As Dr. Cooper writes below this is a time of enormous change and challenge. Yet I find myself surprised and pleased with the responses from our federal government, and from the Alberta government, as well as several other Provinces and Municipalities. The programs announced as of March 29 are breath-taking in scope and breadth. We are going to make it through this, but in the meantime there will likely continue to be swings in mortgage interest rates, both up and down. In another post today I will explore what is happening, why and what I think we should do.
Now back to Dr. Cooper’s article “Why Are Mortgage Rates Rising?”
Over the past month, the Bank of Canada has lowered its overnight rate by a whopping 1.5 percentage points to a mere 0.25%. Many people expected mortgage rates to fall equivalently. The banks have reduced prime rates by the full 150 basis points (bps). But, since the second Bank of Canada rate cut on March 13, banks and other lenders have hiked mortgage rates for fixed- and variable-rate loans. That’s not what happens typically when the Bank cuts its overnight rate. But these are extraordinary times.
The Covid-19 pandemic has disrupted everything, shutting down the entire global economy and damaging business and consumer confidence. No one knows when it will end. This degree of uncertainty and the risk to our health is profoundly unnerving.