Edmonton Journal

CIBC expects mortgage tally to be halved

- ARMINA LIGAYA

The Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce anticipate­s it will issue half as many new mortgages in the latter part of the year as it did in the same period of 2017 amid cooling in the real estate market.

The bank has noticed a slowdown in the housing market in the last few months, likely due to changes to mortgage underwriti­ng guidelines, Christina Kramer, CIBC’s group head of personal and small business banking for Canada, said Wednesday. Those changes include a new stress test for buyers who don’t need mortgage insurance, which has made it harder for some would-be homebuyers to qualify.

“When we take a look at the second half, we continue to see that there will be originatio­n decline, probably in around 50 per cent range relative to the same period last year,” Kramer told analysts on a call discussing CIBC’s results for its second quarter, ended April 30.

CIBC, the first of Canada’s Big Six banks to report second-quarter results, announced a double-digit profit bump Wednesday, handily beating market expectatio­ns despite slowing growth in mortgage lending.

Concern has been mounting over the impact of a cooling real estate market on mortgage loans at Canada’s biggest banks, as national housing sales activity reach lows not seen in several years.

In April, home sales dropped to a seven-year low for the month that typically kicks off the busy spring real estate season. The Canadian Real Estate Associatio­n largely blamed a new stress test for uninsured mortgages that came info effect on Jan. 1. The new stress test requires would-be homebuyers with more than a 20 per cent down payment to prove they can service their mortgage if interest rates rise.

CIBC’s said its quarterly profit attributab­le to common shareholde­rs was $1.29 billion, up from $1.04 billion a year ago on strong results both at home and south of the border after some U.S. acquisitio­ns last year.

On an adjusted basis, it earned $1.32 billion, or $2.95 per diluted share for the quarter, up from $1.06 billion, or $2.64 a year earlier.

CIBC’s spot mortgage balance for the second quarter was $203 billion, up 6.8 per cent from a year ago, but flat compared with the first quarter. By comparison, in the second quarter of 2017, CIBC’s spot mortgage balance was up 12.4 per cent from the previous year and up 2.2 per cent from the previous quarter.

In the latest quarter, the bank booked $7 billion in uninsured residentia­l mortgage originatio­ns, down from $11 billion a year ago.

“We’ve actually seen a very soft start with the spring market,” Kramer told analysts. “We don’t know whether that’s a bit of a pause in the market or consumers changing behaviour or waiting to see what happens.”

Despite headwinds in the real estate market, CIBC’s chief executive Victor Dodig said the bank expects to continue generating strong earnings growth in excess of its five per cent target going forward, if macroecono­mic environmen­t conditions remain benign or relatively positive.

However, Shannon Stemm, an analyst with Edward Jones based in St. Louis., said while it appears CIBC’s diversific­ation is paying off, questions remain about how it will compensate for lower mortgage revenues.

“It could be difficult for them to continue to offset such a big chunk of what’s been driving growth, over the next couple of years.”

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? CIBC predicts a decline in mortgages in the second half of the year, citing changes to mortgage underwriti­ng guidelines as a likely factor for the cooling housing market.
NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS CIBC predicts a decline in mortgages in the second half of the year, citing changes to mortgage underwriti­ng guidelines as a likely factor for the cooling housing market.

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