2016-10-25

There are new mortgage rules in effect. Here’s how they will impact our housing market.

1. Mortgage rate stress test for all insured mortgages
As of October 17, 2016, all insured home buyers must qualify for the Bank of Canada’s posted five-year rate,

now at 4.64 per cent. Previously, this requirement applied only home buyers with variable rate mortgages

and mortgages with terms of less than five years. Borrowers must also have a GDS ratio maximum of

39 per cent and a TDS ratio maximum of 44 per cent.

These requirements apply to all new mortgage insurance applications received on and after October 17, 2016.

The new requirements don’t apply to:

mortgage insurance applications received after October 2, 2016 and before October 17, 2016, provided the mortgage is funded by March 1, 2017;

home owners with an existing insured mortgage; or

home owners renewing existing insured mortgages.

2. Low-ratio mortgage insurance eligibility requirements
As of November 30, 2016, borrowers with a down payment of 20 per cent or more (low ratio) must also meet

the same loan eligibility criteria as high-ratio mortgages of less than 20 per cent.

Lenders can no longer insure refinances, non-owner-occupied properties, amortizations over 25 years, or mortgages

over $1 million.

If the loan is at a variable rate, payments must be recalculated at least once every five years.

The borrower must have a minimum credit score of 600, a GDS ratio maximum of 39 per cent, and a TDS

ratio maximum of 44 per cent.

Other changes

Capital gains exemption on the sale of a principal residence
To ensure foreign owners aren’t abusing the principal residence capital gains exemption, the federal government

is tightening tax laws that allowed a non-resident to buy a home and avoid paying capital gains tax by claiming it

as a principal residence when the home is sold.

Starting now, non-residents who buy a home in Canada must file taxes as a resident to claim the principal residence

exemption.

The home owner or a family member must live in the home at some time during the year.

This measure will provide the federal government with data on foreign buyers.

Learn more about these changes.

Will this make homes more affordable?
“First-time buyers will experience a steep decline in housing affordability,” said Cameron Muir, BC Real Estate Association

chief economist.

“The new rules will result in the sharpest drop in the purchasing power of low equity home buyers in years.”

Muir provided three examples:

A family with an annual household income of $80,000 and a 5 per cent down payment will see their purchasing

power fall from $505,000 to $405,000 (-$100,000).

An individual with an annual income of $60,000 and a 5 per cent down payment will experience a reduction of

purchasing power from $380,000 to $305,000 (-$75,000).

A household earning $120,000 per year and has a 10 per cent down payment will see a reduction in purchasing

power from $803,000 to $651,000 (-$152,000).

“At a time when housing affordability is a critical issue, deliberately chopping millennials’ purchasing power by as

much as 20 per cent will only exacerbate a well-known problem,” said Muir.

Genworth MI Canada Inc., a private mortgage insurer, estimates more than one-third of first-time buyers would

have difficulty meeting the required debt service ratios and would have to consider buying a lower priced property

or increasing the size of their down payment.

“Approximately 50% to 55% of our total portfolio new insurance would no longer be eligible for mortgage insurance

under the new mortgage insurance requirements,” said Stuart Levings, president and CEO of Genworth Canada.

Jobs at risk
Home sales and construction are key economic drivers in BC, collectively producing 26.5 per cent of the province’s

GDP in 201 – the largest share by far of the province’s economic output.

Including spin-offs, between 35 and 40 per cent of all economic growth in the province over the last two years is

traceable to the impacts of the robust housing sector.

In Greater Vancouver, 42,326 homes were sold in 2015, generating $2.7 billion in economic spin-off activity and

19,000 jobs in a range of areas from architects and engineers to legal, notary, and financial services, to construction

workers, landscapers, and movers to sales of appliances and furniture.

The negative spin-offs are already evident and as many as 5,000 well-paying jobs in our neighbourhoods could be

lost in the end of the year, according to Bob de Wit, CEO, Greater Vancouver Home Builders’ Association.

What’s behind these changes?

Hon. Rich Coleman, Minister Responsible for Housing, said the provincial government wanted the new regulations.

“The changes announced by the federal government include measures we have asked for, and they are welcome steps

that may help provide further fairness and stability in the market for home-buyers.”

Consultations about risk in mortgage financing

In Canada, borrowers with a down payment of less than 20 per cent must buy insurance through one of three

mortgage insurers:

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC), a federal Crown corporation;

Genworth MI Canada Inc., a private insurer; or

Canada Guaranty Mortgage Insurance Co., also a private insurer.

The federal government backs these insurers 100 per cent against default and is concerned about the distribution

of risk.

The government will launch a public consultation this fall to gather feedback on introducing risk sharing for government-

backed insured mortgages.

The Board will keep you posted about this consultation and when you can participate.
Learn more.

Source: REBGV

For information, contact Andrew Peck, vice-president and general manager, Royal Pacific Realty Group

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