TORONTO — Canadian homeowners have likely gained a reprieve from an expected increase in mortgage rates this year.
Economists say rates will dip slightly in response to the Bank of Canada's surprise move Wednesday to cut its trend-setting interest rate to 0.75 per cent, from one per cent, to soften the blow of dropping oil prices on the Canadian economy.
It was anticipated that the Bank of Canada would move to increase its overnight rate later this year due to an improving economy, until crude prices started to slide and dropped below US$50 a barrel.
"This signals that low interest rates will be with us a while longer," said Avery Shenfeld, the chief economist at CIBC World Markets, noting that the central bank's rate cut will likely mean a corresponding 0.25 drop in variable, or floating, mortgage rates.
Fixed-rate mortgages are also likely to see a slight decline, as they follow bond yields, which will move lower in response to the rate cut.
A conventional five-year mortgage stands at about 4.79 per cent, according to data from the Bank of Canada.
The rate cut could boost sales and prices of homes in Central and Atlantic Canada, including in Toronto's red-hot property market. But it may also spur Canadians, who have been criticized previously by the Bank of Canada for holding record levels of debt to borrow more money.
"Certainly this isn't going to discourage anyone from taking on debt," Shenfeld said.
"But I think in the Bank of Canada's eyes right now, it's a lesser of two evils. They've shown discomfort with the amount of borrowing Canadians have done, but the economy right now can't afford to shut the tap off on that if we're not getting the lift to growth from the energy sector."
Although cheaper mortgage rates are likely to buoy real estate markets in Central and Atlantic Canada, TD economist Craig Alexander says the impact of oil prices will trump interest rates in Western Canada.
"I think it's inevitable that you're going to see a pullback in sales and a softening in price growth in real estate in oil-rich provinces because, at the end of the day, income growth in those provinces is going to be a lot less," Alexander said.
"It is an economic shock, and real estate markets do reflect local economic conditions."
Meanwhile, older Canadians who rely on interest-bearing investments for their income could find themselves squeezed as a result of the central bank's policy change.
"It will push them into looking at alternative investments that can generate a bit more yield than a straight GIC," Shenfeld said.