The straight line running from Hormuz to Canada’s housing market

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So far, Canada’s inflation has been slower to respond to the global energy shock than the U.S., but it might catch up a bit after next Tuesday’s CPI reading.

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Growth from fiscal stimulus and AI capital expenditures is also propping up rates, as are cross-border updrafts as investors demand fatter term premia on U.S. bonds to compensate for rising risk. Those premiums are now at multi-year highs for five-year Treasuries. Even Canadian term premia have recently traded near decade highs.

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What’s at stake

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If the Bank of Canada actually pulls the trigger and hikes, housing would feel the sting straightaway. A 100 basis point bump in mortgage rates, for instance, lops roughly 8.5 per cent off buying power. That immediately limits what most people can pay for homes.

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On top of that, all else being equal, steeper mortgage rates on renewals typically mean higher default rates, more real estate listings and somewhat greater systemic losses if home prices make a new low.

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Worst of all, back-to-back rate hike cycles, if we indeed get one, would deplete resources for some of the 36 per cent of homeowners who say they already find it challenging to make mortgage payments. And by my arithmetic, almost a quarter of that group has a renewal date in the next 12 months.

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And let’s not forget the head of the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI), Peter Routledge, who estimated this year that as many as 30,000 to 150,000 households could be particularly vulnerable at renewal.

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Most of those wouldn’t default, but only 13,749 bank mortgage holders are in arrears today, so it wouldn’t take much to boost the default rate noticeably.

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All this is to say, this humble author wouldn’t bet the kids’ college fund on home prices surging in 2026. And no one should be borrowing to the gills to buy at this moment.

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For all anyone knows, those green shoots sprouting in Canada’s real estate garden could turn out to be weeds in disguise.

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In perspective

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Ultimately, drowning in doom over real estate is a fool’s errand, and certainly not smart over the long run.

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Longer term, the fundamentals are still in housing’s corner, for multiple reasons:

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  • Sooner or later, Ottawa will turn the immigration tap back to a normal flow. (It has no real option, as Canadians aren’t churning out babies at a sustainable rate.)
  • Newcomers tend to settle in urban hubs, which only turns the heat up on prices in major markets.
  • The current dearth of owner-occupied homebuilding should come back to bite us in a few years.
  • The senior population keeps growing, and a growing share want to age in place, which takes supply off the market.
  • Construction costs aren’t exactly trending down.
  • Restrictive land-use regulations/zoning won’t significantly improve, and, most importantly…
  • Interest rates will fall again once a recession seems likely.

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With all that on the table, there may still be one more tremor before Canada’s real estate dust settles.

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That’s especially likely if inflation expectations become unanchored and/or average core inflation runs well past three per cent, at which point the Bank of Canada is almost contractually obligated to hike.

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Robert McLister is a mortgage strategist, interest rate analyst and editor of MortgageLogic.news. You can follow him on X at @RobMcLister.

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