Ottawa Citizen

Mortgage stress test a ‘safety buffer’

‘It’s prudent for the bank and it’s prudent for the borrower,’ financial regulator says

- GEOFF ZOCHODNE

TORONTO The federal banking regulator defended on Tuesday a stress test for uninsured mortgages that has been criticized for making it harder than it should be for some Canadians to own a home.

“The stress test is, quite simply, a safety buffer that ensures a borrower doesn’t stretch their borrowing capacity to its maximum, and leave no room to absorb unforeseen events,” said Carolyn Rogers, assistant superinten­dent at the Office of the Superinten­dent of Financial Institutio­ns.

“This is simply prudent. It’s prudent for the bank and it’s prudent for the borrower.”

In a speech to the Economic Club of Canada, Rogers worked to rebut concerns about the measure, which came into effect in January 2018 for federally regulated financial institutio­ns.

Under the stress test, borrowers making a down payment of more than 20 per cent need to qualify at whichever is higher: the Bank of Canada’s five-year benchmark rate or the rate that’s on their contract plus 200 basis points.

The test was part of the revisions to a guideline known as B-20, one of many guidelines and advisories that OSFI has for mortgage lenders, Rogers said. B-20, however, is the only guideline with its own hashtag, she noted, underscori­ng how much attention it has gotten.

Rogers said the most common criticism of B-20 was that a nationwide policy had been implemente­d to try to solve skyrocketi­ng home prices in Toronto and Vancouver.

This assumed that the new rules were targeted at those prices, but they were actually aimed at mortgage underwriti­ng standards, Rogers said.

“And sound underwriti­ng looks the same no matter what city you live in,” she added.

While OSFI only oversees federally regulated financial institutio­ns, concerns have been raised about borrowers turning to unregulate­d lenders to avoid the stress test.

The Bank of Canada, for instance, noted in November that private lenders had seen their share of the Greater Toronto Area’s mortgage market rise in the wake of the stress test’s implementa­tion, to nearly nine per cent in the second quarter of 2018 from about six per cent a year prior.

Rogers said this was a concern, albeit the type of one that all regulators have to reckon with, and one that the real estate industry is well placed to give a warning about to borrowers.

“But it cannot be a reason not to act,” she said. “It can’t prevent us from doing our job.”

The stress test, however, has been a target of criticism from both industry and politician­s amid higher interest rates and a cooler Canadian housing market.

“The government, through the stress test, changes to the mortgage rules, carbon taxes and higher daily costs of living, is suppressin­g the ability of people to meet the day-to-day needs and pay for their needs,” said Conservati­ve MP Tom Kmiec in a speech in the House of Commons on Jan. 31.

Meanwhile, a report published in January by industry group Mortgage Profession­als Canada said the stress tests not only “will suppress homebuying,” but also pose a potential risk to house prices and the broader economy.

“Our report illustrate­s that a more reasonable stress test level and lending restrictio­n reforms are now needed to strike a better balance for borrowers and policymake­rs, improving housing affordabil­ity and Canada’s economy,” said Paul Taylor, president and CEO of the group, in a news release.

The Canadian Real Estate Associatio­n also reported recently that national homes sales posted their fourth-straight monthly decline in December, the same month that the head of the Building Industry and Land Developmen­t Associatio­n said they would continue to call on the federal government “to undo the negative effects of the outdated stress test on consumers’ ability to purchase homes.”

 ?? KEITH SRaKOCIC/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Carolyn Rogers of the Office of the Superinten­dent of Financial Institutio­ns says a “margin of safety” is sensible in an environmen­t where interest rates remain at historical­ly low levels, while personal debt levels are at historical highs.
KEITH SRaKOCIC/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Carolyn Rogers of the Office of the Superinten­dent of Financial Institutio­ns says a “margin of safety” is sensible in an environmen­t where interest rates remain at historical­ly low levels, while personal debt levels are at historical highs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada