Calgary Herald

Banks brace for longer-term impact of payment deferrals

More than $180B in mortgages and home equity lines of credit will come due by fall

- GEOFF ZOCHODNE Financial Post

TORONTO Canada’s biggest banks have authorized customers to put off payments on more than $180 billion in mortgages and home equity lines of credit because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, a sum that suggests a large chunk of household debt is hanging in the balance of an economic recovery.

“At the outset of this pandemic, it was clear to us, based on the inbound calls and based on the economics that we saw out there, that clients were feeling anxiety and hardship,” Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce chief executive Victor Dodig said on a conference call Thursday. “Some was real financial hardship, some was perceived financial hardship, and we wanted it to deal with them as expeditiou­sly as possible.”

Dodig’s comments came after Toronto-based CIBC reported it had offered about 108,000 customer accounts the opportunit­y to defer payments on $35.5 billion in Canadian residentia­l mortgages, or about 16 per cent of its domestic real estate-secured lending.

Similar numbers were announced by the other Big Six institutio­ns this past week, with the banks reporting they’d permitted payments to be deferred on more than $180 billion of Canadian residentia­l mortgage and real estate-secured loan balances during the three months ended April 30.

That total represents more than 14 per cent of the $1.24 trillion in residentia­l mortgages that chartered banks had on their balance sheets as of March, according to Bank of Canada’s numbers.

The Canadian Bankers Associatio­n said 13 member banks have allowed more than 720,000 Canadians to defer or skip a payment as of May 27, representi­ng around 15 per cent of the number of mortgages in bank portfolios.

The Big Six are also offering deferrals on Canadian credit cards, personal loans and commercial mortgages. Add it all up and the total amount of debt on which the Big Six have offered payment deferrals is more than $300 billion.

Mortgage deferral periods last up to six months, yet there is no guarantee the economy will bounce back to pre-pandemic levels by the fall.

The head of Canada’s national housing agency even warned a Parliament­ary committee this month of a looming mortgage “deferral cliff” this fall, when some unemployed borrowers will have to resume repayment.

“As much as one-fifth of all mortgages could be in arrears if our economy has not recovered sufficient­ly,” Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. chief executive Evan Siddall said.

Loan-deferral programs have helped households in the short term, but “there is a concern that those programs may only have delayed the timing of some households becoming insolvent,” said Charles St-arnaud, chief economist at Alberta Central, the central banking facility for the province’s credit unions, in a report Wednesday.

The Big Six and Desjardins Group’s credit unions account for about 90 per cent of the total assets of deposit-taking institutio­ns in Canada. If borrowers are not in a position to repay come fall, the lenders could have to decide whether to grant their customers further relief.

“We will work with them and take the appropriat­e steps,” Riaz Ahmed, Toronto-dominion Bank’s chief financial officer, said in an emailed response.

Payment deferrals were granted for about $36 billion in balances for Canadian real estate-secured lending as of April 30, or around 12 per cent of TD’S loans in that category, the bank’s latest financial filings showed. The percentage of TD’S loans subject to deferrals was “relatively lower than peers,” National Bank Financial analyst Gabriel Dechaine noted.

Royal Bank of Canada, the country’s biggest bank, said its Canadian banking business had approved deferrals on $47.2 billion in residentia­l mortgages, around 18 per cent of its mortgage balance for the quarter ended April 30.

 ??  ?? Victor Dodig
Victor Dodig

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