The Globe and Mail reports in its Tuesday edition the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions is
right to be considering a possible revision of its mortgage
guidelines, in particular, the way that it deals with uninsured mortgages
with long amortization periods. An unbylined item in The Globe's Comment page notes that mortgage insurance is mandatory
for residential mortgages when the down payment is less than 20
per cent of the residence's value. Bank lenders
take on real risk when they hold uninsured mortgages.
The OSFI is thinking about limiting all
housing mortgages to amortization periods of 25 years.
The Canadian housing market could have a "soft landing." A hard
landing would mean that real-estate values would substantially
fall.
Canadian banks have healthy capital positions.
There
continues to be a substantial case that housing prices are still high
by comparison to residential rents, hence, the emergence of some
investors who are "shorting" Canadian bank
shares.
The Globe says the folks at the OSFI are prudent and will
consult discreetly with the major lenders before taking any action.
The Globe says the OSFI is right to be thinking intently about uninsured
mortgages.
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