10/5/2018
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Posted in Mortgage Interest Rates by Vanguard Realty | Back to Main Blog Page
Homeowners could be facing two interest rate rises in the coming months according to an updated forecast.
CIBC Capital Markets said Thursday that it was already expecting a rate rise in October due to anticipation that a NAFTA deal would happen. The agreement of the next-gen trade deal USMCA supports the earlier forecast.
However, economists are now calling for a further rate rise in January 2019, slightly earlier than it had been forecasting. That’s due to recent positive data points.
The good news for homeowners with mortgages is that, following those two rate rises within three months, CIBC Capital Markets believes there will need to be a “prolonged pause” by the BoC due to the “elevated sensitivity of households” to the interest rate hikes.
The outlook also forecasts that the Canadian dollar will strengthen over the next six months or so before easing back to the low 1.30s against the greenback by mid-2019.
Challenges ahead for the economy
CIBC economists Andrew Grantham and Royce Mendes have posted their economic outlook for the coming years and highlighted some challenges.
These include rising mortgage rates, attracting and retaining talent, and a US slowdown by 2020.
Provincially, Alberta is expected to see stronger growth in 2018 than previously predicted due to a resurgence of oil production.
BC is set for weaker growth than expected due to the slowdown in the housing market, which is a key driver of growth in the province. The economists note that there has been a more pronounced slowdown in the BC housing market activity than in Ontario and not much of a rebound so far.
The outlook also suggests a slowdown in consumer spending in BC and Ontario as the provinces see the biggest impact from rising interest rates.
The report highlights that 5-year mortgages will be renewed at higher rates for the first time in a generation.
Bank of Canada Benchmark Rate, Mortgage Consumers, Mortgage Market, Mortgage Rates, Mortgage Rates Canada, Mortgage Trends, Mortgages & Real Estate, NonMortgage Debt, Variable Rate Mortgages