From here:
As the world’s spotlight turns to the Vancouver Olympics, all eyes will be on Canada. Our nation suffered comparatively less than other G7 economies during the last recession, and our banking system has received praises for being good and boring (read the Sceptical Market Observer’s comment on this).
To be sure, our economy is adding jobs, our stock market has rallied sharply, our currency is close to reaching parity with the USD, commodity exports are up, everything looks great. A buddy of mine even told me that our currency is being bought by central banks around the world. Canada seems to be on a tear.
But things are far from perfect. For one, there is a housing bubble in the making that could last a lot longer than people think. Stephen Jarislowsky, one of Canada’s best known investors, says he believes government measures aimed at juicing the housing market has put the sector in a bubble:
“I am convinced there is a housing bubble in Canada,” Mr. Jarislowsky told Bloomberg News. “… I conclude that the prices of housing today in the U.S. are cheaper than they should be, and that the prices in Canada are far more expensive than they should be.”
Mr. Jarislowsky is not alone. Other economists have also fretted about a bubble given the stunning rebound in real estate after the slump, and projections for record sales and prices this year. Ottawa is now considering tightening some rules. Said Mr. Jarislowsky: “They have basically encouraged people to buy houses based on cheap mortgages. That has created the opposite effect of what was desirable.”
Then, there is what Peter Foster of the National Post calls the Canada Moral Hazard Corporation:
There has been much official chest swelling over Canada’s relatively strong performance during the financial crisis, but perhaps Canadians shouldn’t — if you’ll excuse the mixing of metaphors — be counting their chickens until they are sure that there are no black swans present. And in fact there does seem to be one dark, plump, bird looming around the back of economic barnyard: the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. Or is that a turkey that should be renamed the Canada Moral Hazard Corporation?
The CMHC was never given a cutesy acronym like its U.S. equivalents, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. But why not “Morrie Haz,” acknowledging that it has always been an instrument of moral hazard, the situation where insurance makes the insured-against event more likely?
As we know, Fannie and Freddie — which were privately-owned but “government-sponsored,” which meant they inevitably got bailed out — were front and centre in the U.S. housing market meltdown, which in turn precipitated the global financial crisis.
There are increasing concerns that the Canadian housing market is headed the same way as that of the U.S., stoked by the same factors: artificially low central bank interest rates, and the government insurance/promotion of risky mortgages.
This policy double whammy explains the growing calls for somebody — banks? CMHC? Carney? Flaherty? Anybody else? — to tighten mortgage regulations. These requests appear puzzling until we realize the role of the CMHC in encouraging perverse behaviour.
In a free market, if banks felt a housing bubble building, they would simply tighten standards themselves, either by demanding higher credit qualifications, hoisting rates, or shortening amortization periods. Hoisting rates is out of the question, since rock bottom mortgage rates are now considered by the Bank of Canada to be essential to national economic recovery and protection of our export industries. That leaves Morrie Haz waiting there to insure mortgages, and gives the banks every incentive to hand out any loan that can get insurance. However, they obviously grasp that such cosmic policy fecklessness will ultimately come back to haunt them.
A couple of weeks ago, Peter Routledge of credit analyst Moody’s pointed out that the overheating of the housing market was goosing an unsustainable increase in household borrowing more generally. “As witnessed in the United States,” he wrote, “this movie does not end well.” Specifically, once the punchbowl of low interest rates disappears, households find themselves in trouble, and so do their bankers.
Mr. Routledge noted that Canadian banks likely wouldn’t wind up in the same depths as their U.S. counterparts, but that is only because their riskiest mortgages are backstopped by CMHC. But this makes the systemic threat to the Canadian economy greater.
The U.S. crisis was massive but did not fall entirely on Fannie and Freddie. It was shared with other financial institutions. Nevertheless Fannie and Freddie both failed and had to be taken into government “conservatorship.” Mr. Routledge suggests that the situation is more “secure” in Canada, but as a recent report from the Fraser Institute points out, what this really means that the Canadian system features “massive taxpayer exposure.”
Mr. Routledge suggested that CMHC should tighten its insurance criteria, and this week he was seconded by former Governor of the Bank of Canada David Dodge.
The Fraser study, by Neil Mohindra, confirms that the taxpayer risk from a housing collapse is greater in Canada than elsewhere. He notes that a stunning 90% of all insured residential mortgages in Canada are covered by the CMHC. This amounts to an estimated $480-billion for which Canadian taxpayers would be on the hook if the housing market tanked (although any loss would obviously only be a fraction of this amount).
The study suggests that the CMHC’s activities should be privatized, but that possibility appears a long way down the road, both for practical and political reasons. The biggest problem is that nobody is going to want to privatize a property which harbours a potential time bomb.
The whole thrust of CMHC insurance is to encourage banks to make riskier loans. Normal insurance provisions are based on actuarial principles. CMHC insurance is based — like the activities of Fannie and Freddie — on promoting home ownership. Mixing social and economic objectives usually ends in taxpayer tears.
There is no indication that the Canadian mortgage market has been subject to the lunacies of the U.S., where — for a while — anybody with a pulse could get a home loan. Still, high ratio mortgages — that is, ones with down payments as low as 5% — inevitably carry a hefty risk of default when a bubble bursts. That default then becomes the CMHC’s problem.
As such, notes Mr. Mohindra, Canada is not a model for anybody. Morrie Haz has always been an accident waiting to happen.
According to Moody’s Mr. Routledge, “If policymakers deploy the appropriate tools early rather than late in this period of household credit expansion, perhaps the Canadian movie will end differently.”
But Finance Minister Jim Flaherty knows that ending the party is not going to be popular, which is where inevitable political self-interest compounds those practical problems. Meanwhile CMHC isn’t just a provider of potentially reckless insurance and the depository of last resort for mortgage assets the banks don’t want. Yesterday a representative of Diane Finley, Minister of Human Resources and Skills Development, who is also responsible for CMHC (go figure), was in Montreal handing out stimulus slush under Canada’s Economic Action Plan.
Mr. Flaherty doesn’t want to see a bubble, much less a bomb. But when it comes to which movie we’re coming to the end of, maybe he should check out The Hurt Locker. Just in case.
Of course, lenders like ING, oppose any clampdown to rein in mortgage borrowing. Sound familiar? I agree with Stephen Jarislowsky and I also fear that this movie isn’t going to end well. Enjoy the Vancouver games, because I feel a post-Olympics winter chill headed our way.
Read more: http://advisoranalyst.com/glablog/2010/02/15/canada-moral-hazard-corporation/#ixzz0fp7Xp6Pq
I saw the Hurt Locker and it has nothing to do with 'bubbles'.
ReplyDeleteING opposes any restrictions because they can't undercut the big banks.
Even this nut admits that
"There is no indication that the Canadian mortgage market has been subject to the lunacies of the U.S., where — for a while — anybody with a pulse could get a home loan. Still, high ratio mortgages — that is, ones with down payments as low as 5% — inevitably carry a hefty risk of default when a bubble bursts. That default then becomes the CMHC’s problem."
The problem is that Leo Kolivakis presents no evidence that we are in a bubble.
Jim
ReplyDeleteWhen it takes nine times the median income to buy a median priced home, you are in a major league bubble; period. It is not, nor has it been for some considerable period, a question of if the bubble will pop, but when, and with how big a bang.
Does anyone know when these charts will be updated?
ReplyDeletehttp://cuer.sauder.ubc.ca/cma/data/ResidentialRealEstate/HousingPrices/housing-pri-vancouver.pdf
They get one thing right: there is obvious moral hazard when a loan is fully insured.
ReplyDeleteI disagree that making MI private will solve the problem. There is still significant beta risk even with private insurers. I have doubts that even if MI were privatized it could be decoupled from the government, given how important housing can be in elections.
I haven't yet gone through CMHC's balance sheet. Some of the numbers thrown around about taxpayer exposure are scary but how much are we really exposed? My suspicion is not as much as people might think. CMHC has been collecting insurance from borrowers for a long time without massive defaults. Where did all that money go? If into the coffers of the government, it's a bit hypocritical to think that money shouldn't be used to fund CMHC shortfalls in the future.
Right! The reason why they are happy writing more insurance is the huge premiums they charge.
ReplyDeleteSome FTB are paying 5% up front. This insurance terminates when the property is sold. How can they lose?
I have doubts that even if MI were privatized it could be decoupled from the government, given how important housing can be in elections.
ReplyDeleteIn other words it would be too big to fail, just like Fannie and Freddie. Not to mention AIG.
At least when MI is provided by the government it's clear where the accountability lies.
Housing does not produce tradable goods and services. Mortgage insurance serves no useful economic (as opposed to political) purpose. It just encourages people to borrow too much money.
Get rid of mortgage insurance altogether, and if people can't put together a down payment, let them seek high ratio financing (not "insurance") on the open market.
patriotz, another similar concept to "insurance" is "hedging". I don't see how it's practical to ban either.
ReplyDeleteI see two extremes: CMHC has horseshoes up its rear end and has managed to stay afloat because of unusual market conditions or, using its government guarantee, has managed to put together a solid business regardless of unusual market conditions.
Voters want to own. No surprise that the political consequences include CMHC.
patriotz, another similar concept to "insurance" is "hedging". I don't see how it's practical to ban either.
ReplyDeleteIt's one thing for me to make a contract with a counterparty to offload, e.g. currency risk for a given amount, it's another for a business to offer to offload risk to the public. If my counterparty can't pay up that's my problem, but when an insurance company can't pay up it's everyone's problem.
If a business is too big to fail it's too big. I think that offering "insurance" for correlated risks is fraudulent and should be banned. And it's certainly practical to stop banks from relying on "insurers" to cover their risks.
As I said before I think the risk on high-ratio mortgages should be offloaded to high-yield lenders, not "insurers". If no such lender can be found the mortgage is economically faulty.