Cape Breton Post

Sweating a rate hike?

Lock in your mortgage now, experts say

- BY CRAIG WONG

Homeowners with variable rate mortgages losing sleep over the increased chatter about a potential interest rate hike by the Bank of Canada should consider locking their rates in now, mortgage experts say.

James Laird, co-founder of interest rate-comparison website RateHub, says in order to stick with the variable option you need to be able to handle fluctuatin­g rates.

“Rates might go up much faster than anyone is expecting and so if you’re right on the border of being able to afford your mortgage payment and you’re able to lock in an affordable payment for five years, you should definitely do that,” Laird said.

Recent comments by the Bank of Canada have prompted speculatio­n that it may move to raise its key interest rate sooner than many economists had expected.

The central bank has kept the rate on hold at 0.5 per cent after cutting it twice in 2015 in an effort to boost the economy.

An increase in the Bank of Canada’s overnight rate target will prompt the country’s big banks to raise their prime rates, which will push the rate charged on variable rate mortgages higher.

The U.S. Federal Reserve has already started to raise its key interest rate with the latest quarter point increase on Wednesday to a range of one per cent to 1.25 per cent.

Laird said historical­ly borrowers who have chosen the variable rate mortgage have done better than those who have opted to lock in their rate. But he points out that variable rate mortgages are only about half a percentage point lower than the fixed rates that are being offered today.

The best five-year variable rate posted on RateHub.ca was 1.8 per cent, while the best fiveyear fixed rate was 2.24 per cent.

“If prime moves up by, say, 50 basis points then most variable rates would be higher than the fixed rate that you can lock in at today,” Laird said.

He noted that the rates on fixed-rate mortgages also may soon be on the rise following a recent increase in the yields on Canadian government five-year bonds, a key benchmark.

The possibilit­y of an increase in the prime rate offered by lenders comes as household debt levels sit near record highs.

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