Canadian real estate values continue to soar, and a record number of buyers are piling into risky loans. According to the Bank of Canada (BoC), and the Ministry of Finance (MoF), high ratio mortgage borrowers are extending themselves to the limit. While we covered how concerning this trend has become in Toronto, it’s not just isolated to that city. It’s a trend that’s growing across all Canadian urban centers.
High Risk Mortgages
People taking out high-ratio mortgages combined with incomes too low for the property value, is spreading across Canada. A high-ratio mortgage is defined as a mortgage where the buyer leaves less than a 20% downpayment. The BoC and MoF have both expressed concern when high-ratio mortgages are paired with high income-to-loan ratios. The amount of high risk buyers is increasing as markets reach dizzying heights, especially in urban areas.
Vulnerability isn’t just the buyer’s ability to keep devoting a high percentage of their income to carrying payments. Since the number of these buyers are accelerating as prices get higher, they’re at a greater risk during a correction (not even a crash). Something as small as a 5% drop in value and many of these mortgages would be underwater. Underwater is industry slang for the buyer has 0, or less than 0, equity in their home. If this happens it would mean already broke homeowners would have to pay to get rid of their home. Combine that with a higher interest rate at renewal, and you can imagine the mayhem that can unfold.
Toronto and Vancouver Have The Highest Totals
High-ratio mortgages with low income levels is a growing trend in Canada, but Toronto and Vancouver take it to the next level. Across Canada, 18% of high risk mortgages have extremely low incomes for the homes they’re in, an increase of 38% over two years. Despite Vancouver’s insanely high prices, Toronto still tops the risky business of subprime borrowers. Toronto takes the top spot with a 53% increase during the same period, bringing their total to 49%. Coming in second is Vancouver which had a 25% increase over the past two years, bringing their total to 39%. These two cities are moving much faster than the average for the country, and they’re getting to dangerously high levels.
Source: Ministry of Finance (Canada), Bank of Canada’s Calculations.
Trend Is Growing Across Canada
Although Toronto and Vancouver take the cake, this trend is also growing across Canada, albeit with a lower impact. Over the past 2 years, Calgary saw a 23% increase of high ratio mortgages with at risk-income ratios, totalling 32%. Montreal saw a 30% increase over the past two years, bringing their total to 13%. Ottawa-Gatineau saw a massive 62.5% increase, bringing their total to 13%. Meanwhile, quiet little Halifax saw a 40% increase, a total of 7%. So while the issue is growing across Canada, it hasn’t reached the crisis heights of Toronto and Vancouver yet.
While Toronto and Vancouver are leading the market for risky mortgage debt, they aren’t alone. Canada has dodged the real estate commodity cycle for almost 30 years. That has produced a whole generation of people that have no idea that real estate is a cyclical market. This irrational exuberance, and the thoughts that this market will never end is placing all homeowners in a precarious situation.
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Hi Kaitlin – Any idea what percentage of 2016 (and 2017 if available) Toronto home loans were high-ratio? Without that information, one can’t tell whether this is a serious problem or not.
Thanks,
steve
Exactly. I wish there were stats on the actual amount of loans in Toronto that are high ratio. Without this information, making predictions or decisions is like shooting in the dark. If the percentage of high ratio mortgages in Toronto is very small – like 2%, it makes a 53% increase inconsequential.
It’s ridiculous that this simple stat is not made available at least by cmhc since it is tax payers money at stake. One would be able to deduce, to some degree, the percentage of homes sold in Toronto in any given year that were bought using high ratio mortgages if we knew how many properties cmhc insured during that year.
If the number is ridiculously high, it makes the possibility of a correction very strong. However, If cmhc is insuring few mortgages in Toronto, the market will remain fine for years considering immigration, Intra-provincial migration, inflow of foreign investors due to low dollar and standard of living, and strong job market.
The problem isn’t just high-ratio mortgages Steve… I think people borrowing from lines of credit, friends and family to avoid being in a high-ratio mortgage is actually a bigger problem. This problem got exacerbated after the federal mortgage rules that came into play in October.
These are the people who are going into the subprime market (let’s call it what it is) and getting loans at 500% to 1000% or even 2000% loan-to-income ratios. After all the value of a detached home in Toronto is now 25 times the median income!
I like to see the percentage of all mortgages (not just high-ratio) that have loan-to-income ratios of over 450% since this is really the ratio that defines your debt-servicing capabilities or as Richard Wozny just correctly pointed out your level of tax evasion.
Not sure if I can post links here, but that’s a great eye-opening article on the Globe today about the Vancouver housing crisis (equally applicable to Toronto/Ontario): http://www.theglobeandmail.com/real-estate/vancouver/housing-talk-gets-louder-and-angrier-in-vancouver/article34850038/
I do not see how we can conclude that we are not in a bubble at this time. The median total annual family income in the Greater Toronto region is estimated to be around $73 thousand. The median house price is seventeen times higher than income, only marginally better than the ten times income price of a condo or townhome. Given the cost increases in tuition, property taxes, electricity, car insurance, etc., I cannot see how families in the GTA can afford to keep their homes in the absence of gains that come from the market action. I am sorry but we do not need much more data to reach a rational conclusion that there is a problem. The only question is when the bubble pops and that could still be some time away as the Bank of Canada and the federal and provincial governments will try to do what they can to keep the party going. What the market correction needs is a trigger and we cannot be sure what that is.
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I thought high-ratio meant 4.5x income or more
40-50% of CMHC approved loans have been high ratio mortgages since 2009. They let it happen as a policy to reinvigorate housing to get the economy going. That and the $125 billion of the worst loans Flaherty bought from the big banks in return for them lending more – because they stopped lending.
[…] Sorry Vancouver, But Toronto Is The King Of Risky Mortgage Debt […]
[…] BoC’s concerns are not just limited to Vancouver, they previously noted that Canadians across the country are increasingly stretching themselves thin to pursue homeownership. Rapidly increasing prices are great for homeowner equity, but high leverage borrowers should be […]
[…] BoC’s concerns are not just limited to Vancouver, they previously noted that Canadians across the country are increasingly stretching themselves thin to pursue homeownership . Rapidly increasing prices are great for homeowner equity, but high leverage borrowers should be […]
[…] BoC’s concerns are not just limited to Vancouver, they previously noted that Canadians across the country are increasingly stretching themselves thin to pursue homeownership. Rapidly increasing prices are great for homeowner equity, but high leverage borrowers should be […]
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