Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Rise In Interest Rates Could Cause Trouble For Some Canadians: TransUnion

The Canadian Press, 13 Sep, 2016 11:40 AM
    TORONTO — Up to one million Canadian borrowers could face problems paying their debts if interest rates rise by a full percentage point including some of the highest rated consumers, a report released Tuesday by TransUnion suggests.
     
    The credit reporting agency said that while the majority of Canadians will not be materially impacted in the near term by an interest rate increase, there is a "material subset" that may be challenged.
     
    Jason Wang, TransUnion's director of research and industry analysis in Canada, said even those with what are considered "super-prime" credit scores could struggle because credit scores measure past behaviour.
     
    "If there's a rate increase, are you still able to do that in the future? That is the question," Wang said.
     
    "This is the kind of review that a lot of lenders need to be doing because they probably have a good strategy on sub-prime consumers already. It's the super-prime that sometimes can catch them off guard."
     
    TransUnion estimates approximately seven million Canadian consumers have a variable-rate mortgage or a line of credit with a variable interest rate.
     
    Its study found more than 700,000 of those could struggle with the increase in monthly payments related to a quarter-point hike and that rises to up to a million with a one percentage point increase.
     
    For $50,000 on a line of credit that requires interest-only payments, an increase of a quarter-point would mean an additional $10.42 a month. A full-point increase would add $41.67 a month.
     
     
     
    For variable rate mortgages, the payments may depend on the lender. With some lenders, payments will remain the same, but people will pay off less principal as more of the payment goes toward interest. Others will increase payments as interest rates rise.
     
    However, Wang said the increase in monthly payment is only part of the equation as some may be able to cope with the increase by cutting back on extras.
     
    "But for some other consumers, they may not be able to absorb that because they wouldn't be able to put enough gas in their tank to go to work or they wouldn't be able to put food on the table," he said.
     
    Consumers have piled on debt in recent years as interest rates have remained near record lows.
     
    The Bank of Canada's overnight interest rate target has been set at 0.5 per cent since it was cut twice last year. The rate is a key variable for the big banks when setting their prime rates and the rates for borrowing like variable rate mortgages and lines of credit.
     
    Economists don't expect the central bank to raise its key interest rate target any time soon, but it remains well below what is considered a normal level.
     
    Statistics Canada is expected to release its latest assessment on household debt later this week.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Resident Trapped In Moscow Says Clerical Error Caused Government To Revoke Status

    Canadian Resident Trapped In Moscow Says Clerical Error Caused Government To Revoke Status
    Julia Yakobi says the Aug. 11 decision has left her stranded in her native country without means of returning to the country she now considers home.

    Canadian Resident Trapped In Moscow Says Clerical Error Caused Government To Revoke Status

    Trial Begins For Man Accused In Mill Shooting In Nanaimo, B.C.

    Trial Begins For Man Accused In Mill Shooting In Nanaimo, B.C.
    Michael Lunn and Fred McEachern were both killed when a lone gunman entered the Western Forest Products mill on the morning of April 30, 2014, and started firing his weapon.

    Trial Begins For Man Accused In Mill Shooting In Nanaimo, B.C.

    Expectations High For Proposed National Housing Strategy, CMHC

    Expectations High For Proposed National Housing Strategy, CMHC
    OTTAWA — The head of the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation says the combined cost of all the expectations for a national housing strategy would likely be too much for the federal budget to handle.

    Expectations High For Proposed National Housing Strategy, CMHC

    Back to School Safety Tops the September Enforcement List

    Back to School Safety Tops the September Enforcement List
    As children head back to school, the Vancouver Police are reminding motorists to slow down and pay attention.

    Back to School Safety Tops the September Enforcement List

    Friends Mourn Quebec Singer Killed In Helicopter Crash In Northern New Brunswick

    Friends Mourn Quebec Singer Killed In Helicopter Crash In Northern New Brunswick
    The team also said the its president, Michel Laplante, was injured in the crash but is expected to survive.

    Friends Mourn Quebec Singer Killed In Helicopter Crash In Northern New Brunswick

    Charge Withdrawn For Teen Accused Of Making Death Threats In Lyrics On Facebook

    Charge Withdrawn For Teen Accused Of Making Death Threats In Lyrics On Facebook
    The RCMP said the lyrics, written by 18-year-old Nelson Fletcher Rudderham, represented a threat against students and staff at the Inverness Education Centre Academy.

    Charge Withdrawn For Teen Accused Of Making Death Threats In Lyrics On Facebook