Canadian Prime rate to go up only a bit.
As expected the economy is not as hot as every one thought. That means that Prime – as below – is now predicted to go up to .5% and then hold there or up to 1% for the rest of the year.
This means that the Variable rates are now very attractive because we know where Prime is headed – as in holding constant. A variable at Prime -.6 today is 2.5-.6= 1.9%. The 5 year fixed are more like 4.30%
Weak Canadian GDP puts BoC on the spot
Eric Lam, Financial Post · Friday, Jul. 2, 2010
With Canada’s economy stumbling in April, adding fuel to speculation the country’s roaring recovery that began in September 2009 was coming to an abrupt end, economists warned Canada’s central bank will have to tread carefully on its plan to raise interest rates for the rest of the year.
Derek Holt and Gorica Djeric, economists with Scotia Capital, said the Bank of Canada “was not likely to be swayed” by Wednesday’s economic data. The pair maintain a forecasted 1.25% benchmark rate by the end of the year.
“There should be enough strength in the underlying economic momentum to dismiss the drag on GDP in April as something that does not portend the start of a new trend,” the pair say in a note.
In April, Canada’s gross domestic product neither expanded nor contracted, compared with 0.6% growth in March. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg had been forecasting 0.2% growth in GDP for April.
This is the first time in eight months Canada’s economy did not expand.
In its report, Statistics Canada blames the stagnant April on a “large decline” in retail trade of 1.7%, after a 1.9% gain in March. Declines in manufacturing and utilities also contributed to the underperformance while advances in mining, wholesale trade, the public sector and construction helped to offset the decreases.
Krishen Rangasamy, economist with CIBC World Markets, said it was too soon to jump to conclusions.
“It’s too early to conclude from this GDP report that the recovery is already waning,” he said in a note on Wednesday. “The excellent handoff from March means that we’re starting the second quarter from a higher base, which sets Canada up for a decent quarter despite a slow start.”
Michael Gregory, senior economist with BMO Capital Markets, said that while the 3% growth now expected is respectable, it is a bit of a letdown compared with the 5% to 6% growth figures seen earlier.
“It’s kind of like driving on the highway at 100 kilometres an hour, then getting off and going 50,” he said in an interview. “But 3% growth is still all right and where we see it for this year.”
The second half of the year will likely move quite sluggishly, however, as a lot of spending in housing, renovation and other big-ticket items was “pulled forward” due to the HST, introduced in July in Ontario and British Columbia. Mr. Gregory expects growth of about 2% on average in the fall and winter months.
Canada’s economy also faces headwinds from the sovereign debt crisis in Europe, an even worse slowdown in the United States, and possible fallout in China, he warned.
Warren Jestin, chief economist with Scotia Economics, said in a note on Wednesday that Canada’s position as a resource leader should help keep it afloat in the face of other developed countries, although “this won’t be a hard race to win.”
The situation in Europe is troubling for Mr. Gregory, but he suspects the combination of weakening housing, high unemployment and zero credit growth will hurt the United States.
“That buzz you hear about a possible double-dip recession is legitimate and will remain a worry for markets the rest of the summer and into the fall,” he said. “It’s why we think the Bank of Canada will be on hold for a while after July.”
Mr. Gregory figures the central bank will raise rates 25 basis points at its next meeting in July, then go on hold to see how things play out in Canada the rest of the year. It is likely the BoC will push rates to 1% by the end of 2010 and add another 1 percentage point to 1.5 percentage points in 2011.
“An environment of 3% growth is still something that requires higher interest rates,” he said. “Rapid buildup in household debt is a long-term risk.”
Canadian Mortgage Rates May Slide Down
Canadian 5 yr bond yield is at 2.34%. The spread, (based on the 5 yr rate published rate of 4.49%) has jumped far above the comfort zone at 2.15.
The banks dropped their posted rates by .10bps lasts week
Explanation:
The rate of return on the bond, can be read through a yield curve, If the increase in bond yield continues to go up, the spread will continue to shrink and this could be a trigger for interest rates to rise. Currently lenders are looking for a spread, between 1.50 and 1.75.
Toronto woman paying for mortgage fraud
This is too bad and we see it all the time. There is no free lunch. If you sign papers for a house and they pay you to do it is pretty much fraud and you pay the price.
Toronto woman paying for mortgage fraud
A Toronto woman is being ordered to pay RBC $95,000 after failing to realize she was being tricked into a mortgage fraud.
Angela Isaacs accepted $6,000 to co-sign a stranger’s mortgage and signed the documents without reading them, reported the Toronto Star.
Madam Justice Anne Molloy of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice also decreed that Isaacs owes 6.3 per cent annual interest on the $95,000 loss from June 26, 2008 until the debt is paid and, within 30 days, $13,500 of the bank’s legal fees.
“She took the risk and got stung,” said Molloy during the ruling. “That is her own responsibility, not the fault of the bank.”
In late 2004, Isaacs was discussing her financial woes with her then common-law husband in a Tim Hortons coffee shop. She was earning $35,000 a year at a full-time job and raising three young children.
A stranger called Mike told her she could receive $4,000 for co-signing a mortgage for six months so a man with a poor credit rating could buy a house. Later Isaacs decided against it but was persuaded after she was offered $6,000.
Isaacs clued into the scam when RBC started sending her late payment notices for a $280,000 mortgage on a house she owned with a man supposedly named Mark Forrest.
Residential Mortgage Rates Lowered
- 4.49% to 4.19% to 4.09% – depending on how long your rate hold is for a 5 year fixed
- 1.90% = Prime – .6% = 2.5%-,65=1.90% for a variable.
Residential Mortgage Rates Lowered
TORONTO, June 24 /JAC/ – Residential mortgage rate changes as and when announced by major lenders.
TORONTO, June 24 /CNW/ – RBC Royal Bank announced today that it is decreasing its residential mortgage rates effective June 25, 2010.
The changes are as follows:
Fixed Rate Mortgages
- Six-month convertible 4.85 per cent (decreased by 0.10 per cent)
- One-year closed 3.60 per cent (decreased by 0.10 per cent)
- Two-year closed 3.95 per cent (decreased by 0.10 per cent)
- Three-year closed 4.50 per cent (decreased by 0.10 per cent)
- Four-year closed 5.54 per cent (decreased by 0.10 per cent)
- Five-year closed 5.89 per cent (decreased by 0.10 per cent)
- Seven-year closed 6.85 per cent (decreased by 0.10 per cent)
- Ten-year closed 7.00 per cent (decreased by 0.10 per cent)
Special Fixed Rate Offers*
- Four-year closed 4.39 per cent (decreased by 0.10 per cent)
- Five-year closed 4.49 per cent (decreased by 0.10 per cent)
* The rates indicated are special discounted rates and are not the posted rates of Royal Bank of Canada. To calculate a rate discount compare the Special Offer rate against the posted rate for the applicable term.
Special Offers may be changed, withdrawn or extended at any time, without notice. Not available in combination with any other rate discounts, offers or promotions.
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For further information: Media contact: Gillian McArdle, (416) 974-5506
TORONTO, June 24 /CNW/ – TD Canada Trust has changed its mortgage rates, effective June 25, 2010.
The changes are as follows:
Fixed Rates To/Change:
- 6-month convertible 4.75% – 0.10%
- 1-year open 6.70% N/C
- 1-year closed 3.80% – 0.10%
- 2-year closed 4.30% – 0.10%
- 3-year closed 4.85% – 0.10%
- 4-year closed 5.54% – 0.10%
- 5-year closed 5.89% – 0.10%
- 6-year closed 6.20% – 0.10%
- 7-year closed 6.59% N/C
- 10-year closed 6.90% N/C
Special Fixed Rate Offers To/Change:
- 1-year closed 2.80% – 0.10%
- 4-year closed 4.39% – 0.10%
- 5-year closed 4.49% – 0.10%
- 7-year closed 5.25% N/C
- 10-year closed 5.59% N/C
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For further information: Tashlin Hirani, Media Relations, Corporate and Public Affairs, TD Bank Financial Group, (416) 982-3375
TORONTO, June 25 /CNW/ – CIBC (CM: TSX; NYSE) today announced the following changes in mortgage rates:
- Six-month convertible 4.85 per cent, down 0.10 per cent
- Six-month open 6.70 per cent, no change
- One-year open 6.45 per cent, no change
- One-year closed 3.60 per cent, down 0.10 per cent
- Two-year closed 3.95 per cent, down 0.10 per cent
- Three-year closed 4.60 per cent, down 0.10 per cent
- Four-year closed 5.54 per cent, down 0.10 per cent
- Five-year closed 5.89 per cent, down 0.10 per cent
- Seven-year closed 6.95 per cent, down 0.10 per cent
- Ten-year closed 7.00 per cent, down 0.10 per cent
These rates are effective Saturday, June 26, 2010.
Rates may not go up
Rate hike not guaranteed….Global financial chaos could override domestic factors
Emily Mathieu Business Reporter Toronto Star
Higher than expected rates of inflation and reports of record breaking retail sales means interest rate hikes will likely go ahead, according to a top economist with BMO Capital Markets. But domestic strength might not be enough to justify increases if the upheaval in global markets continues, said Porter.
“If the (Bank of Canada’s) decision was based solely on domestic factors, then this would be no questions asked, no debate,” said Doug Porter, deputy chief economist.
The central bank has long predicted rates would rise on June 1, but Porter said doubt over the future of global economic stability could cause them to go off course.
“It would take a very brave central bank indeed, I think, to raise interest rates in the face of the turmoil we are seeing in global financial markets right now.”
According to Statistics Canada’s Consumer Price Index, the core index advanced 1.9 per cent during the 12 months leading up to April, following a 1.7 per cent increase in March.
The boost in April was due mainly to a rise in prices for the purchase of passenger vehicles, passenger vehicle insurance premiums, property taxes, and food purchased from restaurants, the report showed.
The seasonally adjusted monthly core index rose 0.2 per cent in April, following a 0.3 per cent decline in March.
Consumer prices across the country rose 1.8 per cent in the 12 months leading up to April, following a 1.4 per cent increase in March. In Ontario, prices rose 2.2 per cent.
Porter said BMO has no plans to alter their position that rates will rise on June 1, but said that position could change if market upheaval continues into next week.
“If Canada were an island there would be no debate,” said Porter. “There is a very compelling domestic case for higher interest rates.”
Statistics Canada reported a 2.1 per cent increase in retail sales dollars in March, to $37 billion. Porter said earlier reports had predicted sales would be close to flat. “Instead we get one of the best gains on record.”
National energy prices rose 9.8 per cent between April and the same time the previous year, following a 5.8 per cent increase during the 12 months between March 2010 and the same time the previous year. Excluding the increase in energy the index rose 1.1 per cent, compared with a 1 per cent increase in March.
For the sixth month in a row, gas prices exerted the strongest upward pressure on the index. In April, Canadians paid 16.3 per cent more at the pump than they did the same time the previous year. That change follows a 17.2 per cent increase between March of this year and the same time in 2009.
Natural gas prices were up 3.3 per cent in April than the same time the previous year. Between March 2010 and the same time the previous year prices had dropped 22.4 per cent.
The cost of transportation was up 6.2 per cent in the 12 months to April and consumers paid a 5.6 per cent more for insurance premiums in April compared to the previous year.
Housing costs were up 0.8 per cent, after declining 0.7 per cent in March, with household utilities exerting the most upward pressure. The mortgage cost index fell 6.1 per cent, the report showed.
Food prices were up 1 per cent, following a 1.3 per cent increase in March. The 1 per cent rise, largely related to prices for food purchased in restaurants, was the smallest since March 2008.
Health care prices rose 3.3 per cent, the report showed. http://www.thestar.com/business/article/812567–rate-hike-not-guaranteed
Home ownership costs increase across Canada except Alberta says RBC report
By The Canadian Press TORONTO – Owning a home in Canada has become even more expensive _ unless you live in Alberta, according to the latest housing report by RBC Economics Research.
The report, released Tuesday, says homeownership costs in Canada rose for the third straight quarter across all housing segments in the first quarter of 2010. A strong real estate market and jacked up housing prices are getting the blame for putting a strain on Canadians’ bank accounts.
“Although home ownership became more costly in the first quarter of 2010, affordability measures are still moderately above the long-term average and below peak levels,” said RBC senior economist Robert Hogue.
“We expect affordability to deteriorate throughout 2010 and 2011, but this should be limited as more balanced supply and demand conditions will take much of the steam out of the housing market,” he said.
The RBC Housing Affordability report projects that the cost of owning a home will continue to rise.
The main contributing factor is an expected rise in interest rates, as the Bank of Canada moves towards raising the current exceptionally low rates to more normal levels through the second half of this year and in 2011.
According to the report, housing affordability measures in Canada are unlikely to exceed the peak levels reached in early 2008.
With the exception of Alberta, home affordability measures deteriorated across all provinces with a significant decline in affordability in B.C., Saskatchewan and Manitoba.
Housing affordability declined more moderately in Quebec, Ontario and Atlantic Canada. Alberta is the only province to show a drop in the costs of owning a home. http://ca.news.finance.yahoo.com/s/25052010/2/biz-finance-home-ownership-costs-increase-across-canada-except-alberta.html