely in the two countries. Unlike the U.S., where the mainstay of the mortgage market is the 30-year fixed mortgage, the most common mortgage product in Canada is a five-year fixed rate mortgage (with a 25-year amortization period). As figure 5 illustrates, the two benchmark mortgage interest rates move closely with one another until after the beginning of the U.S. housing market crisis, when U.S. rates fall significantly below Canadian rates.

          5. Benchmark Mortgage Interest Rates


          Source: U.S.: Federal Housing Administration/Haver Analytics (30-year fixed nonjumbo); Canada: Bank of Canada website (V122521=Conventional mortgage, 5-year).
          The similarity of the impact of monetary policy and the absence of a housing market bust in Canada suggest that some other factor must have been present in the U.S. to generate the boom and bust. This is not to suggest that “loose” monetary policy did not put upward pressure on housing prices—indeed, both Canada and the U.S. experienced substantial levels of house price appreciation. However, the Canada-U.S comparison suggests that some other factor drove both the more rapid house appreciation and set the groundwork for a U.S. housing bust.

          Relaxed Lending Standards: Different Subprime Lending Booms

          The other leading explanation of the housing boom and bust relies critically on relaxed lending standards. This story is linked to the dramatic rise in subprime lending and high levels of loan securitization, which some commentators have argued reduced the incentives for mortgage originators to maintain underwriting standards. This is one area where there was a significant difference between the two countries, both in the size and nature of the subprime market and in the fraction of mortgages securitized.

          The subprime markets in the U.S. and Canada include households with tarnished credit histories as well as borrowers with difficult-to-document income sources. Subprime lending has grown rapidly in both countries, though the magnitude has been far more striking in the U.S. While subprime mortgages accounted for less than 5 percent of mortgage originations in the U.S. in 1994, a fifth of all mortgages originated between 2004–2006 were subprime, according to data reported by James Barth in 2009.

          But while subprime lending also increased in Canada, the subprime market remains much smaller than in the U.S. The most cited estimate is that subprime lenders had a market share of roughly 5 percent in 2006—compared to 22 percent in the U.S. (Mortgage Architects, 2007). Moreover, the Canadian subprime market never expanded significantly into newer products, such as interest-only or negative-amortization mortgages, whose popularity grew rapidly in the U.S. from 2003 to 2006. Instead, the Canadian subprime market mainly offered products popularized in the U.S. during the 1990s, such as longer amortization periods for loans (from 25 to 40 years), and mainly targeted near-prime borrowers.

          Securitization has also been less common in Canada than in the United States, with roughly 25 percent of Canadian mortgages securitized in 2007 versus nearly 60 percent in the U.S. The Canadian securitization market has grown rapidly over the past decade, rising from roughly 5 percent of mortgages in 1998 to over 25 percent in 2008. However, in many ways, the Canadian market resembles the early stages of the U.S. mortgage securitization market, as most securitized mortgages in Canada are backed by an explicit government guarantee. This government guarantee requires limits on borrowers’ debt-service ratios and amortization periods, which makes it more difficult for lenders to offer some types of subprime loans.

          The different magnitude of the subprime lending boom in the two countries is consistent with differences outlined above between the Canadian and U.S. housing markets over the past 10 years. The rapid growth of the subprime market provided an additional boost to demand in the U.S. that is consistent with the more rapid house price appreciation in the U.S. than in Canada.

          The subprime story is also consistent with the different pattern of mortgage delinquencies in Canada and the U.S. In the U.S., mortgage delinquencies for both prime and nonprime mortgages began to rise before the recession began and unemployment rates began to climb. In contrast, mortgage delinquencies in Canada have only recently begun to increase—after unemployment rates started rising and the Canadian and world economies slowed sharply in the fall of 2008.

          Finally, the relaxed lending story is consistent with the fact that the U.S. experienced a housing bust over 2007–2009 while Canada did not. While the expansion of subprime lending provided a temporary boost to housing price growth rates, when prices stopped rising, the inability of some borrowers to refinance homes they could not afford led to a spike of delinquencies. The resulting increase in liquidation and foreclosure sales put additional downward pressure on house prices, which in turn pushed more borrowers into default. This “negative feedback” cycle helped push a correction in the housing market into a housing bust.

          One possible critique of this argument is that while Canada has not yet experienced a housing bust, it is likely to experience one in the next year. Indeed, a recent Merrill-Lynch-Canada report noted that Canadian house prices over the past decade closely resemble U.S. house prices with a two-year lag (see figure 1). Based on this, they concluded that Canada was also likely to experience a large decline in house prices over the coming year. Canada’s smaller subprime market share and fewer households with high LTV ratios, however, suggest that the country is less likely to see the rapid increase in defaults that helped trigger the bust in U.S. housing prices. So far the incoming data suggest that the Canadian housing market is likely to experience a housing market slowdown rather than a bust.

          Why Was the Subprime Market in Canada Smaller?

          Given the key role played by the “subprime” market, the question is why the Canadian subprime market was both smaller and levels of securitization were lower than in the U.S. While it is difficult to disentangle the reasons why Canada avoided the subprime boom, some factors can be identified that may have contributed to the differences in the Canadian and U.S. subprime markets.

          Perhaps the simplest story is that Canada was “lucky” to be a late adopter of U.S. innovations rather than an innovator in mortgage finance. While the subprime share of the Canadian market was small, it was growing rapidly prior to the onset of the U.S. subprime crisis. In response to the U.S. crisis, some subprime lenders exited the Canadian market due to difficulties in securing funding. In addition, the Canadian government moved in July 2008 to tighten the standards for mortgage insurance required for high LTV loans originated by federally regulated financial institutions. This further limited the ability of Canadian banks to directly offer subprime-type products to borrowers.

          There are also several institutional details that played a role. The Canadian market lacks a counterpart to Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, both of which played a significant role in the growth of securitization in the U.S. In addition, bank capital regulation in Canada treats off-balance sheet vehicles more strictly than the U.S., and the stricter treatment reduces the incentive for Canadian banks to move mortgage loans to off-balance sheet vehicles. Finally, as noted above, the fact that the government-mandated mortgage insurance for high LTV loans issued by Canadian banks effectively made it impossible for banks to offer certain subprime products. This likely slowed the growth of the subprime market in Canada, as nonbank intermediaries had to organically grow origination networks.

          A Challenge for Policymakers

          The Canada-U.S. comparison suggests the low interest rate policy of the central banks in both countries contributed to the housing boom over 2001–2006 and that a relaxation of lending standards in the U.S. was the critical factor in setting the stage for the housing bust. A caveat worth emphasizing, however, is that the Canada-U.S. comparison tells us little about what would have happened if U.S. monetary policy had been tighter earlier. Tighter monetary policy in the early part of the decade may have helped to limit the subprime boom by slowing the rate of house price appreciation over 2002–2006. The Canada-U.S. comparison does, however, highlight the practical challenge facing policymakers in assessing whether a rapid run-up in asset prices is a bubble or a “sustainable” movement in market prices.




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          • #20
            Re: Socialist Canadian Housing Market Surges Safely Ahead

            or with the graphics

            http://itulip.com/forums/showthread....Gee#post138288

            Originally posted by Fiat Currency View Post
            I had posted this in one o

            Comment


            • #21
              Re: Socialist Canadian Housing Market Surges Safely Ahead

              My thesis is that real estate is something real, something tangible, something that people can use, and that is why real estate is now at record highs: interest rates are far too low. So people have placed their money into something real, stoxx, commodities, or real estate, especially the latter. The central bankers have really blown this.

              I built my garage in 2009 because I was worried about the beaver buck, in fact, all world paper money. So the garage was real, and the garage got built. The same thing with my cedar shake roof; it was real, and it got built.

              Real things are a redemption sink for paper money, especially hot paper that earns nothing in the banks.

              The end to all this will come when interest rates finally go up. Then it all comes apart. That is why the central bankers have "lunched" this. Even a modest rise in interest rates, perhaps as little as 2%, would change the game on just about everything, and especially in real estate. So in the end, we have the crash that the zero interest rate policy was supposed to avert..... But a crash postponed artificially by the ZIRP would be a worse crash than ever when it arrives, and the crash can't be postponed forever with a ZIRP. So the pressures are building for the reckoning.

              It is sort of like running a business and paying everyone with hot cheques. It works until it doesn't, and the longer it goes on, the worse the reckoning.
              Last edited by Starving Steve; February 11, 2010, 06:38 PM.

              Comment


              • #22
                Re: Socialist Canadian Housing Market Surges Safely Ahead

                Originally posted by Aetius Romulous View Post
                Tavia Grant


                Globe and Mail Update Published on Monday, Feb. 08, 2010 8:35AM EST Last updated on Monday, Feb. 08, 2010 6:37PM EST



                "Canadian house prices will hit a record $337,500, on average, this year and sales activity should also burst through an all-time high, a real-estate report predicted Monday.



                National average home prices are expected to rise 5.4 per cent, with gains in all provinces, the Canadian Real Estate Association said. A rebound in activity in Canada's priciest markets, particularly British Columbia and Ontario, will juice gains.



                Sales are booming too. National sales activity will reach a record 527,300 units this year – up a sizable 13.3 per cent from last year and 1.2 per cent higher than the previous peak in 2007.



                Low interest rates are expected to boost housing demand in the first half of the year, resulting in strong annual sales growth in nearly all provinces in 2010, led by British Columbia and Ontario,” the association said."


                http://www.theglobeandmail.com/repor...rticle1459822/
                Okay, it's official. Canada's Federal Finance Minister sez so, and the government would't mislead us now would they...:rolleyes:
                No housing bubble in Canada: Flaherty


                CALGARY - Federal Finance Minister Jim Flaherty shrugged off housing worries in Canada Wednesday, saying there is no bubble and that the subprime-mortgage woes crippling financial institutions in the United States are not threatening banks north of the border.

                “There is no bubble in the Canadian housing sector,” he told reporters after speaking to roughly 400 people at a Calgary Chamber of Commerce event...


                My wife got quotes from several western Canadian suppliers for some bathroom plumbing fixtures for the bunker. Last Friday, after she settled on a supplier and called them to place the order she was told she would have to wait one week to get an appointment with their sales rep before they would take the order.

                Housing bubble? Nah, there's no housing bubble here...:p

                When this thing finally pops it's going to be truly entertaining to watch it close up for a change [although it'll still be small beans compared to Dubai and the Gulf]

                Comment


                • #23
                  Re: Socialist Canadian Housing Market Surges Safely Ahead

                  Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
                  Okay, it's official. Canada's Federal Finance Minister sez so, and the government would't mislead us now would they...:rolleyes:
                  Same guy who said this - this morning right ??

                  Jim Flaherty tightens mortgage rules

                  Finance Minister Jim Flaherty Tuesday announced tighter lending standards for mortgages, saying that while the housing market is “healthy” the moves are needed to “help prevent negative trends from developing.”

                  Under the new rules, all borrowers will need to meet standards for 5-year fixed-rate mortgages regardless of whether they're seeking a loan with a lower rate and shorter term.

                  Also, the government is lowering the maximum amount Canadians can withdraw when refinancing to 90 per cent of the value of their homes, from the current 95 per cent, and requiring a 20 per cent down payment for government-backed mortgage insurance on “speculative” investment properties.

                  “There are no definitive signs of a housing bubble,” Mr. Flaherty said. “We think we're being pro-active in the three steps we're taking today.”
                  ...

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Re: Socialist Canadian Housing Market Surges Safely Ahead

                    Originally posted by Fiat Currency View Post
                    Same guy who said this - this morning right ??
                    Tinkering around the edges.

                    The changes announced are useful imo, but the only reason they won't go any further is because they know they'll burst the bubble they claim doesn't exist...:p

                    Even under these new rules it won't take much of a drop in price to wipe out all the equity and more for new buyers. When I bought my first house it was common to put down 20% to 25% and nobody would lend at less than 20% down. 5% down is simply not enough imo.

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Re: Socialist Canadian Housing Market Surges Safely Ahead

                      Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
                      Even under these new rules it won't take much of a drop in price to wipe out all the equity and more for new buyers. When I bought my first house it was common to put down 20% to 25% and nobody would lend at less than 20% down. 5% down is simply not enough imo.
                      Agreed - especially when you factor this in ...

                      Household mortgage debt hits record

                      More Canadians – especially young, first-time home buyers – are assuming mortgage debt they might not be able to afford once interest rates start to rise, an annual study cautioned Tuesday.

                      National house prices hit $340,000 in late fall, equal to five times the average after-tax incomes of Canadian households – a far greater portion than the long-term average of 3.7 times, the Vanier Institute of the Family said in its report on the current state of family finances.
                      Canadian interest rates are set to rise, as early as this summer, and the report warned that many families – especially first-time buyers who took advantage of record low rates to enter the market – “may not fully realize” what an increase in mortgage rates by several per cent will mean for their monthly payments.

                      The report comes as Ottawa tightened lending standards for mortgages Tuesday amid concern homeowners could get pinched as rates rise.

                      Households across the country are more indebted. The average debt per household rose to $96,100 in the third quarter of last year, with consumer and mortgage debt levels at record highs, the Vanier study said. That put the debt-to-income ratio at 145 per cent – the highest level since the annual study began 11 years ago.

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Re: Socialist Canadian Housing Market Surges Safely Ahead

                        Originally posted by Fiat Currency View Post
                        Agreed - especially when you factor this in ...
                        What's really sad is they use "household income" in these calculations, and for most new homebuyers that's based on two incomes. With the present divorce rates in the country [which will probably rise under the economic stress of the financial crisis induced economic contraction] there's just a whole lotta people getting in over their heads in the housing market with zero contingency if their circumstances change in any material way.

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Re: Socialist Canadian Housing Market Surges Safely Ahead

                          When I look at the actual data, and compare that to my own anecdotal experience, my comment would be that a Canadian housing "bubble" has already come and gone.

                          The market is indeed heating up, but that is from a bottom that had mirrored the American experience from its peak in 2006/2007, albeit on a different, softer magnitude. However starts, sales, inventory...any metric you choose, are all a great deal down from where they were two years ago.

                          So federal attempts to cool things off now are nothing more than an attempt to ensure things don't return to the bad old days. Which of course is rational and the right thing to do.

                          CMHC Report

                          Additionally, there are basic economic indicators that suggest there is some systemic weakness in the jobless numbers. Again, this correlates to my own anecdotal experience. So this is a far more important number than the housing stuff, which as my original post suggested, is pretty tightly controlled.

                          For me however, the issue really is the one thing the Canadian government can exercise little control over, and that is interest rates. The Americans control these.

                          So the nut of the issue is that the Canadian government will indeed do what it can and is doing to keep the housing scene rational and "real", and part of that fight will be dealing with insane American monetary policy. If a Canadian bubble does occur, it will be no fault of Canada's.

                          But there is no bubble now, nor can I for one foresee any.
                          ScreamBucket.com

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Re: Socialist Canadian Housing Market Surges Safely Ahead

                            Originally posted by Aetius Romulous View Post
                            When I look at the actual data, and compare that to my own anecdotal experience, my comment would be that a Canadian housing "bubble" has already come and gone.

                            The market is indeed heating up, but that is from a bottom that had mirrored the American experience from its peak in 2006/2007, albeit on a different, softer magnitude. However starts, sales, inventory...any metric you choose, are all a great deal down from where they were two years ago.

                            So federal attempts to cool things off now are nothing more than an attempt to ensure things don't return to the bad old days. Which of course is rational and the right thing to do.

                            CMHC Report

                            Additionally, there are basic economic indicators that suggest there is some systemic weakness in the jobless numbers. Again, this correlates to my own anecdotal experience. So this is a far more important number than the housing stuff, which as my original post suggested, is pretty tightly controlled.

                            For me however, the issue really is the one thing the Canadian government can exercise little control over, and that is interest rates. The Americans control these.

                            So the nut of the issue is that the Canadian government will indeed do what it can and is doing to keep the housing scene rational and "real", and part of that fight will be dealing with insane American monetary policy. If a Canadian bubble does occur, it will be no fault of Canada's.

                            But there is no bubble now, nor can I for one foresee any.
                            Coming "from a bottom that mirrored the American experience"? You must be joking.

                            Both Vancouver and Ottawa set ALL TIME nominal new average price records in January 2010. Toronto is already back above the previous peak average price set in the spring of 2008. Only Calgary and Edmonton are still declining [however, these two cities had by far the biggest percentage increases in the country during the '05 to '07 bubble creation years, with average prices at the peak measurably higher than Toronto, which is unprecedented].

                            Yes overall construction activity is down from the peak...and that is to be expected given the reduced availability of finance to spec builders and land developers in the wake of the global credit contraction. But speculators seem little detered from what I can see, and now the fever has spread to the point where we have clearly created a new class of overlevered private "homeowners" who are afraid if they don't buy now they will never be able to afford to "own" a home. It's lunacy.

                            And yes, the Canadian government and the BoC does have some control over interest rates...there is absolutely no reason it should be copying the Fed's near-ZIRP policy at this juncture.

                            Edit added: There's a reason the last holdouts of the global real estate bubble are mostly clustered around the Pacific Rim...Vancouver, Shanghai, Sydney, Hong Kong...the expectation of permanent exemption from the effects of gravity has been articulated often throughout history, and in many a varied jurisdiction and circumstance...always to no avail.
                            Last edited by GRG55; February 16, 2010, 11:38 AM.

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                            • #29
                              Re: Socialist Canadian Housing Market Surges Safely Ahead

                              and they are not building anymore land up in Canada, better get in now before it is too late.

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                              • #30
                                Re: Socialist Canadian Housing Market Surges Safely Ahead

                                Well, again, I'm just using the data provided by CMHC, and some personal experience (I build/develop/manage international retail chains and of course, live in Canada).

                                On the issue of interest rates, I would accept an understanding that falls between my "little control" and your "some control".

                                I think everybody is a little freaked out lately, and want to see a bubble behind every tree. Which is good LOL.

                                But no bubble hear folks, nothing to see, everybody keep moving...
                                ScreamBucket.com

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