OCTOBER 2016 NEWSLETTER

Jody Ivanick - Mortgage Broker

jodyivan@gmail.com
604 724 2675
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/jody-ivanick/24/124/3a1

Jody - Facebook

Banff hikes

 

After a long hiatus I spent some time hiking in Banff at the very end of August.  This being the mountains and Canada, yes, we got snowed on - but that was on a climb at over 10,000 feet.  And it was still beautiful.   

The rest of my hikes were lower down, and the weather was stellar.  The whole trip was a fabulous reminder of what a great place the Rockies are.  If you haven't been, all I can say is this - go.   

The picture is of Lake Louise, taken on my last morning there.  The day before I had hiked out to the glacier at the far end of the picture.  I even got lucky (or unlucky, depending on your perspective) by running into a grizzly bear.  He cared much more about the marmots he was hunting than about me, so fortunately no problems there.  The Canadian wilderness at its finest!  



Court Ordered Foreclosures list - October 2016

 

September 2016 - Burnaby - Attached
September 2016 - Commercial list
September 2016 - Maple Ridge - Attached
September 2016 - Maple Ridge - Detached
September 2016 - Mission - Detached
September 2016 - New Westminster - Attached
September 2016 - Pitt Meadows - Detached
September 2016 - Port Moody - Attached
September 2016 - Richmond - Attached
September 2016 - Squamish - Attached
September 2016 - Sunshine Coast - Attached
September 2016 - Vancouver - detached

Back by popular demand, the ever popular foreclosure list....



Only Freak Out With Less Than 20% Down

 

If you have less then 20% down, you are going to lose 20% of your purchasing power. 

This means the following:
If you wanted to live in Vancouver, you are now living in Burnaby.
If you wanted to live in Burnaby, you are now living in Coquitlam.
If you wanted to live in Coquitlam, you are now living in Langley.
If you wanted to live in Langley, you are now living in Abbotsford.
If you wanted to live in Abbotsford, you are now living in Chilliwack.  
and so on...

Overall, if you do not have 20% down, you are moving East.

You have till October 17th to have an offer on a property to bypass this.  

For everyone else with access to 20% down, we have lenders that will not be affected by these rule changes.   



Great Article Regarding the New Lending Requirements

Written by Economist Michael Campbell:

The Ghost of the Sub Prime Mortgage Crisis Haunts the Finance Minister

By now you will have seen the details of the significant changes to the mortgage market announced by the Finance Minister but how will they impact the market?

In a nutshell – it will be big. The changes fundamentally impact the demand side of the supply/demand relationship. Over that past 7 years, market demand at the entry and mid level have been fueled by record low interest rates. The new regulations are the equivalent of a significant increase in rates.

By forcing all insured borrowers to qualify based on the posted rate of 4.64% instead of the actual negotiated rate, the changes are the equivalent of a jump of 2% in mortgage rates.  Time will tell how many people, especially first time buyers and other low equity buyers will be forced out of the market with most estimates centering around 1 in 5 but a much higher percentage may see their mortgage limit drop.

In major centers like Vancouver, Calgary and Edmonton, the timing couldn’t be worse.  Following a dismal August, Vancouver’s September numbers are just as bad with single detached home sales plunging 72% compared to September, 2015.  Calgary and Edmonton have been slow for far longer. While many rural communities never experienced anything approaching Vancouver-like gains over the last 5 years, they’re all subject to the rule changes.

Given that Vancouver’s city government is going forward with their new vacancy tax and the provincial government has the foreign buyers tax as well as tax changes for foreign buyers in the new regulations, you’d be forgiven for thinking government won’t rest until they do for real estate what they’ve done for the energy industry.

Two Surprises

It’s amazing that the changes come amid an outcry over affordability and will put home ownership farther out of reach for many first time buyers, especially in cities like Vancouver and Toronto.

Secondly, the changes come on the heels of a slew of downward revisions to Canada’s economic growth. The latest came today from International Monetary Fund, which now pegs Canada’s growth at 1.2% this year and 1.9% next year. The latest changes will put further downward pressure on the economy given that real estate is the most important industry in 7 out of 10 provinces.

The Bright Spot

The one short term bright spot is that people with an existing mortgage agreement and those who get a deal done prior to the October 17th start date are not subject to the new regulations but have to have the mortgage funded by March 1, 2017. That could result in a buying surge for those scrambling to avoid the new rules.

In Conclusion

Clearly the Finance Minister is worried about all the mortgage insurance risk for CMHC and exposure for the banks. Fair enough but at what cost? Right now it looks like reduced activity, erosion of existing homeowner’s equity, hurting many first time buyers and reeking havoc for non-bank lenders.



Cool App that Allows you to Text without Wi-Fi or Data

 

This just might be the answer a lot of us have been looking for when headed across the border or abroad. This app allows you to text without having wifi or a mobile plan available. The kicker......it's FREE and you can be completely OFF THE GRID.

I am a tech idiot, but even I could understand this article explaining it: More About Fire Chat



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