Mark Mighton from HomeFreeMortgages.ca sent me an
email this week. Some good points. I'm still of the opinion that peace
of mind is the most important thing you could ever have with a
mortgage but your opinion and mine will differ, so do what makes your family feel right.
That’s because informed consumers are more likely to make choices
that are
less profitable for lenders. Going variable is one choice that’s yielding less lender profit these
days.
For many lenders, gross margins are currently over 20 basis points
better in
fixed-rate mortgages than in variables. The big banks salivate at the thought of homeowners paying elevated
4.65%
5-year bank rates. (We’re talking discretionary fixed rates here. The
banks’ publicly disseminated “special offer” rate is even higher: 4.85%.) At 4.65%, the average 5-year fixed bank mortgage is 156 basis points
over the
Government of Canada bond yield (based on Thursday’s close). That’s a
succulent
spread for a lender. Remember: Five weeks ago, some lenders were selling
mortgages at spreads of half that. Not everyone’s biting, though. The 2.9 percentage point gap between fixed and variable rates is wide
enough
to drive a truck through. Informed and well-qualified consumers are
therefore
comparing today’s fixed rates to prime - .50% variables—and many are
taking
their chances in a floating rate. Here’s what others are saying about variable rates:
(This is an interesting
call.
Most in the industry are expecting variable-rate discounts to remain
the same
or grow slightly bigger. Peter speculates that spread will tighten as
rates
start rising, compelling lenders to decrease discounts. Just today, in
fact,
we saw one non-bank lender trim their variable discount. On the other
hand,
some feel that competition will force most lenders to absorb any
margin
compression and maintain variable discounts.)
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