Tuesday, 31 January 2012
CMHC Backing Fewer Loans
Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. is cutting back on mortgages it insures as the Crown corporation edges closer to a $600-billion cap imposed on it by the federal government. A CMHC spokesman confirmed that it had approached a number of lenders at the end of 2011 about reducing its "bulk or portfolio insurance" after third-quarter results showed the agency had committed to back $541-billion in mortgages. CMHC, which guarantees mortgages held by financial institutions, is ultimately backed by the federal government and needs approval to go over the $600-billion limit — something that would create greater risk for taxpayers should the housing market collapse. "CMHC has recently received an unexpected level of requests for large amounts of CMHC portfolio insurance." said Charles Sauriol, a spokesman for the Crown corporation, in an email. "To ensure equitable access to portfolio insurance within CMHC's annual limits, an allocation process is being established which has caused some delays. Portfolio insurance provides lenders with the ability to purchase insurance on pools of previously uninsured low ratio mortgages and does not impact CMHC's transactional business." Financial institutions are required to have mortgage-default insurance when a consumer has less than 20% equity. However, the banks have been seeking insurance on loans with even high downpayments — something not required by law — so they can securitize those bulk lending loans, thereby getting them off their balance sheets and reducing their capital requirements. In those cases in which the loans to value is less than 80%, the bank pays the insurance charge instead of the consumer.
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