National Post (National Edition)

Canadian banks pause payments on 10% of mortgages

Requests so far approach half a million

- GEOFF ZOCHODNE Financial Post gzochodne@nationalpo­st.com

Canadian banks have already received nearly half-amillion requests by borrowers to defer or skip mortgage payments in just a little more than two weeks, amid the swift financial uncertaint­y caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Canadian Bankers Associatio­n said Friday almost 500,000 requests had been completed or were being processed since lenders announced last month they would offer some financial relief, such as up to six months of deferred home-loan payments.

Borrowers quickly tried to take the banks up on their offer, flooding their phone lines with thousands of calls seeking assistance or informatio­n. The CBA said Canada’s six biggest banks have already deferred payments on more than 10 per cent of mortgages in their portfolio.

“The large number of customers who have been helped continues to grow as a result of concerted efforts by frontline workers, contact centre agents and operations teams working diligently,” the CBA said in a press release.

Combining the deferral requests with reports of slower real-estate activity and massive layoffs across the economy, the negative economic effects of the coronaviru­s are becoming clear.

TD Bank CEO Bharat Masrani said Thursday that the lender had approved 60,000 requests for deferrals so far, which was “virtually all” of the applicatio­ns.

Asked about his confidence in borrowers being able to resume repaying their mortgages when the deferral period ends, Masrani noted the “unpreceden­ted” levels of government support and the recent talk of the crisis easing in a few months.

“And if that’s the case, then I think the support provided should provide flexibilit­y to Canadians who have taken on the deferral program,” Masrani said. “I would expect if this continues for a longer period, that government­s will act.”

Meantime, some borrowers are seeing more cash flow coming their way. The CBA noted in its press release, citing CMHC, that the average monthly mortgage payment for a Canadian homeowner was $1,326. In other words, roughly $663 million in cash per month could be freed up by the deferrals, which borrowers could spend on other necessitie­s.

“This number will increase over the coming weeks,” the CBA said.

As these mortgage payments are pushed back, Canada’s housing market is also beginning to show signs of a COVID-19-related slowdown. The Toronto Regional Real Estate Board reported Friday that the first 14 days of March saw a 49-per-cent increase in sales year-over-year, at 4,643, but sales for the rest of the month were down by 15.9 per cent from a year ago, at 3,369. Total Toronto sales for the month were 8,012, a 12.3-percent increase compared to March 2019.

“The overall sales result for March was strong relative to last year, but the impact of COVID-19 was certainly evident in the number of sales reported in the second half of March,” TRREB president Michael Collins said in a release.

Slackening demand in the housing market would be another headwind for the lending business, but the consensus remains that Canada’s banks are up for the challenge.

Eight Capital analyst Steve Theriault wrote recently that he had examined “a reasonable worst case for credit losses and the direct impact to earnings, capital and dividend payouts,” for Canada’s big banks.

“The broad conclusion is that the Canadian banks are well-positioned to weather the coming storm,” Theriault wrote in a report.

 ?? PETER J. THOMPSON / FINANCIAL POST FILES ?? TD Bank CEO Bharat Masrani says the lender has approved 60,000 requests for loan and mortgage relief.
PETER J. THOMPSON / FINANCIAL POST FILES TD Bank CEO Bharat Masrani says the lender has approved 60,000 requests for loan and mortgage relief.

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