Toronto Star

What to expect from increasing interest rates

Experts provide tips on how to handle the hikes for first-time buyers, homeowners and savers

- TESS KALINOWSKI REAL ESTATE REPORTER

Consumers who locked in their mortgage last fall or summer might be feeling smug following Wednesday’s increase in flexible loan rates.

But for first-time buyers and homeowners looking to renew there is nowhere to hide from a rising interest rate environmen­t.

The big Canadian banks increased their fixed-rate mortgages to 5.14 per cent from 4.99 per cent last week, even before the Bank of Canada announced the quarter per cent increase that triggered the rise in variable loan costs. “The fact is, (people) have been incredibly lucky in terms of mortgage rates for the last eight years,” said Laurence Booth, professor of finance at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management.

He reminds his students of his own experience, which included a variable rate mortgage of 24 per cent in 1981, during a period of volatile interest rates.

“We’re definitely in an increasing interest rate environmen­t. We’ve seen that with the three Bank of Canada hikes over the last year,” he said.

More increases to the benchmark rate, which stands at 1.25 per cent, are expected this year. But Booth said the central bank is moving carefully because, while Canadians seldom default on their mortgages, it doesn’t want to drag down the overall economy by reducing Canadians’ spending on groceries and other consumer goods to meet those home payments.

“There’s no intelligen­t way to beat the system,” says mortgage broker James Laird, a co-founder of the Ratehub.ca.

It put the cost of the quarter of a percentage point increase in the bank rate this week at an additional $52 a month or $624 per year for someone holding a $400,000, 5-year variable rate loan amortized over 25 years.

“Variable rates are now up by a quarter of a point. Fixed rates have all adjusted to the current market,” he said.

That brings consumers back to the “classic variable-versus-fixed-rate decision.”

In other words: Is now the time to lock in?

Laird said he believes that variable rate loans tend to be cheaper in the long run. But he acknowledg­ed the increased risk makes that a highly individual decision.

“It’s only appropriat­e for a household to take a variable rate if they have a lot of wiggle room in their finances. If the rate moves 3/4 of a point and beyond — let’s say something unforeseen happens and rates rise quicker than anyone is expecting — they should be able to handle that risk,” said Laird, president of Canwise Financial.

“Any household that is tighter for cash — typically the first-time homebuyer — we try to influence them towards a fixed rate. Yes, it’s going to cost a little bit more off the bat but we do know they can afford it and that is locked in, usually for five years,” he said.

New stress testing launched by the Office of the Superinten­dent of Financial Institutio­ns means most borrowers already have to qualify at higher than the posted rates — either the 5-year benchmark rate or 2 per cent above the mortgage rate they qualify for, whichever is higher.

But Laird says consumers need to remember that interest rates historical­ly have far exceeded today’s relatively low numbers — even if you add another 2 per cent.

The good news is that savers should start to see more for their money, he said, citing a 0.35 per cent increase in Tangerine’s 5-year GIC rate.

“It would be nice if savers were treated to this rising interest rate environmen­t instead of borrowers simply paying,” Laird said . “It’s difficult to support your retirement at 2 per cent GIC rates.”

He doesn’t expect the central rate to rise again in March, but he thinks there will be at least one more increase this year based on Wednesday’s announceme­nt.

The bank acknowledg­ed that the uncertaint­y around the North American Free Trade Agreement clouds an otherwise robust economy, including the high employment and economic factors such as high employment and near-target inflation that prompted this week’s increase.

The Bank of Canada’s overnight rate is the basis for flexible mortgages. But fixed-rate loans are based on the five-year government bond rate, Booth said.

 ?? ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Consumers are going back to the variable-versus-fixed-rate decision.
ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Consumers are going back to the variable-versus-fixed-rate decision.

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