TACKLING HOUSING WORRIES
Higher down payments could be on horizon as Canadians’ debt grows, CMHC warns
The head of Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. has opened the door to the possibility of increasing the minimum down payment needed to buy a house, though a change is not currently on the table.
Evan Siddall, chief executive of CMHC, which advises the federal government on housing, told an audience at the Bank of England in London Friday that raising down payments for homeowners with loans backed by federal mortgage insurance is worth looking at. “The conditions that we now observe in Canada concern us. Increased household borrowing could be jeopardizing our economic future.”
The Canadian government reduced the minimum down payment from 10 per cent to five per cent for first-time home buyers, as a measure to boost the economy. The move was applied to all home buyers in 1998.
“Coupled with the personal exemption from capital gains taxes on the sale of principal residences and other programs, Canadians have very powerful incentives to own homes,” said Siddall. “At 69 per cent, our home ownership rate is among the highest in the world. While home ownership has been an effective vehicle of forced savings and retirement security, it may also constrain labour mobility.”
The federal government moved in December, 2015 to increase the minimum down payment to 10 per cent on contributions on the portion of house prices above $500,000. The maximum value for buying a home backed by government insurance is now $1 million so the down payment on that much house would work out to 7.5 per cent today.
“I have yet to be convinced that people in our country need access to 19:1 leverage to buy homes. In fact, it may be a fool’s bargain with the extra demand simply feeding higher house prices: the benefits of the policy accruing to wealthier home sellers rather than to the young first-time homebuyers it purports to help,” said Siddall.
The chief executive also raised the spectre of the government not backing 100 per cent of loans as it does now for CMHC mortgage insurance. It backs 90 per cent for private mortgage default insurance providers.
“Rather than offering a whole life policy, guaranteeing 100 per cent of the mortgage for the length of its life, should insurance end at a loan-to-value floor?” he said.
Siddall also told the audience about CMHC’s plan to reduce the government’s risk by forcing private institutions into taking what is effectively a deductible on any bad loans. “Currently, lenders benefit from a zero risk weighting on guaranteed mortgages. Requiring lenders to have more skin in the game will align interests, reduce moral hazard and allow the system to benefit from enhanced lender risk management,” he said.
Two alternatives are being considered. The first loss approach, would make lenders responsible for losses up to a fixed amount of the outstanding balance on the loan, with insurers taking on all losses in excess of this limit. Another model would see lenders incur a fixed percentage of the total loss on a loan under a proportionate loss model. The moves could raise mortgage rates on a five-year fixed product from 10 to 40 basis points. Financial Post