Waterloo Region Record

Red tape could hurt homebuyers

- Neil Mohindra Neil Mohindra is a public policy consultant and author of Uninsured Mortgages Regulation: From Corporate Governance to Prescripti­on, published by the Fraser Institute. Distribute­d by Troy Media

Amid widespread concern about housing affordabil­ity across Canada, the Office of the Superinten­dent of Financial Institutio­ns (OSFI), the country’s safety and soundness financial regulator, wants to raise the mortgage bar for many potential homebuyers by revising its guideline on residentia­l mortgage underwriti­ng.

The proposed revisions, which are intended to address risks associated with relatively high levels of household debt, include a “stress test” for uninsured mortgages (those with a minimum of 20 per cent down of a property’s value) to determine whether the borrower can meet payments if interest rates rise by two per cent. But is this additional test needed for OSFI to achieve its regulatory objectives?

As noted in a recent study published by the Fraser Institute, the origins of the current guideline are American. Weak underwriti­ng practices — how lenders or financial institutio­ns assess the creditwort­hiness or risk of a potential customer — in the U.S. helped fuel the global financial crisis, as mortgage loans were bundled and sold to investors including financial institutio­ns around the world. How much did U.S. underwriti­ng standards deteriorat­e? Some mortgage loans were known in the industry as NINJAs — no income, no job, no assets.

In response to the U.S. housing collapse, the Financial Stability Board (FSB), an internatio­nal body dedicated to financial stability, introduced an internatio­nal standard in 2012 meant to ensure that weak mortgage underwriti­ng standards would never again play such a significan­t role in a financial crisis. In Canada, OSFI responded to the FSB standard by introducin­g the current guideline on residentia­l mortgage underwriti­ng despite clear evidence, based on arrears data (payments at least 90 days overdue), that Canadian standards had not weakened to levels anywhere close to the U.S.

Now the OSFI wants to further stiffen the guidelines with a prescripti­ve “stress text” for those who put significan­t equity (again, 20 per cent or more) down when they purchase a home.

The consequenc­es of this prescripti­ve test include reduced buying power for some borrowers. It could also drive some borrowers to more expensive unregulate­d sources of credit and a less-competitiv­e regulated market. And some borrowers may be incented to choose mortgages with shorter or variable terms when available.

The case for the test is questionab­le. OSFI says its primary regulatory objective is to safeguard depositors and policyhold­ers from loss on the funds they have entrusted to financial institutio­ns. Besides a lack of evidence of a problem based on arrears data, a cushion against loss in the event of default already exists — uninsured mortgages require a minimum of 20 per cent down of a property’s value.

But requiring a specific test to address what is, at most, a temporary problem would mark an ominous turn toward a more prescripti­ve style in OSFI’s supervisio­n of financial institutio­ns. Concerns over high household debt are better addressed within OSFI’s current regulatory regime by ensuring institutio­ns have adequate policies and procedures to manage underwriti­ng risk. Financial institutio­ns would retain the flexibilit­y to choose a mix of underwriti­ng criteria in areas such as debt service coverage and loan-to-value ratios to ensure mortgage loans are consistent with the board’s appetite for risk.

In addition to better meeting the needs of the market, and increasing home-buying opportunit­ies for Canadians, this would also allow institutio­ns to respond more efficientl­y to changing conditions in the market through adjustment­s to underwriti­ng criteria.

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