Avoiding the crash

For all the ominous talk of a housing market collapse, the end result could be yet another rebound in prices

by Jason Kirby on Saturday, September 4, 2010 10:20am - 0 Comments

PHOTOGRAPH BY SIMON HAYTER

As the housing market stalls, several people who bought pricey Vancouver condos before they were built are suing to get out of the deals. In Toronto, condo sales during the first half of the year fell for the first time since 1994. And at least one homeowner near Halifax just offered to give away his house for free, so long as whomever took it assumed the $395,000 mortgage. Everywhere, tales of real estate woe and miserable sales data have prompted predictions of a crash. James Grant, a prominent U.S. investment newsletter author well known for his bearish outlook on the American economy, has warned house prices here are primed to fall: “The median Canadian house is, in fact, certifiably unaffordable.” Even if prices tumble, though, as happened in 2008—when the economy was also teetering and house prices were at record levels—they could still make another surprising comeback.

No question Canadian prices are outrageously high. As Grant points out, compared to rental rates, home prices in Canada are more than 60 per cent above the historical average. And with home ownership rates and household debt levels higher than they’ve ever been, Scotiabank economist Derek Holt says there’s nowhere for prices to go but down. “This time when we come off the boil, prices are going to stay lower,” he says.

That’s quickly becoming the prevalent view. And another modest eight to 10 per cent correction could occur. But if that happens, there are reasons to expect a repeat rebound, as happened previously when the Teranet-National Bank house price index slipped eight per cent in 2008 and then roared back 18 per cent, reaching an all-time high two months ago. That’s because mortgages remain wildly cheap and, if anything, are getting cheaper. True, the Bank of Canada has raised interest rates twice since June to 0.75 per cent. That only affects homebuyers taking out variable-rate mortgages, though, which currently sit at 2.75 per cent. The fact is, lenders are furiously cutting fixed-rate mortgages. Since May, five-year fixed mortgage rates have fallen to 3.99 per cent from 4.75 per cent, according to Canequity.com.
Another reason house prices rebounded so sharply after the 2008 drop was that there were far more buyers than sellers. As the financial crisis hit in 2008, new home construction slowed while sellers yanked properties off the market, lest they get caught in a downward price spiral. But when the Second Great Depression in Canada turned out to be Just Another Recession, home buyers flocked back to the market before sellers had a chance to react, thus driving up prices. A similar phenomenon could play out again.

But if another rebound occurs, it will likely be triggered by Ottawa. The Harper government has repeatedly intervened to micro-manage the $2.8-trillion housing market. Before the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis hit, Ottawa dramatically loosened mortgage rules, allowing Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation to insure zero-down, 40-year mortgages. Ottawa reversed course when such loans were shown to be dangerous. But with the recession, Ottawa swung back into action. It offered first-time home-buyer subsidies, allowed Canadians to withdraw more from RRSPs to buy homes, and authorized CMHC to take $75 billion of mortgages off lenders’ hands. Finally, as the market began to overheat in February, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty tightened mortgage lending standards. But Holt says Ottawa may loosen mortgage restrictions once again if the housing market craters. And it seems entirely possible the government will use its clout through CMHC to spur banks to lend and people to buy.

Efforts to halt prices from falling sharply might keep homeowners, and hence millions of voters, happy, but it’s bad economic policy. First-time buyers would be forced to take on even more dangerously large mortgages. At the same time, if the housing market continues to swing up and down, that eventually translates into stagnation—albeit at high levels.

Which is why many believe it’s time to let the housing market pursue its own trajectory—and, given recent data, that would appear to be down. “There’s a strong case to be made for letting the markets follow their natural evolution, and the U.S. offers a good lesson,” says Holt. “Every time they’ve tried to use stimulus to avoid what’s inevitable in the long run, they end up making things worse.”

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  • Pele

    My wife and I bought a home in Hamilton a few years back because we couldn't afford in Toronto. The price of houses just kept rising beyond any thought of being able to purchase. I grew so bitter that I packed my goods, drove past Stelco and moved into a classic 4 bedroom in the Hammer. (under $180 000.00)

    We have come to love Hamilton. It's kind of gritty (like Parkdale, where we're from) but it's a great place for working families. Good restaurants, festivals, schools etc. Taking my boys to the Labour Day classic at Ivor Wynne tomorrow. GO TICATS!

  • Daniel Gibbons

    The argument about cheap mortgages only holds true if there is an infinite pool of new buyers. You can't pull demand forward forever. That said, the last thing Ottawa wants is a serious fall in house prices before the next election. They'll do everything they possibly can to preserve the fantasy for another six months or so.

    Home ownership rates in Canada are about as high as they can possibly go. In fact the only way to drive them higher would be to further increase the rate of sub-prime lending to allow completely unqualified buyers into the market. I don't think that's completely off the table, given the govt.'s demonstrated appetite for massively expanding CMHC (four-fold increase in securitization in the last four years or so), but it would be utterly reckless for the Harper govt. to do so.

    The condo market seems like it will be the biggest loser, but I also wouldn't want to be the owner of a highly leveraged suburban McMansion.

  • Gordeaux

    "The Harper government has repeatedly intervened to micro-manage the $2.8-trillion housing market."

    That says it all. These guys have no fiscal conservatism in their DNA at all. I guess it's been forced out by all the social conservatism.

  • wayne moores

    This will all end very, very badly.

  • http://www.drewberrymortgageinsurance.co.uk/ MDrewberry

    After billions of stimulus across the globe all housing markets seems to be in the same stagnant state. Now government debts are so high and the stimulus has all but dried up it is worrying what will happen over the next year or two. Mortgage holders not only face the risk of negative equity but also loan default through redundancy.

  • pipewrench

    without a baby boom or massive immigration, the baby boomers will not have a market to sell to when they cash out their houses. It is a simple supply/demand issue and debt load cannot keep prices up forever.

    Inflation cannot happen as we are in a global economy and as western governments tighten budgets to the new reality deflation will really take hold. This chasing our tail down the rabbit whole is going to become the new norm until books can be balanced and with deflation it is going to take a long-long time….

  • vreaa

    This article discussed at VREAA, 'A Housing Crash Rescue Cannot Be Legislated'
    http://wp.me/pcq1o-1ib
    Excerpt:
    "At the very most any policy intervention would only forestall the inevitable crash. To cause an ‘orderly unwinding’ of a bubble you require an 'orderly' and never-ending supply of buyers willing to take on large amounts of (albeit cheap) debt to buy assets that are falling in value and still grossly overpriced. That isn’t going to happen."

    • Sutthiphong

      I totally agree with you. To engineer "orderly unwinding" of a bubble will only further "fend off" qualified homebuyers while attracting unqualified sub-prime ones. The qualified, smart buyers, who usually safely take out small mortgages, will just sit back because they know these would be unnaturally propped-up prices, which will eventually fall even more violently. I am originally from Thailand, a 3rd-world country, and I can't believe Canada is willing to go dangerous 3rd-world style stimulus at the long-term expense of taxpayers just for some selfish politicians to win the short-term election. Stop that 3rd-World style measure now!!!!

  • Brian

    Umnnn LOL .. the O Down 40 yr mortgages were introduced BEFORE Harper won his first minority in Jan 06 .. the house didn't sit until Feb that year — It was Harper who batted down these clowns remember? This article contains your typical Liberal pass the blame and lets rewrite recent history game for sure.

  • Pele

    “Every time they’ve tried to use stimulus to avoid what’s inevitable in the long run, they end up making things worse.”

    Well said.

  • bert

    Buy and stay for 10 years or more. Costs then can be seen as rent. Only fools buy at such high prices to make money when they sell. The only real danger is higher interest rates. Stay within 30% of your yearly income @ twice the going interest rate of today. Then you are at least a little protected. Do the math and stay within your price range and budget. Advice of the day.Lol

  • tscott

    Very good advice, that is about the same advice that I got from my father inlaw 25 years ago and it still hods true today. Think befor you make the big step an buy above you means.

  • MarionKl

    Indeed. I don't understand the "starter home/condo" mentality. We are taking the plunge and buying a semi, and we plan to pay it off as quickly as possible, and live in it long after it has been paid off.

    The market can do whatever it wants in the meantime.

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