Are Canadians ready for higher rates?

The Toronto Dominion Bank Building, Vancouver,...
The Toronto Dominion Bank Building, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

OTTAWA— Globe and Mail Update

Policy makers are right to fret about overbuilding in the Toronto and Vancouver condo markets, but it’s worth remembering that unless those bubble-like markets burst, the less-than-ideal mix of high household debt and overpriced housing may be more manageable than it looks.
Concerns about housing have been in sharp relief for weeks now, long before Tuesday’s report from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. showed a surge in condominium construction, which helped push overall construction starts up 14 per cent last month to the fastest annual rate since September, 2007. That's because Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney started hinting in mid-April that he is looking for an opportunity to start lifting his key interest rate from the current 1 per cent. He also reiterated his concerns about too many people failing to resist the lure of cheap debt that won't be as affordable when rates are higher.
Francis Fong, an economist with Toronto-Dominion Bank, says in a study released Tuesday that while most Canadians look “well-positioned” to absorb an interest-rate increase of around 2 percentage points, “there is a substantial minority that cannot.”
Specifically, Mr. Fong points to analysis from the Bank of Canada itself, which warns that 7.5 per cent of Canadian households could be in some financial trouble once borrowing costs “normalize.” He also points to a projection by the Canadian Association of Accredited Mortgage Professionals that a benchmark rate of 3 per cent would put 21 per cent of all mortgage holders in hot water.
But here’s the thing: nobody believes Mr. Carney has any intention (or capacity) to bring interest rates to that level anytime soon. Even TD, which predicts the first rate hike will come before the end of 2012, sees Mr. Carney moving very gradually to 2 per cent – by the end of 2013. The central banker will be able to move more aggressively once the European crisis seems more stable again, and once the U.S. economy is stronger and the Federal Reserve is closer to hiking, too. So, Mr. Fong warns, barring another “major shock” to the global economy, Mr. Carney’s rate (which directly influences variable-rate mortgages and other floating loans) will rise by at least 2 percentage points before 2015.
Mr. Fong’s main point is that while higher rates are hardly a boon for consumer spending, rates will go up so slowly that there “will likely be enough lead time” for many households to “adjust their spending habits” to account for higher payments.
Moreover, he points to signs that Canadians are already accumulating debt at a slower rate, as does Benjamin Tal of CIBC World Markets in a separate report. Even in an environment of historically low interest rates, Mr. Tal says, overall household credit is rising at the slowest pace since 2002.
“The pace of growth in household credit is no longer a reason for the Bank of Canada to move from the sidelines any time soon,” he argues, suggesting Mr. Carney’s warnings are being heeded after all.
No need to worry, then? Afraid not.
TD’s Mr. Fong notes that annual mortgage credit growth, while down from its pre-recession peak, has held steady at an almost 8-per-cent pace for three years. This suggests borrowers are using their credit cards and lines of credit less, but taking out mortgages at roughly the same clip.
And Mr. Tal notes in his report that the real-estate market is “overshooting,” even as signals suggest – in most markets, anyway – that activity is slowing down.
Which brings us back to overbuilding in Toronto and Vancouver. The same day that CMHC published its eye-popping housing starts numbers, the Crown corporation said in its annual report that it sees no “clear evidence” of a bubble. Mr. Carney, meanwhile, will probably never utter the B-word, but has been hinting for several months that he sees at least the makings of one in some cities.
This below is in his semi-annual assessment of the financial system, from December: “Certain areas of the national housing market may be more vulnerable to price declines,” he said, adding, “the supply of completed but unoccupied condominiums is elevated, which suggests a heightened risk of correction in this market.”
Over and over again since then, Mr. Carney has said authorities are watching closely, and will act to cool the market if necessary, while stressing that interest-rate hikes are too blunt an instrument to deal with this issue, other than in “exceptional circumstances.” With Greece and Spain roiling global markets again, and lukewarm economic news south of the border, it’s harder to imagine Mr. Carney raising rates this year than it was a few weeks ago. Still, the excess supply of condos in Canada’s biggest cities suggests we may have reached “exceptional circumstances.”
That leaves CMHC and, by extension, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty, who is in the process of beefing up oversight of the often clueless-sounding agency.
Mr. Flaherty warned recently that condo developers seem willing to build new units until sales dry up. This could lead to a crash, and the last buyers in could get burned, he warned in a meeting with The Globe and Mail’s editorial board last month.
Some of this frenzied building and buying is linked to foreign investment, the actual amount of which is hard to know since even the government says it doesn’t know. So there may be little the government can do, other than hope the market lands softly.
However, if Ottawa is so worried about the last buyers in, there is one thing it could do to ensure that those people are not the Canadians who can least afford to get burned. The last of three times that Mr. Flaherty has ordered CMHC to tighten its eligibility requirements, in January, 2011, he opted against raising the minimum down payment from the current 5 per cent. (Mr. Flaherty had been warned by the Canadian Real Estate Association and Canadian Association of Accredited Mortgage Professionals that raising the current 5-per-cent minimum down payment would shut too many first-time buyers out of the market and cost jobs.) Raising the minimum to, say, 7 per cent, would seem to be a measured, prudent way for Ottawa to limit the number of naive new borrowers who could be left holding the bag for a lifetime because greedy condo builders couldn’t rein themselves in.



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How Canadian farmers risk missing a global agri-boom

Mark Carney, Governor of the Bank of Canada. W...
Mark Carney, Governor of the Bank of Canada. World Economic Forum, Davos, Switzerland. January 2010. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

OTTAWA— Globe and Mail Blog

Mark Carney likes to remind U.S.-focused exporters that a “massive new middle class” is forming in big emerging markets like China and India -- to the tune of 70 million people a year.
For a net exporter of agricultural products, like Canada, this should be an unmitigated bonus. Urbanization and higher incomes across Asia are fuelling an unprecedented increase in the number of middle-class consumers, and that means an unprecedented increase in the number of families who can afford meat, fruits, oils and other imported foods on a regular basis.
But reaching those customers is harder than it should be, business leaders say, and making it easier could depend on a major shift in trade policy, namely relaxing supply-management protections on dairy and poultry that date back to the 1970s.
In a new paper for the Canadian Council on Chief Executives – the Ottawa-based lobby group headed by former Liberal finance minister John Manley – Michael Gifford, Canada’s former chief agricultural trade negotiator, takes up the cause, urging Ottawa to ensure it does all it can to get Canada a piece of arrangements that are going to reshape global trade. Participation in massive regional bloc deals like the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), for instance, could eventually allow Canada’s agri-food industry to become a “growth engine” for the entire economy.
“If Canadian agricultural producers are to maximize their export potential in Asia, they cannot allow themselves to be placed at a competitive disadvantage compared to other exporters,” Mr. Gifford argues. “The most urgent trade policy challenge, therefore, is to ensure that Canada is not locked out of the preferential trade agreements that will increasingly shape the future of trade in the Asia Pacific region.”
Mr. Gifford argues farmers across the country will miss out unless the government makes clearer an apparent willingness to budge on the long-standing, politically sensitive protections for certain Canadian products. A key barrier to Canada joining the TPP is what many participating countries view as punishingly high tariffs on imported milk and eggs, and the U.S. in particular has opposed Canada entering TPP talks, citing those supply-management protections.
The Harper government has pledged to keep the underlying supply-management system – a hot-button issue in Quebec, for instance, where the country’s dairy industry is based – intact, but officials also have hinted at being willing to compromise in order to get in on the TPP.
Mr. Gifford is clearly hoping to push Ottawa into making this a reality.
“Political sensitivities notwithstanding, the rest of the economy, including the 80 per cent of Canadian agriculture that is tied to world prices, cannot afford to be held hostage to demands by dairy and poultry producers to preserve the status quo,” Mr. Gifford writes.
A problem, though, is that even as Canadian officials increasingly realize this, it is debatable whether U.S. negotiators are ready to entertain anything other than a full abandonment of agricultural protections. Canada is reportedly willing to put everything on the table, but only after it is offered a place at the table, and also wants to see how far the U.S. is willing to go on its own restrictions. The Americans, meanwhile, want Canada to formally signal a readiness to scrap supply management as a condition for joining the discussions.
The only solution, Mr. Gifford says, is for all countries with quota and tariff systems to be willing to at least partially liberalize them, since this is about as far as the agreement will go in the best-case scenario with so many participants restricting one product or another. Again, easier said than done.
But he warns we must not find ourselves on the outside if a huge economy like Japan – which accounts for $3-billion of Canada’s agricultural exports – joins the TPP.




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Canadian farmers have never been older, census data show

Workers tending crop fields off of the highway...
Workers tending crop fields off of the highway from Dharwad to Hampi. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Globe and Mail Blog

Canadian farmers have never been older, raising questions over who will produce the country’s food in the coming decades.
For the first time on record, farmers in the 55-and-over age category comprise the highest percentage of total operators, Canada’s 2011 census of agriculture shows.
An aging work force in Canada’s farming community has long been a source of concern as the profession struggles to attract young people to the sector. Thursday’s census shows the average age of Canadian farmers was 54 years last year, up from age 52 in 2006 and 49.9 in 2001.
Universities and colleges have been trying to attract young people to the sector by, in part, trying to lure more immigrants, women and city dwellers into the field.
“The concern is that farmers are aging, and for the sector and for the economy generally, where are we going to find young farmers to fill the role of those folks who are leaving the business?” said Brian Kaliel, Edmonton-based partner in Canadian law firm Miller Thomson’s agriculture and food production group, who has scrutinized the sector for the past 40 years.
Higher grain prices and improved finances may well be the best draw for young people into the business, he said, adding that the future of farming may well be a splintering into mega-farms on one side and boutique operations that fill niches in the food industry on the other.
The census highlights just how acute that need is becoming. As of last year, nearly half – or 48.3 per cent – of farm operators were 55 or older, compared to 40.7 per cent in 2006.
The census of agriculture, released by Statistics Canada, has been tallied since 1871 and taken at five-year intervals since 1956.
The total number of farmers is declining rapidly. As of last year, there were 294,000 operators – a 10.1-per-cent slide since 2006, a drop that’s occurred in line with the decreasing number of farms. Of the total, 73 per cent of farmers are male and 27 per cent female.
Just 8.2 per cent of operators were younger than 35 as of last year.
Quebec has the youngest farmers, with an average age of 51. British Columbia’s operators had the highest average age at 55.7.
A few factors suggest the numbers may not be as dire as they seem, says Lyndon Carlson, Regina-based senior vice-president of marketing at Farm Credit Canada. For one, many farmers are in no rush to retire in their fifties, he said, adding that he is seeing many sons and daughters who want to continue in the family business.
With technology gains and innovation in the sector, fewer farms and farmers doesn’t mean less production. And higher commodity prices, particularly for grains, are fuelling optimism in the sector, he said.
The census also painted a sweeping picture of agricultural changes in Canada.
Here are some of its findings:
– Canada’s agricultural sector has shifted from livestock-based farms to crop-based farms. “Crop production and beef farming have long been the backbone of Canadian agriculture, but the gap between the two has widened,” the census said. By last year, the share of oilseed and grain farms had grown to 30 per cent, while the share of beef farms had dropped to 18.2 per cent.
– The number of farms in Canada tumbled 10.3 per cent last year from 2006, to 205,730
– The number of farms has been declining steadily since 1941. Between 2006 and 2011, the number fell in every province – except Nova Scotia, where it rose 2.9 per cent.
– The average size of Canadian farms increased 6.9 per cent between 2006 and 2011, from 728 acres to 778 acres. In Saskatchewan, the average farm size jumped 15.1 per cent to 1,668 acres, the largest increase in the country.
– For every dollar of receipts in 2010, Canadian farmers had an average of 83 cents in expenses.
– Canola has surpassed spring wheat, which lost its position as Canada’s No. 1 field crop. It was the fourth straight census in which the acreage of spring wheat fell.
– Organic farms represent 1.8 per cent of all farms in Canada, compared with 1.5 per cent in 2006 and 0.9 per cent in 2001.

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Demographics make big city condos hot

Housing starts
Housing starts (Photo credit: Wikipedia)



On average, a home in Canada costs 84% more than in the United States right now. The national averages are $372,762 at home versus $203,100 south of the 49th parallel. One might argue that something has got to give.
By analyzing housing starts in Canada, we can get a good indication of future trends in real estate. Warm weather throughout most of Canada was credited with being the catalyst for a very strong month of March in new homes. April was expected to be lacklustre, but those expectations were blown out of the water with 244,900 housing starts last month, compared to an estimate of 204,000. This was the best month in about five years, well prior to the onset of the 2008 recession. These numbers have some questioning the sustainability of starts as well as eliciting further calls for a housing bubble here in Canada.
Of particular interest was that nearly two-thirds of new homes last month were multifamily units, which includes condominiums — a 27% increase year-over-year on a seasonally adjusted basis.
Canadian housing also topped a recent global list published by the Economist for 12-month price change, increasing 7%, while ranking high on a comparison of home prices to both rents and average incomes. Overall, the Economist suggests that Canadian homes are 54% overvalued relative to a 19% undervaluation in the U.S.


So clearly it doesn’t take a statistics degree to read the numbers and unequivocally declare the Canadian housing market is overheated and in particular, the condo market, right? Wrong.

First off, CMHC’s recently released annual report stated: “Clear evidence of a bubble is lacking [and we] continue to monitor very closely housing prices and underlying factors such as demographic and economic fundamentals and financial conditions across all major urban centers, including condominium markets.”
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Furthermore, averages can be deceiving and may not be representative of a particular local market. A lack of supply in posh parts of the Greater Toronto Area, for example, has been driving bidding wars and pushing prices considerably higher in some neighbourhoods. Perhaps people are keen to lock in today’s low mortgage rates and are willing to buy a house in their desired neighbourhood regardless of the cost. In the short run, this drives up average prices. In the long run, does this really matter?
The big question based on Canada’s relatively high prices and April’s enormous inventory of new condos is whether the condo market is really experiencing a bubble? One of the key considerations for the purchase of any home has always been location. And location is one of the main reasons the condo market is not in a bubble.
What are many Baby Boomers going to do in coming years? Many will be selling the two-storey houses where they raised their families and buying condos, both for lifestyle reasons and also to bank some money to fund their retirement.
What are many young families going to do in coming years? If they want to live in Canada’s big, expensive cities like Vancouver, Toronto and Montreal, they’ll do what’s been done in the likes of New York, London and Tokyo for years — they’ll buy a condo.
What are many new immigrants going to do in coming years? In recent years, about 70% of Canadian immigrants end up in the big three — Vancouver, Toronto and Montreal. And they don’t buy houses in the suburbs. They rent condos in the city, so they can be close to jobs, resources and cultural centres until they are established.
Demographics (Baby Boomers), family finance (big city housing affordability) and global mobility (immigration to the world’s new “America”) make condos the location of choice for tomorrow’s Canadian home buyers. I live in a big house in the country, northeast of Toronto, so condos aren’t for me. Am I selling my rural house to buy a condo in the city? No. But prices of goods and services, homes included, are all about supply and demand. Therefore, my feeling is that big city condo values will continue to rise in general and that house prices in some urban areas will fall as a broad trend, with average home prices across the country potentially flat in the years to come.
Jason Heath is a fee-only certified financial planner (CFP) and income tax professional for Objective Financial Partners Inc. in Toronto.

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Amendments to the Protecting Canada's Immigration System Act


OTTAWA, ONTARIO, May 09, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- Minister of Citizenship, Immigration, and Multiculturalism Jason Kenney today announced that the Government is proposing amendments to Bill C-31, the Protecting Canada's Immigration System Act.
"Over the past few weeks, I've listened to parliamentarians and witnesses," said Minister Kenney. "We have always said that we were open to amendments that make Bill C-31 stronger and help us to fight human smuggling and to protect Canada's immigration system. These amendments do just that, and make for a stronger bill."
For example, some critics feared that the measures originally proposed in Bill C-31 with respect to the cessation of permanent residence status might be used in a way never intended by the Government. Others speculated that the Government would seek to remove permanent residence status from refugees who have become well-established in Canada, but whose rationale for refugee status ceases to exist due to improved conditions in their country of origin. The Government is introducing an amendment to clarify this section and to explicitly limit the application of this section of the legislation.
The proposed amendment would make it clear that where the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (IRB) determines that an individual's protected person status has ceased to exist solely due to a change in country conditions, that individual would not automatically lose permanent resident status. This was the original purpose of the provision in the bill, and the new language should make that purpose clearer.
Under the Balanced Refugee Reform Act, individuals with a final negative decision from the IRB were barred from applying for a pre-removal risk assessment (PRRA) for 12 months. This is because a PRRA is duplicative of the IRB decision, and a core purpose of the bill was to reduce redundancy and unnecessary delays in the removal process for failed asylum seekers.
The government is proposing to amend this provision so that the 12-month bar will apply as soon as Bill C-31 receives Royal Assent. There is no reason to delay the application of this provision, and the proposed amendment ensures there will be no such delay. The effect of this proposed amendment will be that individuals who received a negative decision from the IRB, or abandoned or withdrew their refugee claim, or received a negative PRRA decision within the 12 months prior to the date of Royal Assent would be barred from applying for a PRRA until 12 months after that decision.
The proposed amendment would also increase the temporal bar from 12 to 36 months for those from designated countries of origin who have received a previous negative decision from the IRB, abandoned or withdrew their refugee claim, or received a negative PRRA decision. This change will discourage failed asylum seekers from going underground and evading removal for 12 months, and recognises that country conditions and the threat of real persecution in a presumptively safe country are not likely to change in the course of 36 months. There is, however, a provision in the Balanced Refugee Reform Act that would allow the Minister to make exceptions to the bar on PRRA to quickly respond to sudden changes in country conditions.
Under the Protecting Canada's Immigration System Act, the Government had initially proposed mandatory detention without review for up to 12 months for those who arrive as part of a designated irregular arrival. This would allow for the determination of identity, admissibility, or any other investigations to take place before members or irregular mass arrivals are released into the community. Persons would, however, be released from detention before 12 months, if they are found to be genuine refugees.
Opposition members have asked for amendments to this detention review schedule, so that these individuals would receive a review of their detention much sooner than initially proposed. They have, for example, suggested that a first detention review should occur within 14 days of detention, with subsequent reviews every 30 days. Other witnesses and critics of this provision of Bill C-31 have suggested other time periods, including an initial review shortly after detention, followed by subsequent reviews at least every 6 months.
After listening to parliamentarians, the Government is proposing a compromise, which would see a first detention review within 14 days and subsequent reviews after every 180 days. As before, a person would be released before this time, upon being found to be a genuine refugee. As an additional safeguard, the government will also propose an amendment to allow the Minister of Public Safety, on his own initiative and at any time, to release a detained individual when grounds for detention no longer exist.
"I believe that these amendments show that the Government is open to reasonable suggestions that improve our Bills," said Minister Kenney. "We have listened to parliamentarians on Bill C-31 and, as a result, we have a stronger bill that will continue to protect genuine refugees, while ensuring that bogus asylum seekers are detained, processed, and swiftly removed, and sending the message to human smugglers that targeting Canada will no longer pay."
Follow us on Twitter at www.twitter.com/CitImmCanada
Photos of Minister Kenney available at: www.cic.gc.ca/english/department/media/photos/high-res/index.asp .
Building a stronger Canada: Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) strengthens Canada's economic, social and cultural prosperity, helping ensure Canadian safety and security while managing one of the largest and most generous immigration programs in the world.
        
        Contacts:
        Ana Curic
        Minister's Office
        Citizenship and Immigration Canada
        613-954-1064
        
        Media Relations
        Communications Branch
        Citizenship and Immigration Canada
        613-952-1650
        CIC-Media-Relations@cic.gc.ca
        
        
        


SOURCE: Citizenship and Immigration Canada

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