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Wednesday, May 26, 2010

The Canadian Housing Bubble: CREA to the Rescue

In response to a series of headlines suggesting that real estate is overpriced, visibly annoyed members of the Canadian Real Estate Association issued a statement today denying any possibility of a housing bubble, with scores of statistics and beautiful charts to support their claim.

In this article, The Frost Report reviews the CREA's rebuttal (and why they should be ashamed of themselves).

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CREA: “Canada’s solid mortgage market trends, conservative lending practices, and prudent borrowing by home buyers means that Canada will avoid a U.S.-style housing price correction.”

The Frost Report: Canada's conservative lending practices are a myth. In the heat of 2006 Canadian banks were, just like their American counterparts, doing loans without even confirming the borrower’s income. As long as the client’s credit bureau reported the name of the company they claimed to work for, this was considered enough evidence. In addition, although the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation has strict guidelines regarding credit scores and income levels required for approval, a CMHC representative recently told me that they had been making exceptions to the rules "left right and center."
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CREA: The “vast majority” of Canadians have mortgages they can afford.

The Frost Report: Canadians can afford them today because of record low interest rates, which is exactly what caused the bubble to re-expand. For several months now the Bank of Canada has been warning consumers that interest rates will be increasing, and expressing concern about their personal debt levels. From June until Nov 2009, many if not most new mortgages were variable rate; this worried the Bank of Canada as well as the Big 5 banks. As a result, laws were passed stating that all buyers must qualify for a fixed rate even if they intend to take a lower (for the moment) variable rate mortgage.
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CREA: “Over the past 12 months, most new mortgages (64 per cent) have amortization periods of 25 years or less. This is an increase compared to 54 per cent one year ago.”

The Frost Report: The insinuation here is that since people are choosing 25-year mortgages (with higher payments) instead of longer-amortization mortgages, they must have money to spare. In fact, the opposite is true. In the past year home prices have become so high that the majority of home purchases have been from existing homeowners - either selling and repurchasing, or doing equity take-outs to purchase second properties. First time homebuyers are seldom able to afford 25-year amortizations. The decline in longer mortgages means that first time homebuyers are abandoning the market.
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CREA: Twenty five per cent of mortgage holders recently increased their home equity via lump sum payments against the principal and/or by increasing their mortgage payments above their scheduled payment.

The Frost Report: It is not these homeowners, but the 75% of homeowners that do not or cannot make extra payments that is concerning. The CREA's comment ignores that fact that if even a small percentage of homeowners fall behind on their payments it will bring down the entire market. In the United States in Q3 2007, subprime adjustable rate mortgages made up only 6.8% of the market, yet accounted for 43% of foreclosures.
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CREA: Most mortgage holders (77 per cent) have a home equity position of at least 25 per cent.

The Frost Report: This is because until 2006, 25% was the minimum requirement to purchase a home in Canada. At that point, the minimum down payment was changed to 0% in order to boost the housing market. Presumably because of the risks, CHMC pulled the plug on zero down payment mortgages in 2008. The minimum is now 5%.
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CREA: Housing prices will not drop. Instead, personal incomes will rise to match home prices.

The Frost Report: I feel vomit in my mouth right now.
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It's hard to imagine a more biased source of information about real estate than an organization whose purpose is to represent “more than 96,000 real estate Brokers/agents and salespeople working through more than 100 real estate Boards and Associations.” Still, the CREA could do the morally upright thing and at least present the potential downside risks. Due to the CREA's press release, hundreds of dreamy-eyed homebuyers will once again enter the market, oblivious of the dangers.

For more examples of CREA spin-doctoring, see Spin City.

For the full text of the CREA statement from which this article was based, see: Relax: It's Just Another Housing Market Cycle.

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“There is no evidence of a housing ‘bubble’ in the United States and housing demand should stay strong for years to come.”

James F. Smith, Society of Industrial and Office Realtors, 2005
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