Dave Larock in Monday Interest Rate Update, Mortgages and Finance, Home Buying, Toronto Real Estate News
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Last week borrowers saw five-year fixed-mortgage rates rise, and then
rise again, ending the era of sub-3% five-year fixed rates ... at least
for the time being.
Lenders raised their rates in reaction to
surging Government of Canada (GoC) five-year bond yields, which have now
increased by 66 basis points over the last seven weeks.
As a
first step toward understanding what all this means for our mortgage
rates over the short and medium term, let’s start by taking a look at
how we got to this point.
The run-up in five-year GoC bond yields
has occurred in three distinct phases which were fueled by separate but
mutually reinforcing factors:
While the first
two factors weren’t enough to change my long-held view that five-year
fixed rates would not materially rise for the foreseeable future, the
U.S. Fed’s latest announcement is a potential game changer. We live in
strange times where the role of central banks has shifted from
influencing markets with an invisible hand to being an active, direct
and leading, market participant. As such, when the Fed softens its
open-ended commitment to be the marginal, and largest, buyer of U.S.
Treasuries, you can bet that U.S. Treasury yields will rise in the
aftermath. Against this back drop, higher Canadian fixed-mortgage rates
are inevitable because GoC bond yields have had a 98% correlation with
U.S. Treasury yields over the past five years (thanks to BMO economist
Doug Porter for that statistic).
But will the U.S. Fed follow
through and taper its quantitative easing programs within the timetable
it now prescribes? The Fed carefully qualified its schedule with caveats
about the economy, jobs, and (implicitly) equity markets, performing as
expected. As such, if equity markets continue to weaken, and/or
business investment and employment growth slow, these developments could
easily cause the Fed to delay its tapering plans. This is a very
realistic possibility. The experts I read have long said that starting
quantitative easing (QE) is as easy as squeezing toothpaste from a tube
and ending it is about as complicated as trying to put that toothpaste
back again (and we’re talking about the multi-coloured kind of
toothpaste in this analogy).
The Fed’s QE programs have created
massive market distortions that won’t right themselves without sending
shock waves through an economy that is still on a fragile footing.
Consider the following:
Although we ignore the
Fed’s warnings at our peril, I can’t help wondering whether the Fed’s
change in tone was really just a trial balloon to see how the market
will react when the day of reckoning, or in this case, the day of
tapering, actually arrives. The Fed certainly left itself plenty of room
to alter its timing if circumstances warrant. In the words of Ben
Bernanke: “Our policies are going to depend on this [improved] scenario
coming true. If it doesn’t come true, we’ll adjust our policies.”
In
the meantime, investors will carefully inspect every piece of new data
with a fine tooth comb in an attempt to pinpoint when the Fed will
actually begin to taper. This guessing game should incite more
volatility in bond yields, and markets in general, in the months to
come.
Five-year GoC bond yields were up 29 basis points last week,
closing at 1.81% on Friday. Five-year fixed rates are now offered in
the 3.25% range while ten-year fixed rates are still available in the
3.64% range. If you value the stability of fixed rates and believe in
the strength and sustainability of the U.S. recovery, paying a small
premium (0.40%) to lock-in a rate for an additional five years of
protection seems like an easy call. If rates start to rise in a major
way, the second five years could be a lot more important than the first
five. (Most people don’t know that breaking a ten-year fixed-rate
mortgage after the fifth year only costs you a penalty of three months’
interest. For more details, here is my post on the ten-year fixed rate, which I took many years ago as my first mortgage.)
Five-year
variable-rate mortgages are available in the prime minus 0.50% range
(which works out to 2.50% using today’s prime rate). Even if the Fed’s
tapering plans come off without any major hitches the removal of its QE
programs will still provide a headwind for the U.S. economy. This should
push out the timing of any change to the Fed’s policy rate, and by
close association, the Bank of Canada’s overnight rate (on which our
variable rates are based). In fact, at their latest meeting, fifteen of
the nineteen members who sit on the committee that sets the U.S. Fed’s
policy rate forecasted that it would not be increased until 2015 or
later.
The Bottom Line: We are now at an inflection point
with mortgage rates and there are two evolving views of where we are
headed. If you believe that the U.S Fed QE taper will not cause serious
damage to the U.S. economy, with five and ten-year fixed rates so
closely aligned, I think the ten-year fixed rate is worth the 0.40%
premium you pay for the five extra years of rate certainty. If you
believe that volatility and fear will remain the watchwords of central
bankers and investors for the foreseeable future, then I think the
five-year variable rate is a far more compelling option than the
five-year fixed rate, especially given the 0.75% gap that now exists
between them.
David Larock is an independent mortgage planner and industry insider specializing in helping clients purchase, refinance or renew their mortgages. David's posts appear weekly on this blog (movesmartly.com) and on his own blog integratedmortgageplanners.com/blog). Email Dave