Today’s Headlines: Interest Rates and Subprime Mortgage
- Bank of Canada’s Carney ponders degree of rate cut - (Reuters) The Bank of Canada has to weigh strong domestic demand against the spillover effects of the slowing U.S. economy when deciding how much to cut interest rates next month, Governor Mark Carney said on Monday. Carney used his first speech since becoming central bank chief on February 1 to convey that he is keeping his options open, suggesting he could potentially reduce the bank’s overnight rate by 50 basis points, as most market players expect.
- U.S. credit woes seep across the border (Globe & Mail)
American subprime shemozzle is beginning to squeeze mortgage and funding availability in Canada.
“Canadian chartered banks have been the main source of financing for real estate projects, but they have got caught up in the U.S. subprime mess and have had to write off those investments. Now, they have returned to what is known as balance sheet lending - or traditional mortgage financing. To maintain government-mandated equilibrium between a bank’s equity and its loans outstanding, the banks have had to both call in loans and cancel commitments for new ones, industry observers say.”
“Intense competition for funds has both increased interest rates on mortgages and created a demand for higher cash-to-mortgage ratios, says David Bowden, president of real estate broker Colliers International Canada in Toronto.”
“The credit crunch is having its greatest effect in smaller centres, says Sheila Botting, senior managing director of Canada for the capital markets group at Cushman & Wakefield Lepage Inc.”
- Rate cuts likely to trump inflation fears (Globe & Mail)
The inflation watch is under way this week in Canada and the United States, but investors are betting the U.S. Federal Reserve Board will to continue to cut regulated interest rates despite price pressures, while the Bank of Canada is expected to play some catch up.It’s anticipated that domestic inflation data scheduled for release today will provide plenty of leeway for the Bank of Canada to lower its target overnight rate on March 4.























































