Mortgage and Consumer Credit Trends: Q4 2021 Data

Our latest release of Mortgage and Consumer Credit Trends data tables cover the fourth quarter of 2020. Here are some key highlights from the data:

Delinquency rates edged lower across all credit types

Mortgage delinquency rates in Canada edged lower to 0.25%. This is the lowest level in the five years that CMHC has reported mortgage delinquency rates. Rates in the major CMAs were below the national average and have fallen to:

  • 0.10% in Toronto
  • 0.14% in Vancouver
  • 0.20% in Montréal

Delinquency rates trended lower across all non-mortgage credit types compared to Q4 2019 to:

  • 1.18% for credit cards (down by  44 basis points)
  • 1.70% for car loans (down by 29 basis points)
  • 0.55% for lines of credit (LOC) (down by 9 basis points)
  • 0.15% for home equity lines of credit (HELOCs) (down by 2 basis points)

Mortgage holders continue to have lower delinquency rates for all other major credit types compared to consumers without a mortgage. That said, the gap between the two groups shrunk.

Mortgage delinquency rates trended lower across all age cohorts:

  • The 25 to 34 year olds, who are typically first-time homebuyers, saw their rate decline to 0.20%, the lowest level of any cohort. This age group accounts for 15% of all mortgage holders.
  • Seniors aged 65 and over, who account for 12% of all mortgage holders, registered the highest delinquency rate of 0.33%.

Delinquency rates declined across all mortgage loan amounts. The highest delinquency rate, at 0.32%, remained for mortgages with the lowest value at origination that is less than $200,000.   

Borrower credit scores trended higher

The share of outstanding and newly originated mortgages held by consumers with a high credit score (700 and above) continued to edge higher. For the outstanding mortgage loans, this share reached 87.71% which is the highest level in the last five years it has been reported by CMHC. For the newly originated mortgage loans this share edged up to 86.06%.

Compared to a year ago, 83.79% of mortgage holders and 83.56% of consumers without a mortgage either maintained or improved their credit scores. The average credit score increased to:

  • 765 for mortgage holders
  • 753 for non-mortgage holders

The average Bankruptcy Navigator Index is a ”predictive” score that estimates the likelihood of a consumer to become insolvent in the next 24 months. Higher scores indicate a lower risk. The score for both mortgage holders (938) and non-mortgage holders (923) reached the highest level over the past five years. This suggests a lower probability of bankruptcies. 

Non-mortgage outstanding balances declined

Total non-mortgage outstanding balances declined compared to Q4 2019. The most notable decline was for credit card outstanding balances:

  • 14.17% for mortgage holders
  • 13.76% for non-mortgage holders

This is followed by lines of credit outstanding balances, which decreased by:

  • 10.72% for mortgage holders
  • 10.14% for non-mortgage holders

Compared to the previous year, average monthly payment obligations declined for all non-mortgage loans with the exception of car loans. Monthly car loan payment obligations increased by:

  • 1.5% for mortgage holders
  • 1.3% for non-mortgage holders

Mortgages accounted for a larger share of consumer debt

Newly originated mortgages as a share of all mortgage loans edged up to 4.94% from 4.39% the year prior. New mortgage loans accounted for 6.93% of outstanding mortgage dollar balance compared to 5.73% in Q4 2019.

Mortgages with a higher loan amount ($400,000 and over) at time of origination as a share of all outstanding mortgages increased. In Q4 2020, these mortgage accounted for 41.42%, up from 37.98% the year prior.

Mortgage loans accounted for a higher share of total outstanding consumer credit balance, which increased to 68.91% from 66.85% a year ago.

Effects of the COVID-19 pandemic

The COVID-19 pandemic has had significant social and economic impacts in 2020 throughout Canada.  We have observed unprecedented declines in employment, and increased financial stress for households. The pandemic poses a major risk to housing and financial markets. CMHC continues to monitor the economic impacts associated with the severity and duration of COVID-19.

-CMHC

Bank regulator proposes higher mortgage stress test level, making it harder to qualify for home loan

Canada’s top banking regulator is proposing to raise the mortgage stress test level to 5.25 per cent or two percentage points above the market rate, whichever is higher.

That’s a hike from 4.79 per cent, which is the current average posted rate at Canada’s biggest lenders.

Thursday’s change by the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI) means borrowers will need to prove that their finances can pay for the loan at that higher rate, regardless of what a lender is willing to lend them. This would make it harder to qualify for a home loan, shrinking the pool of qualified borrowers and ultimately bringing down some of the upward pressure on house prices in the country.

The regulator says it is seeking submissions from stakeholders about its proposal until May 7th, before the new rules would be put into place for uninsured loans as of June 1.

Known colloquially as the “stress test,” the rules came into force in early 2018 and had the effect of cooling down what was at the time an overheated property market — although after they were announced in late 2017, there was a flurry of last-minute buying by people trying to get in before they would be locked out of buying.

Once they were in place in early 2018, the frenzy died down.

While there are a number of different facets to the rules, officially known as the B-20 Guidelines, they boil down to essentially one principle: would-be home buyers would have their finances tested to see if they could cover their mortgage payments should rates rise much higher than they were at the time they signed up for the mortgage.

The testing bar was set at whatever was higher: two percentage points higher than the mortgage rate they were offered, or whatever the average five-year posted fixed rate is at Canada’s big banks. 

Functionally, that five-year average rate has been the bar that most uninsured borrowers have been asked to meet, since market rates have been much lower than two percentage points below that level for almost the entire period of the stress test’s existence.

A look at the numbers

Currently, the average posted five-year big bank mortgage rate is 4.79 per cent, but it’s not difficult to find a loan at about half that rate, a little over two per cent, by shopping around.

A look at the numbers shows how easy it is to get in over your head.

At two per cent, a 25-year mortgage of $300,000 would cost $1,270 a month. But if rates were to rise to 4.79 per cent, where the big bank posted rates already are, that monthly payment goes up by almost $500 a month, to $1,709.https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/Dy5YB/1/

That’s an increase of almost 35 per cent to a borrower’s monthly budget. 

At 5.25 per cent, the new stress test rate, the monthly payment would jump to $1,788 a month.

If the numbers show that a borrower’s finances wouldn’t be able to withstand a significant rate hike, the borrower fails the stress test, and a lender isn’t allowed to lend them money. 

COVID-19 changed the plan

The banking regulator was looking into perhaps setting some other sort of benchmark for the stress test prior to COVID-19, but the pandemic shelved those plans.

In addition to the higher rate, OSFI also says it plans to “revisit the calibration of the qualifying rate at least once a year to ensure it remains appropriate for the risks in the environment.”

The move by OSFI comes as the average price of a Canadian home rose by 25 per cent in the year up until the end of February.

That’s prompted a flurry of calls for policymakers to step in again to make sure borrowers aren’t getting in over their heads.

“The current Canadian housing market conditions have the potential to put lenders at increased financial risk,” OSFI said in a statement Thursday. “OSFI is taking proactive action at this time so that banks will continue to be resilient.”

While the regulator’s goal is to ensure the stability of the system for banks, not for borrowers, James Laird, co-founder of Ratehub.ca and president of mortgage brokerage CanWise Financial, says ultimately the move may be what’s best for homebuyers, too.

“In the near term, this change will make it more difficult for first-time homebuyers to qualify for a mortgage,” Laird said, adding that the move will have the effect of lowering buyers’ purchasing power by about five per cent once it’s in place in June.

“However, if this policy has the desired effect of slowing home value appreciation, it may be a good thing for first-time homebuyers in the long run.”

Sherry Cooper, chief economist at Dominion Lending Centres, says the move may well take some of the froth out of market in the long term, but in the short term it’s likely to make this year’s feverish spring market even hotter.

“This all but ensures that the current boom in home buying will accelerate further in the spring market — providing an impetus for borrowers to get in under the June 1 deadline,” she said. “OSFI’s move will trigger an even hotter spring housing market as demand is pulled forward just as it was before the January 1, 2018 implementation date of the current B-20 ruling.”