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Politics : Canadian Political Free-for-All -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (13503)10/26/2009 5:23:22 AM
From: axial2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 37197
 
You're right that CMHC insuring MBS is normal.

I think the point is here:

"In an effort to prop up the real estate market in 2008 (when affordability nosedived), the Harper government directed the CMHC to approve as many high-risk borrowers as possible and to keep credit flowing. CMHC described these risky loans as "high ratio homeowner units approved to address less-served markets and/or to serve specific government priorities." The approval rate for these risky loans went from 33 per cent in 2007 to 42 per cent in 2008. By mid-2007, average equity as a share of home value was down to six per cent -- from 48 per cent in 2003. At the peak of the U.S. housing bubble, just before it burst, house prices were five times the average American income; in Canada today that ratio is 7.4:1 -- almost 50 per cent higher."

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The G&M started running a series on this about 6 months ago, then stopped. Wonder why...

So it looks like this:

(A) In the 'States banks, investors and homeowners got in over their heads on mortgages, and government had to rescue middlemen and mortgage holders.

(B) In Canada, high-risk mortgages now exceed dangerous levels that triggered the US financial crisis. Banks have assumed no risk, and government has, in effect, pre-guaranteed all high-risk mortgages. High-risk mortgages have a higher interest rate, and will be prejudiced first and more, if interest rates rise, which they will. Eventually, they must.

Awesome. Banks don't have any appreciable risk, so government doesn't need to protect them. As for high-risk mortgages, we now have more than ever before, while housing prices have escalated to more than 7 times the average Canadian salary.

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So government has dispensed with the middlemen, and run its own lottery with the mortgage market and interest rates.

Way to go, Canada! Brilliant!

;)

Jim