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PostPosted: Thu Nov 18, 2010 8:14 pm 
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HVLurker wrote:
I was referencing more the U.S. situation in terms of losing everything.
You can pretend that didn't happen but I have a relative in the states who has been affected.
Imagine buying a house and finding out two months later it's worth 100K less and plummeting even more.
It's not fun for them.
If you're a half full kind of person then all those empty houses in the states just have owners who went on long vacations.
Those bank foreclosure/for sale signs are just lawn ornaments.


We can discuss economics, but lets STOP drawing parallels between USA & Canada. Different countries. Different circumstances. Different scenarios. Different rules. Different laws. Different outcomes.

Sigh.

Since when did Canada allow you to borrow $500k and buy a house without putting a single dollar down.. even though you haven't had a job in 5 years... had no money in the bank... credit card debt up the wazzoo... and a terrible credit rating... then offer you...

..."TODAY'S SPECIAL! No mortgage payment for 1 year.."

..then let you wait a year while prices went up by 30%...

...because EVERYONE qualified for a half-three quarter-or million dollar mortgage (even the dead or the dead's pet dogs) and could afford to buy at any price...

...then re-financed the house to get out all that 30% gain back out in cash.. only to spend it on flashy cars, designer clothing and boats...

...which boosted the internal US economy further (we need more people working to create more things since everyone has more money to spend)...

...which repeated the above scenario... over.. and over.. and over...

...until! CRASH! These people aren't paying anything back!

..to which to the unemployed person who would not even quality for a Pay Day loan in Canada says "ah well.. take my house then" and walks away from their mortgage obligation (which US law allows them to do)...

..which means nobody's got home equity to borrow from anymore.. everyone's on the hook for bad debt... jobs are lost... leaving millions of empty homes available with NO QUALIFIED BUYERS TO BUY THEM.

This is Canada... I'm pretty sure when I went for my mortgage I had to show proof of employment, 2 years of tax returns, have a R1,I1 credit profile, have at least 5% (10% better) down, qualify for the 5 year posted fixed rate, and then proceed to sign away my life -- knowing if I ever walked away from the house, they would sue me until I was black and blue OR I could declare bankruptcy, struggle to find a dingy basement apartment to live in for the next 7-9 years, and prepare to take the bus to and from work since I'll never be able to finance a car.

There will be no bubble. Corrections in some areas? Sure.. no bubble. Not even in Vancouver.

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PostPosted: Thu Nov 18, 2010 8:51 pm 
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...I just posted an update thinking it would be helpful...
Better to be prepared than not. That's all.
I hope there's no bubble but even a correction will affect the more vulnerable.

If I posted a link on prices going up, I would get haters too.

It's naive to think our economy is not connected to the U.S.
If our number one trading partner is not buying from Canada what do you think will happen?
We'll have more job growth and our economy will be flying high? We had lots of job losses here when things tanked in the U.S.
Remember why Mattamy released Spirit homes in 2008?

And yes in Canada we have products called 5% cashback mortgage and Self Employed Recognition Mortgages.
They're probably not as high risk as the American NINJA loans but when 'you don't need to prove your income' is highlighted for the self employed mortgage then that's a red flag to me.

http://www.tdcanadatrust.com/mortgages/5_cashback.jsp

https://www.cibc.com/ca/mortgages/self- ... mortg.html

Just take it for what it is. Don't get so upset.
If all our house values go up then we can all keep celebrating.


Last edited by HVLurker on Thu Nov 18, 2010 8:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Thu Nov 18, 2010 10:12 pm 
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HVLurker wrote:
...I just posted an update thinking it would be helpful...
Better to be prepared than not. That's all.
I hope there's no bubble but even a correction will affect the more vulnerable.

If I posted a link on prices going up, I would get haters too.

It's naive to think our economy is not connected to the U.S.
If our number one trading partner is not buying from Canada what do you think will happen?
We'll have more job growth and our economy will be flying high? We had lots of job losses here when things tanked in the U.S.
Remember why Mattamy released Spirit homes in 2008?

And yes in Canada we have products called 5% cashback mortgage and Self Employed Recognition Mortgages.
They're probably not as high risk as the American NINJA loans but when 'you don't need to prove your income' is highlighted for the self employed mortgage then that's a red flag to me.

http://www.tdcanadatrust.com/mortgages/5_cashback.jsp

https://www.cibc.com/ca/mortgages/self- ... mortg.html

Just take it for what it is. Don't get so upset.
If all our house values go up then we can all keep celebrating.


I agree... I just don't think it's ever possible for Canada to experience a US meltdown of that proportion. We hadn't quite gotten to those lax lending practices and magical accounting.. YET.

I would also point out that the cash back mortgages still require a down payment. My mortgage is 1% cash back.. but the funds aren't handed back until after the closing and they still wanted to see the full 5% minimum down payment paid out.

Now I do remember a few years back the "rent to own" which is what was happening with the US.. but I don't think it lasted long enough to have a major impact on our current market.

It has also been said that a very high percentage of Canadians are more than able to handle a 1-2% increase in mortgage rates. We Canadian's tend to be more frugal... would it suck? sure.. would you have to get rid of the flashy new car and buy something a bit older? maybe.. but lose the house? not likely. Don't forget, most Canadians are also of the "5 year fixed" type and it's unlikely that after 5 years, you wouldn't have built up enough equity to handle an increase. Don't forget there is one last life preserver which is renewing at a longer term. You borrow at 25yr, pay down 5yrs, can't afford the new rate, you bite the bullet and renew for a new 30 or 35yr. Of course, if you took out the 40 when it was available, you might have some issues there.

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PostPosted: Thu Nov 18, 2010 10:16 pm 
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Ol Skool wrote:
DTC,
Now is this something from a lender during the U.S housing bubble?

Answer

No

Right here is Canada right now as we speak.

http://www.yourmortgagesource.org/produ ... erOccupied

How about this from a major bank.

Yup. In Canada. CIBC. They actually bolded what I bolded.

https://www.cibc.com/ca/mortgages/self- ... mortg.html

Yes. There was outright fraud on such a high level in the U.S. the full ramifications of it haven't come to surface, but will eventually. But don't think for a minute that we haven't been reckless here even though outright fraud isn't in play.


Well if it's not a major financial institution it's not a big concern. Those small desperate mom and pop loan sharks come and go every day. Just look at the use car industry. They will go bankrupt, their investors will be upset and life will go on.

As for CIBC.. well 35% equity is more than enough to reduce any risk of loss on the banks part.. unless we are talking about a 35% decrease in market values -- if that happens.. we have a lot bigger problems.

If the 10% is true.. that sounds a bit low.. If that's true.. they need to be regulated back in line.

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PostPosted: Fri Nov 19, 2010 2:16 pm 
HVLurker wrote:
f wrote:
how would you loose your life savings, and your job, if prices went down 10 or 15%?? funny as prices just went up, for the glass is half full kind of people there is ample literature in the paper this week of stable housing and balanced market in the gta.


I was referencing more the U.S. situation in terms of losing everything.
You can pretend that didn't happen but I have a relative in the states who has been affected.
Imagine buying a house and finding out two months later it's worth 100K less and plummeting even more.
It's not fun for them.
If you're a half full kind of person then all those empty houses in the states just have owners who went on long vacations.
Those bank foreclosure/for sale signs are just lawn ornaments.

Even for people here who have put 10% down on a 400K house would not a 10% to 15% loss in a year be significant?
First time home buyers that use up to 25K in RRSP for downpayment because they didn't have enough cash...is that a significant amount to lose?
In terms of refinancing a mortgage, how does one gain back that value if the bank will only finance for less than what is actually owed on the house?
These are not hypothetical situations. It's happened in the states and it can happen here.

You're fortunate if you can endure a 50K to 100K loss.
It's not doom and gloom if people are prepared.

Just for you 'f'...there's nothing wrong with Canadian real estate.
I hear Vancouver has a bunch of condos for sale. Snatch them up while you can since they'll only go up in price.
this is a canadian forum and i assumed you were talking canadian real estate and more relevant to this thread whats happening in Milton. A large correction in price would represent opportunity for me and others i know, i dont worry about any price correction to be honest, i just dont care. for anyone reading this thread i highly doubt they will take any advice pro or con on price, home ownership is a dream for alot of people, thanks for the heads up on Vancouver, ill make sure i look into it.. cut and paste is a wonderful thing..l


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PostPosted: Fri Nov 19, 2010 3:44 pm 
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http://www.moneyville.ca/blog/post/893796#comments

An alternative point of view, less doom and gloom. Despite his obvious interests in preserving real estate demand, I think he raises some valid points.


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PostPosted: Fri Nov 19, 2010 4:14 pm 
my bigger concern would be the costs to carry a house, hydro has been in the news and looks like rates rising big time, natural gas is the lowest price commodity right now, many think its undervalued. add rising taxes and other expenses. id be more worried for these bills than houses dropping 10% or slight interest rate hikes..


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PostPosted: Fri Nov 19, 2010 6:22 pm 
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Ol Skool wrote:
KPR,

I have a simple question for you. Everyone is aware of what the BOC and government did late 2009 with respect to eliminating 0 down 40 yr and putting 20% down on an investment property and banning Sub-Prime lending which they allowed to enter Canada in 2007. But one thing they did that wasn't talked about was changing the Bankruptcy laws. Now if there has never been a foreclosure/bankruptcy problem leading up to 2009 and they don't foresee one going forward in Canada. Why would they in September 2009 make it more difficult to declare bankruptcy. Taking up to 2-3 times longer. Make it much more punitive with respect to income garnished and other burdens. I found it interesting because that is exactly what the U.S. did in 2005. They changed their bankruptcy laws a couple years before their bubble started deflating. The foreclosures in the U.S are obscene, but they would be WAY higher had they not. What exactly did they know was coming. What exactly does Flaherty and Carney know. Or maybe it is all one big coincedence. They closed all the irresponsible loop holes they created to foster this bubble and then trap people in that bad debt they will have difficulty getting out from under without declaring bankruptcy.


I am not going to speculate what Flaherty's rationale was, as it is merely an anecdote to this discussion and will neither prove or disprove the argument for our real estate meltdown.

I do agree a correction is coming, I just don't think it will be as pronounced as it is in the US. The extent of the corrections will occur more sharply in certain areas (Vancouver, Toronto) and also to certain types of homes (500k+). I won't dismiss the immigration argument, as I feel the continued influx of people to specific CMA areas will help mitigate the correction for smaller homes. Are they going to keep the $1M+ homes at Yonge and Lawrence in demand? Not likely, but they may for the smaller more affordable homes $250-400K in the suburbs.


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PostPosted: Fri Nov 19, 2010 6:48 pm 
Ol Skool wrote:
KPR wrote:
http://www.moneyville.ca/blog/post/893796#comments

An alternative point of view, less doom and gloom. Despite his obvious interests in preserving real estate demand, I think he raises some valid points.


Let's see:

Quote:

That’s not what happens here. “It’s illegal to have a zero down payment in Canada,” Lee explains. According to the CMHC, monthly housing costs can’t exceed 32 per cent of gross household income, while the entire monthly debt load shouldn’t be more than 40%.

WRONG. Went over that already 12 pages ago.

Quote:

In Canada, there’s still plenty of demand. Lee says that 350,000 immigrants come to this country each year, so creating demand for housing. Lee says the Maritime provinces are losing more residents than gaining — but major cities, especially Toronto where most immigrants come, will only see its population rise.

WRONG. Yes. The build it and they will come philosophy, immigrants that is. Immigration over the past 60 years hasn't stopped a housing correction every 15 years. Also, the root of the housing crash in the U.S. had little to do with job losses. That was a bi-product of the collapse. It was an unsustainable credit bubble fueled by cheap credit. And that is what we have here in Canada.

Quote:

Lee says housing prices are probably overvalued based on Canadians’ level of debt, but it’s not unmanageable. RBC echoes his comments. In a September report, the bank wrote that housing affordability, which, it says, is the best measure of underlying stress, “does not flag any major misalignment with respect to prices.”

WRONG. Re-max said the same thing in 2006 about the U.S. affordabilities.
If the historical norm is 3-3.5:1 income to home price and it cost 5.5:1 in Toronto and 7-10:1 in Vancouver. That isn't affordable.

Quote:

When Lee was working at the Bank of Montreal, he saw time and time again that financially strapped Canadians would miss car and credit card payments before skipping out on the mortgage.

That I agree with. There is full recourse in Canada whereas the States people just walk away from the responsibliity. Canadians are much more dutiful about paying their mortgage.

Quote:

“The normalization of interest rates could take several years,” say the economists, “with Canadian interest rates rising a moderate 2 to 3 percentage points. By then, incomes should catch up to prices."


We have been waiting for incomes to rise along with home prices for a decade. That hasn't happened. We would need incomes to go up 35% just to get back to historical metrics at current pricing levels. And again, all it took was a 2% rise in Japan and the U.S. to crash ther housing market. So when the posted rate 5 yr rate gets to 7.5% in Canada. Let's see what the market looks like 3 years after that when mortages reset.

KPR,

I have a simple question for you. Everyone is aware of what the BOC and government did late 2009 with respect to eliminating 0 down 40 yr and putting 20% down on an investment property and banning Sub-Prime lending which they allowed to enter Canada in 2007. But one thing they did that wasn't talked about was changing the Bankruptcy laws. Now if there has never been a foreclosure/bankruptcy problem leading up to 2009 and they don't foresee one going forward in Canada. Why would they in September 2009 make it more difficult to declare bankruptcy. Taking up to 2-3 times longer. Make it much more punitive with respect to income garnished and other burdens. I found it interesting because that is exactly what the U.S. did in 2005. They changed their bankruptcy laws a couple years before their bubble started deflating. The foreclosures in the U.S are obscene, but they would be WAY higher had they not. What exactly did they know was coming. What exactly does Flaherty and Carney know. Or maybe it is all one big coincedence. They closed all the irresponsible loop holes they created to foster this bubble and then trap people in that bad debt they will have difficulty getting out from under without declaring bankruptcy.
buddy, your so far off in left field its not even funny anymore, you actually believe your own bull sh*t?


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PostPosted: Fri Nov 19, 2010 8:08 pm 
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f wrote:
my bigger concern would be the costs to carry a house, hydro has been in the news and looks like rates rising big time, natural gas is the lowest price commodity right now, many think its undervalued. add rising taxes and other expenses. id be more worried for these bills than houses dropping 10% or slight interest rate hikes..


Now this I agree with -- the mortgage is peanuts... it could jump by four or five hundred more and I wouldn't bat an eyelash.. what scares me is all the "other" home ownership costs which keep rising much much faster than salaries or inflation.

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PostPosted: Fri Nov 19, 2010 8:14 pm 
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Ol Skool wrote:
We have been waiting for incomes to rise along with home prices for a decade. That hasn't happened. We would need incomes to go up 35% just to get back to historical metrics at current pricing levels. And again, all it took was a 2% rise in Japan and the U.S. to crash ther housing market. So when the posted rate 5 yr rate gets to 7.5% in Canada. Let's see what the market looks like 3 years after that when mortages reset.


I don't think we can look back at history. We are in a different world. Sure, my parents gasp when I tell them my mortgage amount... but then again.. I also remember when it cost my parents pretty much the same price (if not much more when considering electronics etc) to buy consumer goods. The balance of income is shifted.

I remember my parents buying a VCR for well over $1,500 in the early 80s. My first computer was $2,000 in the late 1980s. Clothing was actually more money back then than it is now -- without adjusting for inflation. When I was 12 I remember them buying me the "trendy" Ralph Lauren Polo shirts for $99.00. That was in the late 80s.

Today, more than 20 years later, you can buy a computer for $299.. a flat screen TV for $399 and as many Ralph Lauren Polo shirts as you want from Costco for $24.99. My salary is probably double if not tripple what theirs was in the 1980s but almost everything I buy costs much much MUCH less... except housing, food and energy.

On top of that, during that time interest rates were insanely high and borrowing was expensive.

We are in a different world -- we can afford to spend more on housing because everything else costs less. Sure, if anything changes (and it will -- do you think you can keep paying Chinese workers nothing to make all these goods?) -- then we will see it change... but I don't see that in the near future.. I'm thinking more another decade or two.

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PostPosted: Fri Nov 19, 2010 9:25 pm 
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Dabills wrote:
Facts are pretty clear guys. We are at the peak of the housing market and it simply has nowhere to go but down. most people will be fine, they just will have to get used to not borrowing against their house and live a simpler life. The HELOC generation will come to an end and simple values will return once again.


Isn't it ironic that since this thread started 3 months ago home prices have continued to climb and this is a period Realtors consider quiet, yet you state with such confidence that the housing market has reached it's peak and has no where to go but down.


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PostPosted: Fri Nov 19, 2010 11:17 pm 
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Ol Skool wrote:
DTC Wrote:

My salary is probably double if not tripple what theirs was in the 1980s but almost everything I buy costs much much MUCH less... except housing, food and energy.


That is the single most important thing you wrote. Because everything else you talked about is just stuff we clutter our homes with. They are WANTS. Housing, food and energy is what we NEED to survive. I don't care if my wants are going down in price when my needs are getting out of control. Yet, people get distracted by wants and take needs for granted. We will not be taking housing, food and energy costs for granted going further. And that ultimately will be a good thing.


Yes but lets face it.. housing, food and energy may account for say (estimating) 60% of my income.. that's what I need to live.. the other 40% is pure luxury... that means I can accept a 40% increase in costs and still survive without going into bankrupcy... sure, cut back on the blurays.. the eating out.. the electronic gadgets.. the iphones... etc.. but I have quite a bit to play with.. just like the majority of Canadians.

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PostPosted: Sat Nov 20, 2010 7:40 pm 
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Dabills wrote:
dtc, give us a ball park on your income? that way we can tell if you are making sense or not, lol.

dont forget the average family income is 94,000. are you killing that? if so this thread is irrelevant to you as long as you are smart.


Let's just say, we purchased something below the 3x income range. I also know we could easily afford something 4-5x (maybe even 6x) our income range (like some are doing) by cutting out all the luxury spending we do... Housing + Food + Normal expenses leaves quite a bit of money left in our pockets every month. Money to buy home theater, playstations, vacations, clothing etc.

If interest rates go up after our 5 year locked in term.. we cut back on consumer spending and I figure even with the average 2% wage increases that in 5 years we will be better off. If not, we take out a longer term and set ourselves back on paying off the mortgage early. There are always ways.

..but we also don't have any credit card debt, student loans, ex wives, child support etc.

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PostPosted: Sat Nov 20, 2010 8:35 pm 
dtc I dont think youre alone but I guess you are the exception and not the rule from the medias statistics,

although I must say everyone I know well enough to talk financial advice with are in a similar boat to you or better but maybe its a biased sampling pool.


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