Proposals for Comment
To date, mortgage delinquency rates at federally regulated financial institutions (FRFIs) are at a record low. The large FRFIs have worked closely with borrowers who have reached their trigger points. TD, CIBC, and BMO have allowed some negative amortizations until renewal. As a result, the proportion of their mortgages having remaining amortizations has risen sharply (see second chart below). Questions remain regarding how they will deal with this at renewal time. Will the new mortgage be amortized at 25 years at renewal, raising the monthly payments dramatically and increasing the risk of delinquency or default, especially among highly indebted households?
Earlier last week, CEOs of the Big 5 banks weighed in on vulnerable mortgage clients. None were quite as forthcoming as Scotiabank's new President and CEO, Scott Thomson, who said the bank has about 20,000 borrowers that it considers "vulnerable." These are borrowers with a high loan-to-value (LTV) mortgage, a low credit score, lower deposits in their checking accounts and those with home valuations that are susceptible to market conditions.
"So, as you think about the tail risk, we have about 20,000 vulnerable customers, which would be 2.5% [of the total portfolio]," he said Monday during the RBC Capital Markets Canadian Bank CEO Conference.
However, he added this represents a "manageable-type situation for us on mortgages." Scotiabank's floating-rate mortgages are not fixed payment. They adjust monthly payments every time the central bank changes the overnight rate.
According to Steve Huebl at Canadian Mortgage Trends, RBC President and CEO Dave McKay said that his bank is "keeping a watchful eye on its mortgage clients, turning to AI and various types of modelling to forecast clients' cash flow."
"We look at incomes, we look at the stress of inflation on expenses in a household, and we monitor cash flow to interest payments, as you would in any corporation," McKay said during the conference. "We do that [for] every single consumer in our portfolio because over 80% of our clients have their core checking and core cash management with us."
Looking at the bank's variable-rate mortgage portfolio, which totals between $100 and $120 billion, McKay said the bank has been able to segment that group of clients, keeping tabs on when they reach their trigger rates and when they'll be coming up for rate resets in the next several years.
Through modelling, the bank can then predict which clients with upcoming renewals "will or will not have a cash flow challenge" should the economy enter a moderate or severe recession, he said. "We have a pretty clear view of that."
For clients who have difficulties making their payments, mortgage lenders have several options to try and assist borrowers before the situation progresses to the point of them needing to sell their homes.
"You have skip-a-payment deferrals, you have maturity extensions, whatever it happens to be, you have a lot of ways to work with that client," McKay said.
In terms of clients with cash flow challenges in addition to a collateral problem, where the property sale wouldn't cover their mortgage and could result in default, McKay said it's a much smaller group but one the bank is actively monitoring.
"That bucket, I can tell you, is in the low single-digit percentages of our portfolio," he said. "And that's the bucket we're managing."
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