ALBERTA’S HOUSING AFFORDABILITY REMAINS STABLE AND ATTRACTIVE: RBC ECONOMICS
Calgary market transitioning into a more vigorous phase.
This is great news as affordability is super important. Note in Vancouver it takes about 3/4 of a person’s income to pay for their home. Yikes! Have a look at some other good reports here.
TORONTO, May 20 /CNW/ – Unlike most other major centres across Canada, housing affordability in Alberta remained stable in the first quarter of 2011, according to the latest Housing Trends and Affordability report issued by RBC Economics Research.
Until the fall of 2010, abundant availability of homes for sale in the face of sluggish demand kept housing prices firmly under control. Resulting stable or slightly declining property values contributed to a substantial improvement in affordability in Alberta last year.
“The Alberta market continued to be stuck in low gear in the first quarter of 2011. Sales of existing homes and construction of new housing units showed very modest increases,” said Robert Hogue, senior economist, RBC. “While market conditions have become more balanced in recent months, owning a home doesn’t seem to be getting more expensive in the provincial market at this stage. Affordability levels are still looking quite attractive.”
RBC’s housing affordability measures for Alberta, which capture the province’s proportion of pre-tax household income needed to service the costs of owning a home, remained relatively unchanged and below their long-term averages in the first quarter of 2011. The measure for the benchmark detached bungalow in the province moved up to 31.3 per cent (an increase of 0.4 of a percentage point from the previous quarter), the standard condominium stayed flat at 20.2 per cent and the standard two-storey home fell to 34.2 per cent (down by 0.2 of a percentage point).
RBC’s report notes that there are signs that the Calgary housing market is finally overcoming its protracted slump. Home resales in the area grew for the second consecutive period in the first quarter, the most growth since the middle of 2009, helping to remove market slack and setting a healthier balance between demand and supply.
“Calgary home prices have yet to break out of their listless trends, but they rose at their fastest rate in more than a year in the first quarter, with detached bungalows leading the way,” said Hogue. “Firmer market conditions and higher prices had only limited impact on Calgary’s affordability, which remains among the most attractive of Canada’s major cities.”
The majority of Canadian markets experienced weakened affordability in the first quarter of 2011. Most notable was the sizeable deterioration in British Columbia. More specifically, Vancouver saw significant gains in property values, which drove the already elevated cost of homeownership even higher. Quebec’s homebuyers also faced noticeable rises in ownership costs, while those in Atlantic Canada saw their affordability advantage somewhat diminish. The picture remained mixed in other areas of the country, with Ontario, Alberta and Saskatchewan experiencing ups and downs in ownership costs, depending on the housing type.
“Despite the latest erosion in affordability, provincial levels generally continue to stand near their long-term averages, suggesting that owning a home remains affordable or, at worst, slightly unaffordable across Canada – with Vancouver being a notable exception,” said Hogue.
RBC’s housing affordability measure for a detached bungalow in Canada’s largest cities is as follows: Vancouver 72.1 per cent (up 3.4 percentage points from the last quarter), Toronto 47.5 per cent (up 0.8 of a percentage point), Montreal 43.1 per cent (up 2.0 percentage points), Ottawa 39.0 per cent (up 0.4 of a percentage point), Calgary 35.9 per cent (up 0.9 of a percentage point) and Edmonton 31.5 per cent (up 0.5 of a percentage point).
The RBC housing affordability measure, which has been compiled since 1985, is based on the costs of owning a detached bungalow, a reasonable property benchmark for the housing market in Canada. Alternative housing types are also presented including a standard two-storey home and a standard condominium. The higher the reading, the more costly it is to afford a home. For example, an affordability reading of 50 per cent means that homeownership costs, including mortgage payments, utilities and property taxes, take up 50 per cent of a typical household’s monthly pre-tax income.
Coming soon: higher interest rates
- refinance – or re-do your mortgage – and get today’s rates for another 5 years,
- roll in some higher interest payments – like LOC -Line of Credit or credit cards or,
- buy your first home before rates go up or,
- finally get that summer/ ski vacation cabin.
Call for a free 5-minute mortgage check-up while there is still time. (That may be 2 or 3 weeks from now as the bond market will smell this coming inflation pretty quickly.)

Let’s start with a little tutorial (no, please keep reading, it will be brief) and then we’ll talk about why this week’s economic data changes everything, more or less.
The Bank of Canada sets the benchmark overnight rate (the rate at which banks lend to each other). That in turn affects market interest rates on everything from mortgages through to business loans. At present, the overnight rate is at 1 percent, following three hikes of 25 basis points each last year.
The tutorial is on the ‘output gap’ which is one of the major tools that the Bank of Canada looks at to set monetary policy. Here goes.
The ‘output gap’ refers to the difference between the actual output of the economy and the potential output. Potential output basically refers to the maximum that could be produced if all inputs (like the labour force, technology, capital, factory space and all that) were used to the fullest extent that they can be without triggering inflation. That last little bit is key: when the bank says ‘potential’ they don’t mean full potential, they mean ‘potential without forcing prices higher’. It is a similar concept to what economists mean when they say ‘full employment’. In that case it does not mean everyone working, it means everyone working that can be working without wages being forced higher.
The Bank of Canada monitors the output gap as best they can, first by estimating what potential output is in any period of time, then estimating how close to potential the economy looks to be. A positive output gap means the economy is operating above potential, and that inflation is a risk. A negative gap means there is excess supply (for example, too many unemployed workers) and that inflation is not a risk, or at the extreme, that deflation is possible.
The Bank of Canada adjusts policy to try to get keep things in balance and the output gap closed – sort of a ‘not too hot, not too cold’ thing. Based on their most recent calculations, their latest estimate (which was contained in last week’s Monetary Policy Review) was that the output gap would close by the middle of 2012.
Everybody still with me? Good. Here’s the thing: as well as looking at the output gap itself, the Bank also looks at a bunch of economic indicators to see how close to capacity the Canadian economy is running. Things like industrial production, the unemployment rate, unfilled manufacturing orders – and inflation.
That last one is probably the most important, and it is the one that seems to be running most out of sync with where the Bank of Canada thought it would be. In the Monetary Policy Report, the Bank said that the overall inflation rate (which they target to be 1 to 3 percent) would peak at 3 percent in the second quarter. This week, we got the March inflation report, and we find out that the inflation rate was 3.3 percent as of March – which is decisively in the first quarter. Ouch.
So what does this mean? It means something has to change to keep the Canadian economy from overheating. That something is likely to be Canadian interest rates, and when I say ‘change’ I mean ‘go higher’.
If rates do not go higher, then the output gap is at risk of going into positive territory, which means inflation takes off even more. No way is the Bank of Canada going to let that happen.
There are other things to take into account too – the spiky Canadian dollar is an important one – but it does not take away from the big picture.
Big picture? A rate hike by July, and maybe more to come after that. And yes, watch the loonie soar in the meantime.
‘Window closing’ on ultra-low mortgage rates
Essentially we are in artificially low interest rates and the government is expecting rates to come up to normal levels in the near future. Bond yields are continuing to put pressure on long term mortgage rates and we will continue to see the rates moving upward this year. The government is also trying to make it more difficult for individuals to qualify for insured mortgages. This article, from the Financial Post, speculates rates will increase rates by May.
Enjoy the Read!
Amid the noise of volatile-but-improving economic indicators, mortgage rate hikes are likely to repeat like a chorus in the coming months.
Canadian banks are raising interest rates on mortgages, marking the beginning of a trend as they correlate with rising bond yields and expected monetary tightening.
That’s making a strong case for borrowers to lock into fixed rates before it’s too late, said Benjamin Tal, deputy chief economist with CIBC World Markets. “The window is closing.”
TD Canada Trust and CIBC both announced Monday hikes to their residential mortgage rates, the first increases since changes to the rules of borrowing were announced by the federal government last month. The other big banks where expected to follow the moves shortly.
Effective Feb. 8, the interest rate on the banks’ benchmark five-year closed fixed rate mortgage will increase 25 basis points to 5.44%. The country’s other major lenders are expected to soon follow suit.
Toronto mortgage broker Paula Roberts said rising borrowing costs will compel more of her clients to abandon ultra-low variable rates in favour of higher, fixed-rate mortgages.
That can be a tough decision for borrowers to accept higher payments, but not one that should strain a mortgagee’s finances, she said.
“If you can’t afford [your payments] … that’s a problem,” Ms. Roberts said. “That’s why the government has changed the rules.”
In two stages over the past year the federal government announced changes to the conditions of mortgage lending — shortening the maximum amortization from 35 years to 30 years and requiring borrowers to qualify for a fixed-rate plan, even if they are opting for a variable rate.
Many who only qualify under the old rules, however, will try to secure mortgages before the shorter maximum amortization periods come into effect next month, Ms. Roberts said.
“There are going to be a lot of people that will enter into their agreements by March 18.”
Much of the momentum in mortgage rates can be attributed to a bond selloff and rising yields across the board. That effect is partly a reflection of building global inflationary pressures as well as a global economy that is proving more robust than expected.
“In my opinion, the bond market will not be the place to be over the next six months, and if that’s the case, you will see mortgage rates continue to rise,” Mr. Tal said.
In addition, anticipation of increases to the Bank of Canada’s benchmark lending rates is building, also contributing to rising yields, which puts pressure on fixed-income mortgages.
If there was any lingering doubt that the Bank will soon raise rates, last week’s jobs report erased them. The report showed Canada added four times more jobs than expected in January.
“[It] creates a fairly powerful story for the Bank of Canada, which is clearly concerned on the domestic front,” said Camilla Sutton, chief currency strategist at the Bank of Nova Scotia. “I think there’s a material change.”
So do investors. The probability that the central bank will boost its key policy rate by May, as measured by overnight index swaps, jumped to almost 75% after the jobs data.
Source: Financial Post
Info your banks would prefer you didn’t know
What your Bank doesn’t want you to know
| Monday, 28 February 2011 22:47 |
A list of some pertinent information your banks would prefer you didn’t know:
|
Canada Prime Stays at
Consumer Prime is at 3%. At it will stay the same as well. Nice break for us after the gov’t changes the mortgage rules the day before.
As most predicted it would, the Bank of Canada announced today it is maintaining its target for the overnight rate at one per cent.
Housing crash is not likely to happen in Canada.
Ben is one of the best economists around and is usually correct….
However, Tal said that if rates rise, mortgage defaults will actually drop. He explained that is because rising rates imply rising employment, which influences defaults more than anything.
Canadian Prime staying at 3% – maybe for half a year
Comment – this article exactly summarizes our thoughts for how things will play out:
Prime will stay at 3% for 6 months, mortgage rates will stay low as long as the stock market bounces all over the place and now is a great time to take advantage of the situation by redoing our mortgage or buying.
Bank of Canada holds key rate at 1%
OTTAWA — Interest rate hikes are on hold until at least the spring and maybe as long as late 2011, analysts say, as the Bank of Canada decided Tuesday to keep its policy rate unchanged amid weaker-than-anticipated growth, especially in the United States.
The Canadian dollar fell by more than two cents at one point following the decision, as the central bank signalled the country would need to rely more on net exports for growth — a sign, economists added, the loonie’s value would be a key consideration in future rate decisions.
The central bank said it scaled back its growth projections for this country as the global recovery enters a “new phase.” It now expects GDP to expand just three per cent this year and 2.3 per cent in 2011, compared to expectations in July for advances of 3.5 per cent and 2.9 per cent, respectively. Second-quarter GDP growth, at two per cent annualized, was well below the central bank’s forecast of three per cent expansion.
Further, the Bank of Canada said it does not envisage the Canadian economy reaching full potential until the end of 2012, or one year later than previously expected. The same timeline applies to inflation — which guides all interest-rate decisions — as the “significant” excess slack would keep consumer prices increases from reaching the desired 2% level for another two years.
“This is not just a data watching central bank that is keeping its powder dry in order to evaluate developments over coming months — this is a central bank that has totally revised its outlook and market guidance,” said analysts at Scotia Capital. “To us, the Bank of Canada is saying they are on hold until late next year.”
The central bank also signalled the composition of growth is set to change, with less emphasis on consumer spending and increased reliance on business investment and net exports.
The Canadian dollar recovered slightly after its initial drop. It was trading around 96.92 cents U.S. at 11 a.m., down from Monday’s close of 98.61 cents U.S..
Jonathan Basile, economist at Credit Suisse Securities in New York, said this indicates the Bank of Canada “will be watching the Canadian dollar more closely” as strength in net exports is predicated on a loonie that doesn’t strengthen too much against its U.S. counterpart.
The statement “appears to be a pretty clear signal of the Bank of Canada’s intention to pause,” said Michael Woolfolk, managing director at BNY Mellon Global Markets in New York. “Moreover, it suggests that the central bank may pause longer than expected. With the Bank concerned now about the economy’s increasing reliance on net exports, it will take particular care not to unnecessarily bolster the loonie through future rate hikes.”
Economists at Royal Bank of Canada and Toronto-Dominion Bank told clients that March of next year might be the earliest at which the central bank resumes rate hikes.
“The economic outlook for Canada has changed,” said the central bank, led by governor Mark Carney. “(A) more modest growth profile reflects a more gradual global recovery and a more subdued profile for household spending” as real-estate activity slows and consumers deal with their personal debt.
The decision to keep key rate unchanged leaves “considerable monetary stimulus” in place to achieve the central bank’s preferred two per cent target, the central bank indicated.
Plus, Basile said the central bank signalled three factors that stand in the way of future rate hikes: a weaker U.S. outlook; constraints curbing growth in emerging-market economies; and domestic considerations, most notably household debt.
Tuesday’s rate statement reflects a more dovish tone from the central bank compared to its last decision roughly six weeks ago, when it opted to raise its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points for a third consecutive time. More detail regarding the central bank’s outlook will emerge Wednesday when the Bank of Canada releases its latest quarterly economic outlook.
The big game-changer, analysts say, is the tepid U.S. economy and the signals from the U.S. Federal Reserve that it’s preparing to inject additional liquidity in the economy through asset purchases, with a dual goal of lowering borrowing costs and boosting inflation expectations.
As a result, a pause from the Bank of Canada “is entirely justifiable,” said Eric Lascelles, chief Canadian strategist at TD Securities, in a note to clients prior to the release of the central bank’s decision. “The thought that if the U.S. needs (further easing), the economic prospects for the U.S., and by extension Canada, are also threatened.”
The Bank of Canada said the global economic recovery is entering a “new phase,” as the factors supporting growth in advanced economies, such as the rebuilding of inventories and pent-up demand, subside just as fiscal stimulus is wound down.
“The combination of difficult labour market dynamics and ongoing de-leveraging . . . is expected to moderate the pace of growth relative to prior expectations,” the central bank said. “These factors will contribute to a weaker-than-projected recovery in the United States in particular.”
Growth in emerging economies is expected to ease as governments in those markets put the brakes on stimulus spending and raise borrowing costs. As it happened, China raised interest rates earlier Tuesday.
And recent moves by emerging markets and advanced economies to intervene in foreign-exchange markets was highlighted by the Bank of Canada as a further risk to the global economic recovery. “Heightened tensions in currency markets and related risks associated with global imbalances could result in a more protracted and difficult global recovery,” the central bank said.
The warning emerges just days before a key Group of 20 meeting of finance ministers and central bankers in South Korea in which foreign-exchange policies is now expected to dominate the agenda. Both Carney and Finance Minister Jim Flaherty are set to attend the meeting.
© Copyright (c) Postmedia News
Prime to stay the same until March 2011
Report says BoC likely to hold rates until March 2011
This month’s RBC Financial Markets Monthly publication reports that the Bank of Canada is likely to hold rates until March 2010.
Report Excerpts:
Canada takes a breather after sprinting out of recession
With real GDP standing a hair’s breadth away from its pre-recession peak and final domestic demand already treading into new territory, reports of more moderate activity in July did not prove too surprising. The sharp recovery in the housing market started to stall in mid-2010 because pent-up demand generated during the recession was satiated and buying—ahead of the mild tightening in mortgage rules and the implementation or increase in the HST in three provinces—was exhausted. The robust sales pace left a high level of household debt in its wake resulting in the debt-to-income ratio rising to an all-time high in the first quarter.
Recent growth has not been strong enough to exert significant downward pressure on the unemployment rate and inflation pressures have been moderate with the core rate at 1.6%. The headline inflation rate was 1.7% in August, thereby holding below the Bank’s 2% target, even after the harmonization of provincial and federal sales taxes in Ontario and BC were incorporated into the price measure. Unlike in the US, where we expect that core inflation will remain very low, we forecast Canada’s core rate to hold just below the 2% target during the forecast horizon and gravitate above 2% in mid-2012.
Rate increases likely to resume in early 2011
Our overall assessment of the Canadian outlook has changed little in the past month, so we are maintaining our call that the Bank will gradually raise the overnight rate to 2.25% in the second half of 2011. This gradual reduction in policy accommodation will keep a lid on the degree that term interest rates will rise especially against a backdrop of very low U.S. rates. We trimmed our 2011 forecast for yields looking for the two-year rate to end 2011 at 2.85% and the 10-year bond yield at 3.75%.

Other highlights from this month’s Financial Markets Monthly:
- U.S. data have been a mixed bag and confirm that the U.S. recovery is continuing, albeit slowly. The risk of deflation, not inflation, appears to be at the top of the mind for policymakers now with the Fed likely to implement another round of quantitative easing to ensure that growth and inflation do not slow further.
- The uncertain global outlook is likely to be the dominant factor in the Bank of Canada shifting to the sidelines for the remainder of 2010.
- Policymakers in the UK are unlikely to deliver a further easing in policy unless conditions become much worse.
- The RBA stayed on the sidelines this month although the statement showed a clear tightening bias which sets up for a hike before year end.
- Canada’s economy sputtered in July after very robust domestic demand earlier in the year.
- Inflation remains mild with both the headline and core rates below the Bank’s 2% target.
- The uncertain global outlook is likely to be the dominant factor in the Bank shifting to the sidelines for the remainder of 2010.
Rate increases on hold for Bank of Canada
Preword: It looks like the Canadian interst rates can not rise above the US to much and the US will have to keep their rates the same for most all of 2010 and most of 2011. That means our rates will stay close to the same as now for another 18 months! Great news if you are on the variable rate mortgage.
We have variable rates are Prime – .65% right now, from good banks.
CIBC World Markets Inc. trims forecast for rate hikes and currency strength in Canada as economic growth outlook dampens abroad
TORONTO, Aug. 18 /CNW/ – Continuing weakness in the U.S. economy may force the Bank of Canada to put interest rate hikes on hold after September, notes a new report from CIBC World Markets Inc.
… “Forget about any rates hikes from the U.S. Federal Reserve until sometime in 2012 at the earliest.”
While Canada is in much better economic shape – it leads the U.S., Eurozone, U.K. and Japan in first-half growth and has a record gap over the U.S. in the share of working age population holding a job – it “cannot move all the way to normalized interest rates while the U.S. Federal Reserve is still on hold,” Mr. Shenfeld contends.
For starters, an interest rate differential of 300-400 basis points would take the loonie “substantially stronger” creating additional headwinds for Canadian economic growth, says Mr. Shenfeld.
Furthermore, the “external environment will be one of less-than-normal growth as fiscal tightening bites in Europe and the U.S., and with our own upcoming fiscal tightening also hitting domestic demand, monetary policy might have to be set at stimulative levels to allow the economy to return to potential and remain there. To keep moving at all, you have to step on the gas if your car is trying to roll up a steep incline.”
The report also notes that there are limits to how far the Bank of Canada can diverge from the U.S. Federal Reserve without later regretting it. Episodes in recent years in which rate overnight rates were 2 per cent or more above those stateside resulted in sagging or sacrificed growth. These are “lessons learned, we hope,” says Mr. Shenfeld.
“Since a hike at every rate setting date through 2011 would take rates substantially higher than 2%, a pause is coming on the road to tightening.”
As a result of the dampened external growth outlook, Mr. Shenfeld has trimmed his call for rate hikes. He sees Canadian overnight rates going no higher than 2% next year as the U.S. Federal Reserve stays on hold.
The complete CIBC World Markets report is available at: http://research.cibcwm.com/economic_public/download/gps_aug10.pdf
Prime up 1/4% as expected
Comment: many think that Prime will hold here or go to 3% and hold there for a long while as the economy gets going again.
1/4% Prime Raise
The Bank of Canada raised its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points for the second time in two months, even as households and governments in the developed world continue to cut back on spending.
The rate is now 0.75 per cent. The bank said any further increases “would have to be weighed carefully against domestic and global economic developments.”
The central bank became the only one in the Group of Seven to hike its key lending rate after keeping it at unprecedented lows during the recession.
While economic growth in Canada has largely relied on consumer spending, the bank now projects that business and trade will make up a larger part of the country’s gross domestic product, but overall growth won’t be as large as the bank previously thought.
The bank now estimates that Canadian GDP will expand 3.5 per cent in 2010 and 2.9 per cent in 2011, down from the previous projection of 3.7 per cent and 3.1 per cent respectively.