Factors such as the impact of recent rule changes will cool down the Canadian mortgage sector starting this year, according to a recent study
The Canadian lending market will enter a period of relative cooling in the next few years as far-reaching changes to mortgage rules finally begin to make themselves felt, according to a CIBC forecast released earlier this month.
In the report named “Household Borrowing: Elevated but Slowing”, Benjamin Tal of CIBC wrote that various elements will converge this year to trigger a slowdown in the national mortgage sector.
“As for 2017, we expect the pace of growth in mortgage originations to cool, reflecting factors such as reduced affordability due to tougher qualification criteria, increased share of less expensive (condo) units in total housing sales, marginally higher mortgage rates and slowing activity in centers such as Vancouver,” Tal stated.
The total value of new originations in Canada last year was estimated to be more than $405 billion last year, representing a 5.5% increase from 2015.
The report predicted that mortgage debt outstanding will grow by around 5% year-over-year in the next 2 years. At present, mortgage credit is increasing by nearly 6% annually. Mortgages comprise almost 72% of total household credit nationwide, the highest level in nearly 20 years.
Arrears are hovering near 0.30% nationwide, with the Atlantic Canada region posting the highest arrears rate at 0.65%, and Ontario having the lowest at 0.14%.
CIBC added that slower activity in credit vehicles across the board will cause household credit outstanding to soften a bit compared to market performance in around the past 2 years.
“Growth in household credit in 2016 was very stable with outstanding rising by just over 5% on a year-over-year basis. On an inflation-adjusted basis, household credit is still rising by a full percentage point below its long-term average,” the report explained. “That is, despite the drama in the housing market, the recent pace of credit growth in Canada is not rapid by any stretch of the imagination. And we expect that pace to slow in the coming years.”
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