| Time for Canada to Take Away the Housing Punchbowl |
|
|
|
Dec 23, 2009 Mark McQueen seekingalpha.com Such post-recession excitement. The price of an average Canadian home is up about 20% year-over-year. Even the mansions in the $7 million plus range are starting to move again. Credit Finance Minister Jim Flaherty for telling it like it is: The time has come to take away the punch bowl. Did you know that Canada Mortgage & Housing Corp. can swing you a 35-year amortization mortgage with just 5% down on a new house? Let’s consider the impact of this financial engineering, when it is combined with the lowest mortgage rates in my lifetime. In 1993, a 5-year mortgage would require an interest rate of about 7.25% at a local bank. Although it has been many years since I earned my “personal limits” at Canada’s First Bank, I believe your monthly P+I on a 1993-vintage $300,000 mortgage with a 25-year amortization would have been about $2,155. Assuming you put down 10%, you could swing a $330,000 home (inc. legal fees). Today, what does $2,155/month get you in the world of 4% five year mortgages, 35-year amortizaton and 5% down? A house worth $512,837…and interest costs of $435k over the 35-year period (assuming the interest rate never changed). Knock that 35-year amortization back to 1990s standards (25-year AM), and, voila, you can only “afford” to buy a house worth $430,192. A 35-year amortization schedule gets you 19% more spending power in the marketplace ($512.8k home) versus the 25 year style. And you just have to put up another $3,900 yourself; the price of a decent Plasma TV. What a surprise…the price of an average home is up 20% year-over-year.
That 18% equals $82.8 billion of a $460 billion chartered bank mortgage book; which means that more than $41 billion of mortgages have been added in the past two years with a 30-35-year amortization schedule. No wonder prices are up so dramatically. Canadians shook their heads at former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan when he refused to accept any blame for fueling the U.S. housing meltdown. Fortunately, we’ve learned from their mistakes, right? Not so fast. CIBC World Markets economist Benjamin Tal warned Minister Flaherty via the DTM that
(Economist Tal works for one of Canada’s largest beneficiaries of CMHC mortgage policies.) Five years from now, if your 35-year AM mortgage comes due at even a cheap 5.5% renewal rate, that 95% mortgage on the $512.8k home will cost you an extra ~$410 per month in (post income tax) payments. That represents an additional $9,122 of your pre tax income five years from now. If you could only save $24,000 to put into the downpayment at the outset of home ownership, how easy is it going to be to part with the additional $9,122 for your pre tax income five years from now? Time for Minister Flaherty to take away the punch bowl. |
| Related Information | |
You may help and contribute by posting your thoughts and adding comments to all articles. The Forum actively encourages your voice at any time. All opinions are appreciated.