The GTA’s new homes market has
reached a significant milestone. Anyone with a family income of less
than $100,000 a year and a down payment of 10 per cent or less doesn’t
have a snowball’s chance in July of qualifying for a mortgage on any
condo with a price tag greater than $410,000 or a detached home costing
more than $450,00.
To put this into perspective, at the end of March, the last month
for which up-to-date figures are available, the average new GTA condo
sold for $420,097 and the average new home cost $490, 395. Nor can
would-be home buyers find much relief in the resale market. The average
price for homes sold in April through the multiple listing service was
$437,087.
Nor do the months ahead hold any hope of relief. With increases in
interest rates forecast and with house prices certain to continue to
rise as long as demand outstrips supply, and other factors such as the
harmonized sales tax, ever larger municipal development charges plus
rising land and construction costs are factored in, the cut-off point
for family incomes needed to qualify for mortgages is certain to rise.
So what happened? How did a huge number of people get
disenfranchised from home ownership? Headlines say interest rates
continue at record low levels. You can still get variable rate
mortgages at 2 per cent or less. Even five-year fixed term mortgages
can still carry deep discounts from posted rates.
April 19 is what happened. That was the day federal Finance Minister
Jim Flaherty’s changes to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.
mortgage insurance plan came into force.
The idea was to prevent a meltdown in the real estate market as
interest rates started to rise, he said when he announced the changes
in February.
He wanted to make sure that people borrowing at anywhere from 1.75
per cent to 4.5 per cent could still make payments if rates jumped to 6
per cent or more. The last thing the country needed was massive
foreclosures and defaults on mortgage payments.
Any housing purchase made with less than a 20-per-cent down payment
must have its mortgage insured. CMHC and a couple of private companies
provide that insurance. Rates average about 2.4 per cent of the
principal sum and are tacked onto the face value of the mortgage.
Borrow $200,000 and you pay back $204,800.
To qualify for mortgage insurance you have to meet certain income
standards. Take the amount you want to borrow, tack on mortgage
insurance, figure out the payments over the term of the mortgage then
add on taxes and in the case of condos half the monthly maintenance
fees.
If the resulting dollar figure is about 30 per cent of your gross
family income or less and you have a reasonable credit record and can
prove that you do earn that much on a regular basis, you will likely
get the loan. If, however, that dollar figure exceeds that 30-per-cent
mark, forget it.
On April 19, the new rules said everyone seeking CMHC insured loans
had to qualify based on the five-year fixed term interest rate
applicable at the time the loan was made. If they qualified, they could
choose the much lower variable rate or negotiate a deep discount from
the posted five-year rate and make payments at those levels.
To give you a better idea, On May 7 the Canadian Imperial Bank of
Commerce’s five-year fixed term rate was 6.25 per cent but the
discounted rate was between 4.5 and 4.8 per cent, and variable rates
could still run as low as 1.75 per cent from some lenders.
What level of family
income would you need to qualify for a CMHC mortgage on a $410,000
condo or a $450,000 single family house if you could put 10 per cent
down and the mortgage was amortized over 25 years?
Use today’s 6.25 per cent five-year, fixed interest rate. Figure in
taxes at $350 a month and in the case of the condo set half the monthly
fees at $225.
The result was the same in both cases. You would need $96,000 in
total family income to qualify. And that was only if you could come up
with $41,000 in cash for the condo down payment and $45,000 for the
low-rise house. Remember I used prices significantly below the end of
March averages.
While longer amortization periods can reduce monthly payments, they
may soon be offset by increasing interest rates and rising home prices.