Weighing the risks Borrowing 100 percent means you essentially own a home that is worth less than what you paid once you factor in closing costs. So, if something goes wrong and you have to sell early, you will take a loss and likely owe the bank for the shortfall on the mortgage. If house prices decline, that only exacerbates the loss. However, if house prices continue to increase -- traditionally home prices increase by about three percent annually or the rate of inflation -- then the person who doesn't buy is left in the cold and must save even more to meet the traditional five percent down payment requirement. Meeting eligibility
requirements Moreover, she stresses, these mortgages still meet strict eligibility requirements. The bank applies the same "rigorous" standards assessing cash flow, credit history and ability to service debt. "These are extremely qualified buyers. We have no interest putting people into homes they cannot afford." She adds the mortgage is also flexible and allows buyers to pick from a range of payback options. Doing
the math First, the insurance premium for high-ratio mortgages increases a full point from the 2.75 percent you'd for a 95-percent-financed home to 3.75 percent. That means for a $300,000 home, you will need to borrow an additional $11,250 to cover insurance, which is $3,000 or 30 percent more than at 2.75. Then there's the interest cost. If you add a longer amortization period, it gets very expensive, and that's what concerns Mastracci the most. If you take longer to pay off your mortgage, "it's pushing your retirement nest egg (farther up the road)." He cites the example of a $100,000 mortgage at a six-percent interest rate. Pay it off over 35 years and your interest bill alone is $137,400. The total borrowing cost amounts to $237,400, more than double what you borrowed. If
you pay it off over the shorter period of 25 years, your payments are $640 a month,
but the total interest paid is $91,400 for a total of $191,400. Over 20 years,
the payment is $712 a month and interest is $70,900 for a total of $170,900. Bank
chief is cautious Dodge expressed his concerns in a letter to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC), one of the country's three insurers that back high-risk mortgage loans. The others are Genworth Financial, which backs the new Scotiabank product, and newcomer American International Group Inc., which is expected to start rolling out its products any day now. The Canadian Press reported on a letter exchange between Dodge and the CMHC in which Dodge expressed "dismay" at the CMHC's plan to offer interest-only loans for amortizations as long as 35 years. "Particularly disturbing," he wrote, was the rationale it would allow more Canadians to buy homes sooner. That, he says, will likely drive up home prices, making them less affordable and stoking inflation. Jim Middlemiss is editor of Canadian Lawyer magazine and co-author of Your Guide to Canadian Law. He's a frequent contributor to the National Post and Investment Executive. --
Posted: Nov. 8, 2006 | |
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