Bank of Canada reminds us of more things to worry about - Action News
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Bank of Canada reminds us of more things to worry about

As if we needed a longer list of things to worry about. But by outlining financial dangers, especially in housing, the Bank of Canada hopes to help us avoid them.

By outlining financial dangers, especially in housing, the Bank of Canada hopes to help us avoid them

A sold home is seen in Toronto on Thursday. Canadian house prices continue to rise, but the Bank of Canada warns the market is at a point where a sharp price correction would hurt not just borrowers but the entire economy. (Chris Helgren/Reuters)

Whether you are a teacher, a student, a medical professional or just coping with the COVID-19 crisis in your daily life, there are frequent reports about how the pandemic is increasing our levels of anxiety.

Rather than trying to add to our troubles, the Bank of Canada's latest report on Canada's financial vulnerabilities is intended to help us avoid some major ones. And what the bank's governor, Tiff Macklem, outlined at a news conference on Thursday was not what will certainly go wrong, but what could go wrong if we're not careful.

"The biggest domestic vulnerabilities are those linked to imbalances in the housing market and high household indebtedness," Macklem told reporters. "These are not new, but they have intensified."

The Bank of Canada governor has plenty to keep him awakeat night. The report was not just about housing.

Macklem also worriesCanadian businesses may have become too used to cheap borrowing in the bond market, somethingthat could end without anything to replace it. He frets thatinvestors have failed to account for whatclimate change could do to the price of their assets. He is concerned about cybercrime. Also, the rising Canadian dollar and how it could hurt exports.

Serious damage, and not just to borrowers

But the big worry this time was real estate. The message was clear, if sometimes couched in central-bank-speak.If people don't stop bidding up the price of houses, Canadians are alreadyso loaded withmortgage debt that an unexpected change in the market could do serious damage not just to "overstretched" borrowers with enormous loans, but to the entire economy.

That's why the first and biggest riskoutlined by the bank in its reportwas "a large decline in household income and house prices" caused by an external trigger event. It is hard to be sure what form such a trigger event could take. Macklem referred at one point to a "sharp repricing of risk." Such an eventmight lead to, say, a sudden rise in global interest rates, a stock market crash or a weakening of global trade. Maybe even the collapse of bitcoin.

As the Bank of Canada illustrated in the graphic below, once triggered,already high levels of indebtedness could have a circular impact, pushing house prices down,reducing incomesandspreading through the entire economy.

This is a financial system review graphic from the Bank of Canada's latest report. It shows what could happen if some kind of triggering economic event were to impact the housing market. (Bank of Canada)

Asked if he was responsible for inflated house prices by keeping interest rates too low, Macklem offered a warning: "Interest rates have been very low, and at some point they are going to go back up."

While he thinks this week's high inflation rates are temporary, he made it clear that if inflation does not come back down on its own, the bank is still committed to pushing it back to the twoper centrange. That could mean evenhigher rates.

Tougher stress tests coming

Although it is the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI), not the Bank of Canada, that imposes "stress tests" designed to limit the amount people can borrow, the two bodies workclosely together.

Shortly after Macklem's news conference,OFSIput out a newsrelease of its ownconfirming that as of June 1, the agencywould go ahead with a plan to make it harder to get a loan. Borrowers willhave to prove they have the income to pay a minimum of5.25 per cent interest, even if their lender offers a much lower rate.

That is not a plan that will satisfy everyone, including the many young families thatMacklemsaid send him letters each week saying they have been squeezed out of the housing market.

But they would likely be even more disappointed if the current frenzy to buy a home led to what the Bank of Canada report refers to as "a correction in prices in the future," potentially leading to the viciouscircle described above.

The housing market was far from the only concern Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem discussed at yesterday's news conference (Don Pittis/CBC)

Despite his warnings, Macklem was not entirely gloomy. He pointed to the factthe Canadian economy had proven itself resilient in the face ofwidespread COVID-19 restrictions and lockdowns.

"Vulnerabilities need not lead to serious problems," the central banker told the online gathering of reporters. "Some will work themselves out before bad things happen."

But with so much at stake, including the health of the Canadian property market and all the jobs it supports,hoping for the best really isn't enough.

"The lesson from history is that if left unchecked, vulnerabilities can lead to calamities," Macklem said.

Asked what else he could do besides hikinginterest rates to slow down the property market,Macklem did not mention the very thing he did yesterday: he can try to scare the bejesus outof us.

Follow Don Pittis on Twitter @don_pittis