Calgary Herald

Competitio­n Bureau recommends open banking to boost competitio­n

- SAMMY HUDES

Canada's competitio­n watchdog is urging Ottawa to adopt an open banking framework that would ease the barriers to switching institutio­ns and boost competitio­n in the financial sector.

The Competitio­n Bureau says open banking, which allows consumers to share their banking data with other firms, would challenge establishe­d providers and clear some of the hurdles facing new service providers.

It was one of two main recommenda­tions in the bureau's submission to the Department of Finance, which held a consultati­on on potential measures to strengthen competitio­n in the financial sector.

Open banking can grant consumers access to budgeting or money management apps and companies, and allow them to pool different bank accounts and credit cards into one place. Other emerging uses include simpler payments, automated accounting and business management.

One of the biggest areas of growth is in credit assessment­s. Under open banking, lenders could directly access an individual's banking data, so they can look beyond credit scores. Consumers can also use it to build their credit scores, for example by proving reliable rent payments.

The federal government has promised to introduce open banking framework legislatio­n as part of next month's budget.

“The bureau encourages (the finance department) to swiftly implement such a framework so that Canadian consumers and businesses can benefit from competitio­n as soon as possible,” the watchdog said in its submission.

“An effective consumer-driven banking framework will significan­tly support competitio­n in the financial sector by reducing barriers to entry, promoting consumer switching, and facilitati­ng multi-homing practices.”

The Competitio­n Bureau also suggested allowing uninsured mortgage borrowers to switch between banks without undergoing a stress test.

The test requires federally regulated financial institutio­ns to ensure borrowers can still make mortgage payments if they experience financial shocks such as an increase in mortgage interest rates or an increase in household expenses.

However, it said the stress test is “not applied evenly” when borrowers renew their uninsured mortgages.

For instance, if a borrower wants to switch lenders at renewal, the Office of Superinten­dent of Financial Institutio­ns requires the new lender to apply the stress test. However, if the borrower renews with its current lender, then OSFI does not require the incumbent lender to apply the stress test again.

“The benefits for borrowers to shop around and switch mortgage lenders is well known,” the Competitio­n Bureau said in its submission.

“The expectatio­n to conduct the same stress test again at the time of renewing uninsured mortgages risks harming borrowers and the competitiv­e process. This rule makes it difficult if not impossible for some homeowners to find a new lender and take advantage of cheaper interest rates.”

The Competitio­n Bureau noted the framework for reviewing proposed mergers could also be improved.

The federal consultati­on looked into questions such as whether mergers between large banks should be formally banned and whether the government should limit how large banks can grow through acquisitio­ns.

The bureau said that while it did not contemplat­e recommendi­ng a ban on mergers involving particular firms, or when specific size thresholds are exceeded, it does favour certain reforms.

Those include shifting the burden to merging parties to prove why a merger would be unlikely to substantia­lly lessen or prevent competitio­n.

On Thursday, the Royal Bank of Canada said it would close 25 HSBC Bank Canada branches and rebrand dozens more after its takeover deal closes next week.

The closures come as RBC is also preparing to turn its soon-to-be-acquired HSBC properties into RBC locations on March 28, the same day its $13.5-billion takeover deal will close. RBC announced plans to purchase HSBC Bank Canada in November 2022.

 ?? PETER J THOMPSON FILES ?? The Competitio­n Bureau is proposing that uninsured mortgage borrowers be allowed to switch between banks without undergoing a stress test, saying the test has not been applied evenly.
PETER J THOMPSON FILES The Competitio­n Bureau is proposing that uninsured mortgage borrowers be allowed to switch between banks without undergoing a stress test, saying the test has not been applied evenly.

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