Mortgage
Articles
Don't Handcuff
Your Mortgage
Would you like to pay an extra $300
per month on your mortgage? Not likely.
That hasn’t stopped a number of Canadians,
with the deal of a lifetime on a variable-rate mortgage, from switching
over to a more expensive fixed-rate product and paying the extra freight.
A fear of rising rates is driving
the rash decision. But if you’ve finally managed to pin your banker to
the ground, why on Earth would you let him off the mat?
More than 28% of Canadians have a
variable-rate product tied to prime, according to the Canadian Association
of Accredited Mortgage Professionals (CAAMP). If you negotiated a deal
before October of last year, chances are you are now borrowing money for
as little as 1.35%. That’s based on deals that at one point saw the banks
giving 90 basis points off prime. Prime is now 2.25%.
The average sale price of a home last
month in Canada was $306,366. Based on a 25% downpayment and a 25-year
amortization, your monthly payment would be $962.61 at 1.35%. Convert that
to a five-year fixed-rate term and you’re probably going to have to consider
a 4% mortgage rate and a monthly payment of $1,289.04.
Rates are rising fast. Most major
banks upped their five-year rate by 40 basis points this week, although
discounters were still offering 4% this past week.
“It’s not a mass rush yet, but we
are starting to see … people locking in. But variable rates are still so
good,” says Joan Dal Bianco, vice-president of real estate-secured lending,
TD Canada Trust. She stops short of questioning why a consumer would pull
out of these “deals” that are no longer available on the market.
Try to get a variable-rate mortgage
today and the best you can probably hope to get is 60 basis points above
prime, or 2.85%.
The landscape changed dramatically
in October during the credit crunch. As the Bank of Canada lowered rates,
the major banks reluctantly lowered prime because of the massive amount
of customers with variable-rate products negotiated under the old, higher
terms.
“Bonds yields are going up rapidly
and people are starting to realize the rates are going to go up,” Ms. Dal
Bianco says. Throw in the fact the Bank of Canada used the weasel word
“conditional”(on inflation rates)when it promised not to raise rates until
June, and you can understand why some people think today’s record-low prime
rate might not hold.
But if you’re someplace between 60
to 90 basis points below prime, the rate is going to have to go up pretty
fast to justify locking in today at 4%, even though that is just slightly
above the all-time low hit last month for a five-year term.
“I don’t understand why you would
lock in,” says Jim Murphy, chief executive of CAAMP. “Sure, if they start
to rise, but [Bank of Canada governor Mark] Carney says they won’t rise,
so you’ve got another year at that prime-minus rate.”
Don Lawby, chief executive of Century
21 Canada, says even when rates do start to increase, they are not going
to jump significantly right away. You are not going to get 4% on a fixed
rate again, but double-digit rates seem unlikely. “The only logic two locking
in would be for someone very sensitive to any rate change and they just
want to be secure,” Mr. Lawby says.
But at what price? If you’re using
the “feeling secure” logic, why not go for the 10-year fixed-rate product?
Rates on that product can be locked at 5.25%, ridiculously low by historical
standards. Yet fewer than 10% of Canadians consider a 10-year product.
There are some compromises you can
make. For starters, there is nothing to prevent consumers from having a
blended mortgage at most Canadian banks. Some banks will let you take half
your outstanding debt and lock it in. Diversity is preached for stock portfolios,
but few people seem to adhere to the same philosophy when managing their
debt.
Consumers might want to take their
cue from business. Few companies would want all of their debt coming due
at the same time — it presents too much risk. The other option is knocking
down principal: Make payments based on a 4% rate and have that extra $300
go straight to your principal every month.
The bottom line is if you’ve got a
deal on your mortgage, why would you give it back?
Gary Marr, Financial Post
Note: A variable rate mortgage
historically outperforms a fixed rate mortgage. With a variable rate
you hit some peeks and valleys when prime fluctuates but overall a better
rate long term. The question again is to ask yourself are you comfortable
with fluctuating payments should prime rate increase. Merix
financial is offering prime plus .40% giving you a variable rate at 2.65%
(prime rate at 2.25%), one of the most competitive variable rates out there
currently in the marketplace. Merix Financial is only accessed threw
an approved mortgage broker.
Back
to Articles Page
|