TORONTO – A BMO Capital Markets senior economist says the Bank of Canada’s recent move to increase its key interest rate is setting up the housing market for an even deeper correction next year.
Robert Kavcic says governor Tiff Macklem’s surprise one-percentage-point rate hike last week was like taking a hammer to the housing market.
In a note to investors, Kavcic says the increase which prompted the commercial banks to increase their prime rates has made it more difficult to qualify for a mortgage under Canada’s stress test rules.
The test sets the qualifying rate for uninsured mortgages at either two percentage points above the contract rate or 5.25 per cent, whichever is greater.
BMO: “Housing Arithmetic Deteriorating Fast(er)” pic.twitter.com/sbpvjiei8Y
— Scott Barlow (@SBarlow_ROB) July 15, 2022
Kavcic says before the move, variable-rate borrowers were still qualifying at 5.25 per cent, but that has now shifted up to around six per cent, which he considers “a massive pill for the market to swallow.”
Fixed-rate borrowers are qualifying around seven per cent, which he says will carve into their purchasing power too.
New from me at TVO, speaking with BMO’s Robert Kavcic about interest rates and what’s coming. https://t.co/VE4UpgTkAz
— John Michael McGrath (@jm_mcgrath) July 19, 2022
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 18, 2022.
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