CIBC has become the latest among the big Canadian banks to increase some of its mortgage rates
CIBC has become the latest among the big Canadian banks to increase some of its mortgage rates.
The bank (TSX:CM) said Tuesday it had raised its special offer, three-year fixed rate by 10 basis points to 2.59 per cent.
Meanwhile, its special offer, four-year fixed rate has also gone up by 10 basis points, to 2.84 per cent.
A CIBC spokeswoman says the changes came into effect on Jan. 9.
Special offer rates are discounted rates that are available only to qualified borrowers.
The move comes after similar rate increases from other lenders, including Royal Bank (TSX:RY) and TD Bank (TSX:TD).
RBC said on Jan. 6 that its special offer, five-year fixed mortgage would rise by one-tenth of a point to 3.04 per cent.
On Dec. 18, Toronto-Dominion Bank (TSX:TD) increased its one-year closed and four-year closed special rate, both by one-tenth of a point, or 10 basis points.
Scotiabank, meanwhile, increased its variable mortgage rate by 10 basis points on Jan. 8, while leaving its fixed rate unchanged.
Robert McLister, a mortgage planner at IntelliMortgage and the founder of RateSpy.com, says there are a host of reasons why both fixed and variable mortgage rates have been ticking higher, including recent changes from Ottawa aimed at reducing risk in the country's housing market.
The rule changes include an increase in the fees charged to lenders looking to securitize their government-backed mortgages and a proposal that could force lenders to hold more capital against some insured mortgage loans.
"It's going to be more expensive for banks to hold mortgages," McLister said. "They have to put aside more capital and when you put aside more capital then you can't do other things with it, and that costs you money, so that gets baked into pricing."
McLister says banks may also be moving the rates higher to brace for the possibility that the Bank of Canada will cut its benchmark lending rate again, which would put on pressure on the banks' lending margins.
"I think there is a bit of banks positioning themselves for potentially lower rates in 2016," McLister said.
Alexandra Posadzki
THE CANADIAN PRESS
The bank (TSX:CM) said Tuesday it had raised its special offer, three-year fixed rate by 10 basis points to 2.59 per cent.
Meanwhile, its special offer, four-year fixed rate has also gone up by 10 basis points, to 2.84 per cent.
A CIBC spokeswoman says the changes came into effect on Jan. 9.
Special offer rates are discounted rates that are available only to qualified borrowers.
The move comes after similar rate increases from other lenders, including Royal Bank (TSX:RY) and TD Bank (TSX:TD).
RBC said on Jan. 6 that its special offer, five-year fixed mortgage would rise by one-tenth of a point to 3.04 per cent.
On Dec. 18, Toronto-Dominion Bank (TSX:TD) increased its one-year closed and four-year closed special rate, both by one-tenth of a point, or 10 basis points.
Scotiabank, meanwhile, increased its variable mortgage rate by 10 basis points on Jan. 8, while leaving its fixed rate unchanged.
Robert McLister, a mortgage planner at IntelliMortgage and the founder of RateSpy.com, says there are a host of reasons why both fixed and variable mortgage rates have been ticking higher, including recent changes from Ottawa aimed at reducing risk in the country's housing market.
The rule changes include an increase in the fees charged to lenders looking to securitize their government-backed mortgages and a proposal that could force lenders to hold more capital against some insured mortgage loans.
"It's going to be more expensive for banks to hold mortgages," McLister said. "They have to put aside more capital and when you put aside more capital then you can't do other things with it, and that costs you money, so that gets baked into pricing."
McLister says banks may also be moving the rates higher to brace for the possibility that the Bank of Canada will cut its benchmark lending rate again, which would put on pressure on the banks' lending margins.
"I think there is a bit of banks positioning themselves for potentially lower rates in 2016," McLister said.
Alexandra Posadzki
THE CANADIAN PRESS