ANALYSIS | Soaring house prices are goosed by falling interest rates, but the opposite is also true | CBC News (2024)

Business·Analysis

Rising interest rates could have an ugly effect on Canada's housing market. But does anyone believe central banks will actually hike them?

Central banks promise rate hikes as inflation climbs. Are homebuyers even listening?

ANALYSIS | Soaring house prices are goosed by falling interest rates, but the opposite is also true | CBC News (1)

Don Pittis · CBC News

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ANALYSIS | Soaring house prices are goosed by falling interest rates, but the opposite is also true | CBC News (2)

Popular outrage at the soaring price of Canadian housing has afix that almost no one is talking about — certainly not those aspiring to be Canada's prime minister.

While they have not framed it specifically as a method of curbing Canada's property sector, central bankers are the exception to that rule. Bank of Canada governorTiff Mackleminsists he is preparingto push a lever expected to have a real effect on the escalating price of houses: hiking interest rates.

People with a stake in Canada's diverse housing sector, including homeowners, investors and those aspiring to buy, will be paying close attention to Wednesday's latest data from the Canadian Real Estate Association.

They will also be watching Canada's inflation numbers coming out on the same day, expected by economists to hit 3.9 per cent. If so, that will be the highest Canadian inflation figure since 2003.

Watching for a continued housing slide

In Canada's hottest markets, including Greater Vancouver and Toronto, regional housing data released early this month showed little sign of cooling in August. But nationally, many expect the July slide in both sales and prices to continue in Wednesday's results.

The Canadian housing market is complicated, influenced by immigration, demographics,the rate of construction and speculative demand, sometimes called "exuberance."But as with any expensive asset, there is a clear relationship between price and interest rates.

  • Canadian home sales slipped 3% in July while average price fell to $662,000

Simply put, in the case of things you cannot afford to buy outright — especially houses that take years to pay off — prices are partly determined by how much it costs to borrow the money to buy them.

In the current market, itis hard to break out how much the fear of increasing interest rates is affecting the real estate market, but if you can believe our central bankers, thatthreat is rising.

ANALYSIS | Soaring house prices are goosed by falling interest rates, but the opposite is also true | CBC News (3)

"It is reasonable to expect that when we do eventually need to reduce monetary stimulus, our first move will be to raise the target for the overnight rate — our policy interest rate," Macklemsaid in last week's speech to the Quebec Chamber of Commerce. That would come, he said, before the bank began selling off the bonds that it is still accumulating at a rate of $2 billion worth per weekas a secondary means of stimulating the economy.

The exact moment when the worm turns and rates start to rise will be determined by such things as when economic indicators such as employment bounce back and whether inflation goesdown on its own, but the Bank of Canadais currently projecting it will hike rates next year.It will also inevitably be influenced by what the U.S. central bank does, simply because getting too farout of sync with U.S. rates affects the loonie and thus exports.

  • Inflation rate spikes to highest level in a decade, at 3.7% in July

A poll of economists last weekby Britain'sFinancial Times shows a vast majority predictingthat a strengthening U.S. economy and rising inflation will force the Federal Reserve to raise rates next year, too. But there are many doubters.

A recent editorial cartoon (which I now cannot find to share) shows an old and wrinkled Jerome Powell, chair of the U.S. Federal Reserve,still threatening to increase rates off their current lows. NewU.S. consumer price indexnumbers outTuesday showed inflation there remains high, with pricesgrowing5.3 per cent year on year, down fractionally from the 5.4 per cent in the previous release.

Reason for hesitating

There is a good reason for hesitancy. Rising interest rates havea wide impact on stock and bond markets, as well ason businessand government borrowing. In fact, one argument that inflation would be inevitable was that higher rates would push government borrowing costs too high.

"Inflation could be seen as the most politically palatable solution," suggested a report last year from the global investment giant BlackRock.

But interest rates certainly have an impact on the price of houses. They had a strong upward effect on house prices as ratesfell, as Mike Moffatt, an economist at Western University's IveyBusiness Schoolin London, Ont., has explained, and theopposite will almost certainly happenifinterest rates begin to rise.

  • AnalysisWhat faltering stocks and bonds could mean for house prices: Don Pittis
  • AnalysisCanada and New Zealand both have hot housing markets, but only 1 has plan to cool things down

In a series of tweets,Moffatt tracks the risingprice of a house he once owned as mortgage rates fellbetween 2004 and 2021. His valid point is that rising costs have made housing unaffordable for new entrants, asthat same house rose in price from $200,000 to $700,000.

While the required down payment has rocketedwith the total selling price, perhaps most interestingly, the lifetime interest costs over the 25-year mortgage actually declinedbetween 2004 and 2021.

Here's the lifetime interest payments over those 25 years:<br><br>2004: 181K<br>2014: 107K<br>2021: 170K<br><br>Despite rock-bottom interest rates, the total interest payments are about the same as in 2004. Why? The principal is so much higher!

&mdash;@MikePMoffatt

Effectively falling interest rates — in some cases recently as low as two per cent — have pushed the interest costs on a million-dollar mortgageto a very affordable $20,000 a year. But as we have seen in the past, when interest rates rise instead, lifetimecarrying costs rise as well. Thatchangesthe calculus for buyers, whether they are buying to live in the house or as an investment.

An unmentionable solution

In the past, rising interest rates have pushed house pricesdown, although it takes months or years to take effect.

The leading political parties in the current federal election all want to make housing more affordable. Several have plans to increase housing construction, and some say they will offer subsidies to help new buyers intothe market. But none have celebrated the idea of higher interest rates.

WATCH | Promises forhouseprices made on the campaign trail:

ANALYSIS | Soaring house prices are goosed by falling interest rates, but the opposite is also true | CBC News (4)

Promises for home prices, gig workers and seniors on the campaign trail

3 years ago

Duration 2:04

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh promised to address sky-high housing prices, Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole proposed a savings account for gig workers and Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau offered increased financial support for seniors on the campaign trail.

According to therules we share with the U.S., Britain and several other economies, politicians don't talk about their power to raise or lower interest rates. That job is officially delegated to the central bank, supposedly to prevent the politicization of the role. But there may be another reason it has become unmentionable.

In a country like Canada, where the housing market seems to be in the process of swallowing the entire economy, raising interest rates would likely have an enormous decelerating impact well beyond cutting the price for first-time homebuyers.

Even if rising inflation and out-of-control real estate ultimately meanthatan increase in the cost of borrowing becomesa necessary evil, forcing people to think about the consequences is unlikely to be an election-time winner.

Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

ANALYSIS | Soaring house prices are goosed by falling interest rates, but the opposite is also true | CBC News (5)

Don Pittis

Business columnist

Based in Toronto, Don Pittis is a business columnist and senior producer for CBC News. Previously, he was a forest firefighter, and a ranger in Canada's High Arctic islands. After moving into journalism, he was principal business reporter for Radio Television Hong Kong before the handover to China. He has produced and reported for the CBC in Saskatchewan and Toronto and the BBC in London.

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