本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛For the first time since the stress-test rate last increased (in May 2018), a major bank has cut its 5-year posted rate below 5.34%.
RBC confirmed the move Saturday morning, lowering its trend-setting posted 5-year fixed by 15 basis points to 5.19%.
Speculation has been running rampant in the industry about the government persuading banks to keep their 5-year posted rates propped up. With housing risk still elevated, people’s theory was that regulators wanted to see the minimum qualifying rate stay at 5.34%. That makes the mortgage stress test harder to pass, thus tempering real estate demand.
OSFI, for its part, suggests it has no such involvement. It told us Saturday that “business decisions including [setting posted rates] are made by the banks.”
We also reached out to the Department of Finance for its take, given its history of influencing bank pricing. We’ll update this story once they respond.
Why This Matters
Lenders and consumers have been waiting for banks to drop their 5-year posted rates for months, but banks have held out. In fact, despite 5-year bond yields falling 113 bps since their November high, the benchmark posted rate hasn’t fallen one iota.
Lower posted rates have three benefits in that they:
Reduce fixed-rate mortgage penalties (other things equal)
That’s due to how banks calculate interest rate differential charges
Reduce the stress-test rate
The mortgage qualifying rate is based on a mode average of the Big 6 banks’ 5-year posted rates
Allow discounted rates to be reset lower for borrowers who’ve locked in but have not yet closed their mortgage
This is true for some lenders, not all.
De-Stressing the Stress Test
The government’s stress-test rate hasn’t fallen since September 2016. A decrease this time around would require at least two more banks to follow RBC in cutting their 5-year posted rates.
If that led to the minimum qualifying rate dropping from 5.34% to 5.19%, the median 2+ person family making $92,700 with 20% down could theoretically afford up to 1.4% more house.
That’s not huge, but it is about $7,600 in additional buying power—using the above example.
Of course, a 15-bps cut in the stress test would have little impact on its own. But if it’s the start of multiple posted-rate cuts, it’s significant. A gentler stress test would bolster Canadian real estate psychology at a pivotal moment, with recession risk making headlines and home prices struggling to stabilize. Easier qualification would also slightly boost refinance volumes.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
RBC confirmed the move Saturday morning, lowering its trend-setting posted 5-year fixed by 15 basis points to 5.19%.
Speculation has been running rampant in the industry about the government persuading banks to keep their 5-year posted rates propped up. With housing risk still elevated, people’s theory was that regulators wanted to see the minimum qualifying rate stay at 5.34%. That makes the mortgage stress test harder to pass, thus tempering real estate demand.
OSFI, for its part, suggests it has no such involvement. It told us Saturday that “business decisions including [setting posted rates] are made by the banks.”
We also reached out to the Department of Finance for its take, given its history of influencing bank pricing. We’ll update this story once they respond.
Why This Matters
Lenders and consumers have been waiting for banks to drop their 5-year posted rates for months, but banks have held out. In fact, despite 5-year bond yields falling 113 bps since their November high, the benchmark posted rate hasn’t fallen one iota.
Lower posted rates have three benefits in that they:
Reduce fixed-rate mortgage penalties (other things equal)
That’s due to how banks calculate interest rate differential charges
Reduce the stress-test rate
The mortgage qualifying rate is based on a mode average of the Big 6 banks’ 5-year posted rates
Allow discounted rates to be reset lower for borrowers who’ve locked in but have not yet closed their mortgage
This is true for some lenders, not all.
De-Stressing the Stress Test
The government’s stress-test rate hasn’t fallen since September 2016. A decrease this time around would require at least two more banks to follow RBC in cutting their 5-year posted rates.
If that led to the minimum qualifying rate dropping from 5.34% to 5.19%, the median 2+ person family making $92,700 with 20% down could theoretically afford up to 1.4% more house.
That’s not huge, but it is about $7,600 in additional buying power—using the above example.
Of course, a 15-bps cut in the stress test would have little impact on its own. But if it’s the start of multiple posted-rate cuts, it’s significant. A gentler stress test would bolster Canadian real estate psychology at a pivotal moment, with recession risk making headlines and home prices struggling to stabilize. Easier qualification would also slightly boost refinance volumes.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net