The overnight rate held steady yesterday as the Bank of Canada announced that it would maintain its traget of 1 percent. This leaves the prime lending rate at 3 percent. It’s now been more than two years since the prime rate has increased, giving variable rate mortgage holders the upper hand on higher interest costs. Continue reading
Category Archives: General Interest
Loophole May Make Credit Unions the Better Mortgage Option
New mortgage guidelines aimed at Canada’s sizzling real estate market might not be as ironclad as Finance Minister Mark Carney may have hoped. That’s because credit unions, which are provincially regulated, are not under the jurisdiction of the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI). This loophole may provide community credit unions with an important competitive advantage and borrowers with an attractive alternative to traditional lending sources. Continue reading
How To Save For Your Down Payment
According to a recent TD Canada Trust survey, nearly 60 percent of Canadians were disappointed in the size of their down payment. These findings aren’t all that surprising; in a world of record-setting consumer debt, slim savings and lacklustre investment returns, saving for a sizeable deposit can seem like an exercise in futility. And yet, the bigger your down payment, the less interest you’ll pay, the easier it will be to refinance and you’ll enjoy lower mortgage fees. Continue reading
RBC Increases Rates And the Argument for Smaller Lenders
The Royal Bank is the first of Canada’s big banks to hike rates, increasing two of its mortgages by one-fifth of a point each this morning. RBC’s posted rate for a three-year, fixed-rate mortgage has increased 0.2 percentage points to 4.05 while their special-offer rate for a five-year closed mortgage rose to 3.69 percent.
RBC is the first major commercial bank to increase their three-year mortgage rate since late January. Competitors are currently sitting at 3.95 percent. Data from the Bank of Canada shows that five-year conventional mortgages have held steady at 5.24 percent since May. Continue reading
Are Two Addresses Better Than One?
Whether it’s a cottage in the Muskokas or a vacation home in Cabo, multiple homeownership is becoming more and more common among wealthy Canadians. Now, more than ever, Canadians are picking up secondary properties, many of them south of the border. While statistics are hard to come buy, numbers from the National Association of Realtors show that foreign buyers are having a big impact on the United States housing market… and many of these buyers are Canadian.
International buyers purchased roughly $82.5 billion worth of property in the U.S. in the year ending March 31, 2012, compared to $66 billion the previous year. Canadians are estimated to represent about a quarter of those buyers. Continue reading