Wondering how CMHC will look on March 17th, 2017?

With CMHC increasing their premiums for the 3rd time in 3 years, many people are asking how this will effect them.

Homebuyers with less than 20{ea18e790148ddb141722068dfb73f9f74b06205fa18c7d39ece0e7144d0672b8} down are going to pay more.

CMHC is hiking mortgage insurance rates for the third time in three years. Premiums are jumping up to 0.65 percentage points on the highest LTV mortgages, effective March 17, 2017. Here’s the new premium table:

CMHC-Premiums-Table.png

But high-ratio hikes aren’t the only story. Premiums on mortgages between 65.01 and 80{ea18e790148ddb141722068dfb73f9f74b06205fa18c7d39ece0e7144d0672b8} LTV are soaring too.

At 80{ea18e790148ddb141722068dfb73f9f74b06205fa18c7d39ece0e7144d0672b8} LTV, the most popular LTV for those refinancing, the premium is almost doubling to 2.40{ea18e790148ddb141722068dfb73f9f74b06205fa18c7d39ece0e7144d0672b8}. That will push up interest rates among lenders who currently pay this premium for their customers in order to securitize the mortgage.

CMHC had a conference call this morning about the increases. Here were some takeaways:

  • It says these premium hikes are due mainly to OSFI’s capital requirement changes, which took effect January 1.
  • OSFI’s new capital requirements include a formula based on LTV, credit score, location and other things. Oddly, this formula disproportionately targets (increases the costs for) mortgages in the conservative 65.01 to 80{ea18e790148ddb141722068dfb73f9f74b06205fa18c7d39ece0e7144d0672b8} LTV bracket.
  • Bulk insurance premiums have increased similar to the low-ratio transactional premiums, says CMHC.
  • The insurer says it has communicated bulk pricing criteria to lenders (although the securitizing lenders I’ve spoken with cite considerable obscurity in bulk pricing, which has led many of them to transactionally insure their mortgages instead)
  • Roughly two-thirds of CMHC’s business is in the 95{ea18e790148ddb141722068dfb73f9f74b06205fa18c7d39ece0e7144d0672b8} LTV category, said CMHC, and about 4{ea18e790148ddb141722068dfb73f9f74b06205fa18c7d39ece0e7144d0672b8} of its transactional insurance is used for low-ratio customers.

Steven Mennill, Senior Vice-President, Insurance, said that CMHC is “Not doing this to affect housing markets…” and doesn’t think it will have a significant effect on competition.

Mortgage finance companies would vehemently disagree. Higher premiums have already limited competition in the low-ratio market where MFCs must charge rates that are up to ¼ point higher on 80{ea18e790148ddb141722068dfb73f9f74b06205fa18c7d39ece0e7144d0672b8} LTV deals (compared to last fall).

Big banks, which don’t need to rely on insured mortgages for securitization purposes, now have more pricing power than ever—at least since the dawn of NHA-MBS. And no one should blame banks. They’re not writing these rules. But from a consumer standpoint, Joe Borrower is getting the shaft, which leads us to the legislated purpose of the National Housing Act:

“The purpose of this Act, in relation to financing for housing, is to promote housing affordability and choice, to facilitate access to, and competition and efficiency in the provision of, housing finance, to protect the availability of adequate funding for housing at low cost, and generally to contribute to the well-being of the housing sector in the national economy.” (emphasis ours)

The recent decisions by the Department of Finance, OSFI and CMHC appear to twist or flout these essential provisions of the National Housing Act.

Policymakers argue that such measure are warranted for the stability of the market. That’s a whole other debate, one that’s not well supported by any publicly available mortgage risk data (default rates, overall credit quality, equity levels, etc.).

Suffice it to say, Canada’s mortgage industry never required an unlevel competitive playing field to create stability. But that’s what these new premiums have now given us.

via: Canadian Mortgage Trends

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