Ottawa Citizen

Manulife to offer mortgage, credit-card relief

- BARBARA SHECTER

TORONTO Manulife Financial Corp.’s Canadian unit is prepared to provide relief from credit card or mortgage obligation­s to its banking customers who are directly impacted by economic fallout from the COVID -19 pandemic.

“We are approachin­g, on a case-by-case basis, if customers have (financial) reasons they’re struggling,” Mike Doughty, chief executive of Manulife Canada, told the Financial Post.

Doughty said the Canadian banking unit of Manulife Financial, one of the country’s largest companies, will allow mortgage payment deferrals of up to six months, alongside Canada’s six largest banks. The firm will also provide unspecifie­d “relief” when it comes to other credit products, such as credit cards, he said.

Canadians, many of whom are already saddled with consumer debt including credit cards with high rates of interest on outstandin­g balances, have been financiall­y squeezed by layoffs resulting from mandatory business shutdowns to curb the spread of the virus.

The federal government announced a $27 billion emergency financial aid package for workers last week, but many are expected to take a hit to their monthly pay.

Doughty said Manulife Canada is also in discussion­s with customers in the firm’s other lines of business, which include wealth management, group benefits, and life and travel insurance.

“It’s a combinatio­n of both proactive and reactive” communicat­ion, he said, adding that advisers are fielding numerous calls from wealth management clients seeking advice about how to handle the stock market’s precipitou­s tumble. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is off more than 30 per cent from its high earlier this year, and on pace to record its worst month since the Depression.

“What we don’t want is people pulling out at the worst time, which often happens,” Doughty said from his temporary office in the basement of his Waterloo, Ont., home. He has been working from home, along with some 8,000 employees of Manulife Canada who are dealing with everything from customer service to strategy.

Manulife’s travel insurance unit was among the first in Canada to declare the novel coronaviru­s that causes COVID-19 a “known event,” rendering it an ineligible cause for travel cancellati­on or interrupti­on claims.

The March 5 activation date stands, but Doughty said the broad travel restrictio­ns subsequent­ly announced by the federal government — advising against non-essential travel anywhere in the world and any travel on cruise ships — has broadened what could be claimed on insurance purchased prior to that date.

“It was obviously a situation that evolved very quickly,” he said. “We did honour that. It’s a legitimate reason for you to be able to get a refund.”

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