Ottawa is tightening mortgage insurance rules

The federal government said Wednesday that it is tightening the rules relating to government-guaranteed mortgages.

The new rules, set to take effect Oct. 15, are a “responsible and measured approach … to reduce the risk of a U.S.-style housing bubble developing in Canada,” the Department of Finance said in a news release.
The measures will apply to new, government-backed, insured mortgages. “Canadians who already hold mortgages will not be affected,” it said.

The changes include:
• Cutting the maximum amortization period to 35 years from 40.
• Requiring a minimum down payment of five per cent, whereas loans for 100 per cent of the price are possible now.
• Establishing a requirement for a consistent minimum credit score.
• Introducing new loan-documentation standards.

The government acknowledged that the proportion of bank mortgages in arrears is stable at 0.27 per cent, “near the lowest levels experienced since 1990 and well below the highs of 0.65 per cent experienced in each of 1992 and 1997.”

Source: CBC News

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