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sheba birhanu

Definitions - 6 views

Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC): A line of credit extended to a homeowner that uses the borrower's home as collateral. Once a maximum loan balance is established, the homeowner may draw on the l...

mortgage loan property

Christie Park

CMHC shrugs off housing 'bubble' talk, defends role in debt financing | FP Street | New... - 0 views

  • Bank of Canada “has indicated that it is likely to remain at 1.0% for 2012,” prompting a strong denial by the central bank itself.
  • Rock-bottom mortgage rates have fueled Canada’s housing boom, but they have also raised concerns over record-high household debt as many consumers take advantage of cheap lending costs while they last. Higher rates could push many households beyond their limit and out of the market, and that could lead to a drop in prices, especially in the over-development condo sector.
  • On Tuesday, CMHC also reported housing starts jumped 14% in April, mainly for multi-unit construction,
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  • The report also highlighted the important role CMHC plays in the housing market, which it said accounted for 20%, or $346-billion, of Canada’s gross domestic product last year.
  • The corporation, created in 1946, currently has a $600-billion loan limit, which the government increased three years ago from $450-billion. The federal government guarantees the full value of mortgages insured by CMHC and 90% of loans insured by private firms.
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    This article presents information from CMHC's annual report.
Christie Park

Could a U.S.-style collapse happen here? - Yahoo! Finance Canada - 0 views

  • the average price of a detached home in Canada has doubled since 2000, and in September was sitting at $331,000
  • the Canadian household debt-to-income ratio hit a record high of 148.1 per cent in the third quarter. That is slightly above the 147.2 per cent debt ratio seen in the U.S.
  • household debt has jumped by seven per cent since the recession bottomed out, compared to a fall of 3.5 per cent in the U.S. And most of the household debt in Canada can be attributed to mortgages, which have grown from $421 billion in 2000 to more than $1 trillion today, a 137 per cent increase in 10 years.
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  • Canadian home prices relative to income are 15 per cent above the post-1970 average. This may not sound all that bad until you compare it to the U.S. and the fact that before prices there began to tumble, relative to income they were 11 per cent above the long-term average
  • Canada has some of the most expensive real estate in the world
  • buy/rent ratio was about 1.85x
  • typical house eats up 41 per cent of median income today, compared to 49 per cent in Toronto, and 73 per cent in Vancouver
  • The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation has insured $773 billion in mortgages and loans, while holding only 1.2 per cent in equity.
Christie Park

Dean Baker: The Son of the Housing Bubble: First-Time Homebuyers Tax Credit - 0 views

  • The bill gave a tax credit equal to 10 percent of a home's purchase price, up to $8,000, to first time buyers or people who had not owned a home for more than three years. To qualify for the credit, buyers had to close on their purchase by the end of November, 2009, however the credit was extended to buyers who signed a contract by the end of April, 2010.
  • The ostensible intention of the bill was to stabilize the housing market
  • House prices, which had been falling at a rate of close to 2.0 percent a month stabilized and actually began to rise by the late summer of 2009, as buyers tried to close on a house before the deadline for the initial credit. There was a further rise in prices around the end of the extended credit in the spring of 2010.
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  • However once the credit ended, prices resumed their fall. By the end of 2011 they were 8.4 percent below the tax credit induced peak in the spring of 2010. Adjusting for inflation, the decline was more than 12.0 percent.
  • The problem was that the credit did not lead more people to buy homes, it just caused people who would have bought homes in the second half of 2010 or 2011 to buy their homes earlier. This meant that the price decline that was in process in 2007-2009 was just delayed for a bit more than a year by the tax credit.
  • This delay allowed homeowners to sell their homes for higher prices than would otherwise have been the case. It also allowed lenders to get back more money on loans that might have otherwise ended with short sales or even defaults. The losers were the people who paid too much for homes, persuaded to get into the market by the tax credit.
  • the temporary reversal of the price decline transferred between $200 and $350 billion (in 2009 dollars) from buyers to sellers and lenders. Another $15-25 billion went from homebuyers to builders selling new homes for higher prices than would otherwise have been possible.
  • To take some of the most extreme cases, in Chicago prices of bottom tier homes fell by close to 30 percent from June 2010 to December of 2011, leading to a lose of $50,000 for a buyer at the cutoff of the bottom tier of the market. The drop in Minneapolis was more than 20 percent or more than $30,000. First-time buyers in Atlanta got the biggest hit. House prices for homes in the bottom tier have fallen by close to 50 percent since June of 2010. That is a loss of $70,000 for a house at the cutoff of the bottom tier.
sheba birhanu

Carney warns of potential housing market trouble - Canada - CBC News - 0 views

  • stopped short of saying a housing bubble exists in Canada.
  • condo markets in Toronto and Vancouver as being particularly unsustainable.
  • issues particularly in some parts of the country, in the condo market,
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  • The average home price in Vancouver finally saw a decline in March at $730,998 from $823,749
  • average home price in Toronto rose again in March at $503,998 from $499,354
  • t's the decisions of the individuals who take out the loans, and Canadians are a smart and prudent people
  • onus isn't just on individual Canadians, but also on the banks and institutions that must make some wise decisions and not lend to people who clearly can't pay the money back
  • as well as the federal government for tightening mortgage lending rules.
  • Carney repeated warnings against Canadians taking on too much household debt,
  • Carney said interest rates "are going to go higher,"
  • Canadians should make sure they can carry that debt when interest rates "are at a more normal level."
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    This article contains preventative measures from Bank of Canada Governor Carney and evidence that we are headed for a housing bubble.
Madelyn Au

Key Facts - 11 views

These were all the most prominent information gathered from the sites in our bookmarks

Christie Park

Housing bubble a danger to economy, TD says - Ottawa - CBC News - 0 views

  • Overvalued housing markets in several Canadian cities and high household debt poses a "clear and present danger" to Canada’s economy
  • The report flags Vancouver as the market with the greatest risk of a housing price correction, because of an influx of foreign buyers, likely in the order of 10 to 15 per cent.
  • overbuilding in the condo market
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  • Household debt growth over the past decade has been fuelled not as much by credit card borrowing, he said, but largely by loans secured by real estate, in particular home equity lines of credit.
  • The ratio of debt-to-personal disposable income, which is now above 150 per cent, Alexander predicted, is likely to reach by late next year the 160 per cent peak experienced in the U.S. and the U.K. before their real estate corrections occurred.
  • The report proposes several options for heading off further growth in household debt. One is to shorten the maximum amortization on mortgages from 30 years to 25.
  • A second possibility is to impose a sort of stress test on borrowers in order to qualify for a mortgage.
  • And another option would be to require applicants for home equity lines of credit to demonstrate their ability to pay it off in 20 years. Finally, the minimum down payment for a mortgage could be raised from five per cent to seven.
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    This article explains how the overvalued housing markets are dangerous to the Canadian economy, as well, a few options to stall the growth in household debt.
Madelyn Au

Bubble Trouble: The Doomsday Scenario - 0 views

shared by Madelyn Au on 17 May 12 - No Cached
  • A housing market correction will put extreme pressure on those of us who are barely keeping up with debt.
  • Property supply will go through the roof, and anyone who can’t carry mortgage payments will be forced to sell low or risk foreclosure.
  • When interest rates fell to 75-year lows in April 2009, the sensible thing would have been to pay off loans. Instead, we borrowed more
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  • for every $1 in disposable income Canadians have, we have $1.47 in cold and unforgiving debt. Much of that debt is mortgage debt.
  • In Toronto, the median house price of $373,000 is 5.4 times that of the median household income
  • The doom-and-gloomers argue that it’s naive to believe measures like the new CMHC rules will save us from flippers, and that deflation is inevitable.
  • “Home ownership rates, mortgage debt ratios and many home price valuation metrics in Canada have reached the same stretched levels the U.S. did back in 2005 and 2006,”
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    -Statistics on Canadian houshold income & mortgage debt
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