Is being a landlord the road to riches?

By Tina McFadden CALGARY — Leaky faucets, broken water heaters, late rent — these aren’t the only issues that landlords have to deal with.

In the 12 years Rod Faulkner’s been renting out properties in Calgary, he’s dealt with unpaid gas and water bills, one physical threat and three trips through the civil court system to sue for damages.

“In the 12 years, people have scammed me in just about every way imaginable,” says Faulkner, who owns 12 Calgary revenue properties. “And every time I get scammed, it costs me money, and I learn a new lesson.”

Property managers can help landlords head off some of the challenges associated with rental properties. Typically, property management companies advertise vacancies, screen tenants, arrange for any maintenance work, deal with tenancy problems and collect rent. However, they typically charge 10 per cent or more of the monthly rent, as well as a tenant finder fee.

Read more: http://business.financialpost.com/2012/03/15/is-being-a-landlord-the-road-to-riches/

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Why smaller down payments can lead to better mortgage rates

By Garry Marr, Financial Post May 3, 2012

It doesn’t make much sense, but a skimpy down payment on a home might actually get you a better mortgage rate in today’s market.

Blame the government subsidy known as mortgage default insurance, which ultimately makes it less risky to lend money to someone who has only 5% down compared to someone with 20%.

Consumers with less than 20% down must get mortgage default insurance in Canada if they are borrowing from a federally regulated bank. The cost is up to 2.75% of the mortgage amount upfront on a 25-year amortization but that fee comes with 100% backing from the federal government if the insurance is provided by Crown corporation Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.

“It’s already happening,” says Rob McLister, editor of Canadian Mortgage Trends, who says secondary lenders are now offering rates that are 10 to 15 basis points higher for a closed five-year mortgage for uninsured consumers.

The crackdown on mortgage insurance announced by Jim Flaherty, the federal Finance Minister, could exacerbate the situation. Mr. Flaherty, who mused to the Financial Post editorial board last week about getting CMHC out of the mortgage insurance business, has placed the agency under the authority of the country’s banking regulator, the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions.

Mr. Flaherty also put in new rules on bulk or portfolio insurance. The banks had been paying the insurance premium on low-ratio mortgages – loans with more than 20% down – because it was easier to securitize them.

However, Mr. Flaherty says those loans will no longer be allowed in the government’s covered bond program.

“Long story short, it is going to tick up rates to some degree,” Mr. McLister says. “You are seeing an interesting phenomenon where if you go to get a mortgage today, you are oftentimes quoted a higher rate on a conventional mortgage. Presumably you have less risk because you have more equity.”

It all depends on the lender. For now, the Big Six banks have kept consistent pricing between low-ratio and high-ratio mortgages.

“There is a question on whether they will continue doing that or raise rates overall to compensate for higher conventional mortgage costs,” Mr. McLister says.

Farhaneh Haque, director of mortgage advice and real estate-secured lending at Toronto-Dominion Bank, says competition among the Big Six banks is keeping rates down and stopping any of them from raising rates for conventional mortgages.

“When we can’t securitize a deal, there is a different cost of funds but the bank continues to offer the same rate,” said Ms. Haque, adding her bank did charge a premium for stated income deals, which usually means self-employed people, but removed the difference last week. The premium was 20 basis points.

“Looking at the competitive landscape, it was a disadvantage,” she says. “We were aiming to target pricing that was specific and for the risk appetite for that deal itself. We didn’t want one [deal] compensating for the other.”

But the banks have bigger fish to fry than just your mortgage. Those with the larger equity position in their homes may be a costlier mortgage to fund, but they also could be a future line-of-credit customers. There’s also the potential for other business such as RRSPs and TFSA, so losing a few basis points might make more sense in the long run.

Peter Routledge, an analyst at National Bank Financial, says he wouldn’t want to be an investor in a bank that approached its business any other way, though he did acknowledge there is a cost to keeping those conventional mortgages. “It’s in effect a subsidy,” Mr. Routledge says.

While banks may be eating some of the costs for people who are not eligible for a subsidy, if they continue down that road they might not be able to match the rates some of the secondary lenders are able to offer with insured mortgages.

It doesn’t sound like much, but the difference between, say, 3.14% and 3.29% on a $500,000 mortgage amortized over 25 years would be about $3,500 extra in interest on a five-year term.

It’s true that those people getting the better rate pay a hefty fee up front in insurance premiums, but they also represent a greater risk to the taxpayer. Do they deserve a better rate?

http://www.canada.com/business/fp/money/smaller+down+payments+lead+better+mortgage+rates/6550872/story.html

 

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How to use your line of credit the right way

Things Not To Buy With Your Line Of Credit.

When used responsibly, home equity lines of credit can help facilitate investments, improve tax-efficiency and provide liquidity. But when credit lines are used for household appliances, vacations, new cars and dinners on the town, the advantages quickly disappear.

A report issued by consumer credit agency Equifax Canada this week suggested Canadian line of credit debt rose by 1.4% in the first quarter — and has increased in each of the last 4 years.

Equifax suggested that even though credit card debt fell marginally, it was largely due to people dumping that debt onto their lines of credit.

It could be argued that the U.S. sub-prime mortgage crisis of 2008 was actually a home equity line of credit crisis for prime and sub-prime borrowers alike.

And despite repeated warnings by Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney that Canadian household debt is the top risk to our economic recovery, we seem destined to follow in the footsteps of our neighbours to the south.

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