Thursday, August 12, 2010

Five expenses that will consume 50 per cent of your lifetime earnings

by Manisha Thakor, Forbes.com
In these recessionary times, financial tips are flowing fast and furious about how to save money and stick to a budget. Facing a sea of information, many people are asking, “Where do I start?” For most of us, five areas of spending will consume over 50% of the money we earn during our lifetime, so that’s the best place to begin.

The five areas are: Home, car, children, education and retirement. Here’s what you need to know about each:

* Don’t bite off more HOME than you can chew. How much house can you comfortably afford? For most people the answer is a house with a purchase price of no more than 3x their annual household income. Rationale: the cost of a home includes much more than the monthly mortgage payment. It’s also property tax, insurance, upkeep, etc. Typically these costs run 2%-3% of the price of your home each year. Assuming a 20% down payment, a 30-year fixed rate mortgage, and interest rates in the 5%-6% rate, the 3x your income rule of thumb will translate into total housing costs of roughly 30% of your gross income.

* Don’t let your CAR drive you to the poor house. The same logic applies to your car. Most people can comfortably afford a car that is one-third of their annual income. If you make $60,000 you can comfortably afford a car that costs $20,000. If that seems low – now you know why so many people are in financial trouble. They are driving it. A car has many other costs than simply the monthly payment. There’s insurance, gas, parking, maintenance, etc. If you follow this rule of thumb, your total transportation costs should be 10% or less of your gross income.

* Don’t let your KIDS kick you in the wallet. Kids are expensive. From a purely clinical standpoint the Dept. of Agriculture estimates it will cost $220,000 to raise a child born in 2008 from diapers to age 18. And that figure is before you add in the cost of college or university! Deciding to be a parent is a major financial obligation. Don’t make it worse by over-indulging your love bundles.

* Don’t forget to ask “How high is too high for higher EDUCATION?” It used to be good debt was defined as mortgage and student loan debt… and bad debt was everything else. Not any more. We’ve now learned that too much of a good thing can indeed be bad. Rough rule of thumb, don’t take on more in total education debt than you think you are going to earn on average annually during your first 10 years after graduating (from college/university or grad school). In plain English, if you think you’ll make $50,000 a year, don’t take out more than $50,000 in loans. The logic behind this is that if it takes you more than 10 years of paying 10% of your income a year in student loan repayments, it’s going to be tough to meet your other financial obligations.

* Don’t underestimate the need to feed your RETIREMENT nest egg. How much will you need to retire? A simple rule of thumb is to multiply your current income by 25. So if you make $50,000 a year and want to maintain that standard of living in retirement, you’ll need a nest egg of at least $1,250,000. Understanding early on in your working life what “your number” is… will help you see just how important it is to plan for this major savings goal.
http://ca.finance.yahoo.com/banking-budgeting/article/forbes/83/five-expenses-that-will-consume-50-per-cent-of-your-lifetime-earnings

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Canada sees ‘dramatic’ housing slowdown, global report says

Canada sees ‘dramatic’ housing slowdown, global report says

Julie Fortier, Financial Post · Tuesday, Aug. 10, 2010

OTTAWA — Canada led in the global housing recovery in the first quarter of 2010, but moderating global growth, heightened financial market volatility and sluggish job creation have led to a “dramatic” slowdown in Canada, according to the Global Real Estate Trends report released Tuesday from Scotia Economics.

“Global real estate markets entered 2010 with a renewed sense of optimism, piggybacking on the broader economic recovery underway,” Adrienne Warren, senior economist at Scotia Economics said in the report. “Housing demand and pricing improved in the first quarter of the year in the majority of the advanced nations we track, benefiting from ultralow interest rates, improved affordability, and in some cases, government purchase incentives.”

Australia and Canada, with inflation-adjusted average home prices rising at double-digit rates, led the pack, echoing their relatively favourable employment and lending conditions. Sweden, Switzerland and the U.K. also saw home price increases, while U.S. and French markets reported small declines.

However, the global trend has reversed itself in recent months and Canada has seen home sales activity begin to fall.

“The recent slowdown has been most dramatic in Canada,” Warren noted. “Average home prices in (the second quarter) were up just 6.8 per cent year-over-year, compared with 16.6 per cent year-over-year in (the first quarter). Sales, while still at a high level, have trended steadily lower alongside reduced affordability and exhausted pent-up demand.”

For instance, figures from the Canadian Real Estate Association released last month showed seasonally adjusted national home sales activity via the Multiple Listing Service Systems fall 8.2 per cent in June from the previous month. Sales fell in almost 70 per cent of local markets.

The Scotia report said hard-hit markets like the U.S., Spain and the U.K. are expected to take years to recover, while “in higher growth nations such as Canada and Australia, housing activity should prove much more subdued than in recent years.”

Friday, August 6, 2010

Loonie's rise 'makes sense,' Flaherty says

Jack Reerink and Jeffrey Hodgson, Reuters · Thursday, Aug. 5, 2010

OTTAWA -- The rise in Canada’s currency “makes sense” because investors are snapping up the country’s assets and the economy is growing nicely, Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said on Thursday.

It’s a different world from the heady days of 2007, when the Canadian dollar zoomed up to a high near US$1.10, Mr. Flaherty said. Then, speculators were at the heart of the rise, he said, while this time he credits the strong economy.

“There’s more demand for Canadian investments. So the upward pressure on the dollar to me makes sense,” said Mr. Flaherty, who previously voiced concerns about the “loonie’s” rapid rise.

The currency was trading just above 98 U.S. cents on Thursday.

“It would have to go significantly above parity. And that would be a concern for Canadian business, and therefore a concern of mine,” Mr. Flaherty told Reuters in his Parliament Hill office.

Mr. Flaherty, the “eminence grise” among finance ministers of the Group of Seven big economies with four years on the job, also is focused on prodding China and other Asian economies to let their currencies rise — a perennial discussion point at finance minister meetings.

“We feel that there’s room to move ... more flexibility in the Asian currencies,” said Mr. Flaherty, who treated his G7 colleagues to a dog sled ride and meal of seal meat at a February conference in Canada’s Far North.

“At the same time, I’m pleased to see a restoration of a degree of flexibility with the Chinese currency,” he said. “We’ll continue to press on the subject.”

Mr. Flaherty’s Asia focus fits with Canada’s drive to stimulate trade with emerging markets, particularly resource-hungry China.

“We know that the world trade picture is changing. You can see it in the countries that sit around the table at the G20 summits,” he said, his voice almost drowned out by the stand-alone air-conditioning unit cooling his office in the Gothic Revival building.

The share of Canada’s exports going to the United States has steadily declined in the past decade, but still stands at three-quarters. Mr. Flaherty sees it going down to as little as 60% in the next five to 10 years on more Asia business and a possible trade deal with the European Union.

All the same, the state of the U.S. economy is always front of mind. And Mr. Flaherty, who mostly uses job figures and consumer confidence to gauge economic conditions, is pretty upbeat.

“My two significant worries about the American economy are the relative weakness of the job recovery ... and weak U.S. consumer confidence,” he said, adding the risk of the U.S. economy sliding back into recession is “modest”

“The more likely course is a modest gradual recovery,” said Mr. Flaherty, who studied at Princeton University before getting his law degree in Canada.

The “track is good” for Mr. Flaherty’s own budget, due early next year, as analysts are ratcheting up expectations of economic growth to 3.5% this year. One issue clouding the picture: how to account for payments to provinces adopting the harmonized sales tax, or HST, which combines federal and provincial sales taxes rather than collect them separately.

Number crunchers are now figuring out whether to take the hit in one go or spread it out over several years, Mr. Flaherty said, adding: “We don’t have fun with figures here.”

© Thomson Reuters 2010

Friday, July 2, 2010

Weak Canadian GDP puts BoC on the spot


Eric Lam, Financial Post · Friday, Jul. 2, 2010

With Canada's economy stumbling in April, adding fuel to speculation the country's roaring recovery that began in September 2009 was coming to an abrupt end, economists warned Canada's central bank will have to tread carefully on its plan to raise interest rates for the rest of the year.

Derek Holt and Gorica Djeric, economists with Scotia Capital, said the Bank of Canada "was not likely to be swayed" by Wednesday's economic data. The pair maintain a forecasted 1.25% benchmark rate by the end of the year.

"There should be enough strength in the underlying economic momentum to dismiss the drag on GDP in April as something that does not portend the start of a new trend," the pair say in a note.

In April, Canada's gross domestic product neither expanded nor contracted, compared with 0.6% growth in March. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg had been forecasting 0.2% growth in GDP for April.

This is the first time in eight months Canada's economy did not expand.

In its report, Statistics Canada blames the stagnant April on a "large decline" in retail trade of 1.7%, after a 1.9% gain in March. Declines in manufacturing and utilities also contributed to the underperformance while advances in mining, wholesale trade, the public sector and construction helped to offset the decreases.

Krishen Rangasamy, economist with CIBC World Markets, said it was too soon to jump to conclusions.

"It's too early to conclude from this GDP report that the recovery is already waning," he said in a note on Wednesday. "The excellent handoff from March means that we're starting the second quarter from a higher base, which sets Canada up for a decent quarter despite a slow start."

Michael Gregory, senior economist with BMO Capital Markets, said that while the 3% growth now expected is respectable, it is a bit of a letdown compared with the 5% to 6% growth figures seen earlier.

"It's kind of like driving on the highway at 100 kilometres an hour, then getting off and going 50," he said in an interview. "But 3% growth is still all right and where we see it for this year."

The second half of the year will likely move quite sluggishly, however, as a lot of spending in housing, renovation and other big-ticket items was "pulled forward" due to the HST, introduced in July in Ontario and British Columbia. Mr. Gregory expects growth of about 2% on average in the fall and winter months.

Canada's economy also faces headwinds from the sovereign debt crisis in Europe, an even worse slowdown in the United States, and possible fallout in China, he warned.

Warren Jestin, chief economist with Scotia Economics, said in a note on Wednesday that Canada's position as a resource leader should help keep it afloat in the face of other developed countries, although "this won't be a hard race to win."

The situation in Europe is troubling for Mr. Gregory, but he suspects the combination of weakening housing, high unemployment and zero credit growth will hurt the United States.

"That buzz you hear about a possible double-dip recession is legitimate and will remain a worry for markets the rest of the summer and into the fall," he said. "It's why we think the Bank of Canada will be on hold for a while after July."

Mr. Gregory figures the central bank will raise rates 25 basis points at its next meeting in July, then go on hold to see how things play out in Canada the rest of the year. It is likely the BoC will push rates to 1% by the end of 2010 and add another 1 percentage point to 1.5 percentage points in 2011.

"An environment of 3% growth is still something that requires higher interest rates," he said. "Rapid buildup in household debt is a long-term risk."

Friday, June 4, 2010

Pension shortfall hits middle class

About 20 to 25 per cent of Canadians are not saving enough to provide an adequate retirement income, says the chief economist of TD Bank Financial Group.

One of the ironies of that statistic is that these pension laggards fall into the middle class group of those who earn $30,000 to $80,000 a year, Craig Alexander said Thursday in Kitchener.

Every Canadian should have a pension that replaces 60 to 70 per cent of their employment income, Alexander said in an interview. Canadians earning more than $80,000 can generally take care of themselves, while those earning below $30,000 can replace much of that with a variety of government pension supplements, he said.

It’s that middle group that poses one of the biggest challenges, he noted.

Alexander was in Kitchener to attend a roundtable discussion chaired by Ontario Finance Minister Dwight Duncan on ways to improve Canada’s retirement income system. About 30 business, labour and pension experts met with Duncan behind closed doors.

It’s the last of a handful of meetings Duncan is holding across the province in preparation for a meeting of finance ministers in Prince Edward Island on the weekend of June 12-13 to look at Canada’s retirement income system.

While Canada’s pension system is not in crisis at the moment, issues such as pension solvency, volatile financial markets, inadequate savings by some individuals and a decrease in the number of workers with defined benefit plans that provide a fixed source of income all mean we can’t afford to be complacent, Alexander said.

A variety of options have been trotted out, such as raising Canada Pension Plan contributions, supplementing CPP benefits, raising the age at which retirement savings plans can be cashed in, offering better protection for defined benefit plans or more incentives to set up defined contribution plans, he noted.

“I don’t think there is a black and white answer to this one,” he said of the retirement income dilemma.

In any case, politicians need more data, and people need more access and knowledge about how to improve their pension coverage, Alexander said. Solutions could come from either the public or private sectors, he added, noting “I am an agnostic on that issue.”

He would like to see financial literacy courses on such issues as savings, debt, mortgages and pensions taught in school as early as Grade 8.

In an interview prior to the roundtable meeting, Duncan said that with only about 30 per cent of Canadians covered by private pension plans and more baby boomers heading into retirement, governments need to act so that pension obligations don’t cut into health-care spending and other public-sector needs.

The province has already passed one bill on pension reform that addresses some of the less contentious issues, but Duncan said he is planning more legislation in the fall to address more serious issues such as the regulation of defined benefit plans. http://news.therecord.com/Business/article/722251

Thursday, June 3, 2010

House prices have peaked for the year

By Sunny Freeman

TORONTO — Skyrocketing home prices appear to have reached their height and are expected to stabilize for the rest of the year and into 2011 as the real estate market cools significantly, economists say.

Gregory Klump, chief economist at the Canadian Real Estate Association, foresees a slight decline in year-over-year prices in the latter half of 2010 before they flatten in 2011. This will happen as new listings come onto the market faster than anticipated and balance out the dynamics between buyers and sellers.

On Wednesday, the real estate association revised its projected housing price increase for this year down from 5.4 per cent to just 1.6 per cent over 2009.

The association predicted that the national average housing price will decline by 1.5 per cent by 2011, driven down by lower prices in the strong markets of B.C. and Ontario, while prices in the rest of the country will remain stable.

Will Dunning, chief economist at the Canadian Association of Accredited Mortgage Professionals, said this year’s prices have likely peaked, and should remain flat for the rest of the year before falling in 2011.

“Last year there was a pattern during the year — slow at the start, strong at the finish, and it’s going to be the opposite this year, almost a mirror image,” he said.

“Somebody who’s in a position to buy can take the time to make sure they get the property they want at a price they’re comfortable with,” he added.

The real estate association also lowered its 2010 national forecast for resale transactions by nearly 40,000 from its previous forecast of 527,300 due to a weaker-than-expected start to the year in British Columbia, Ontario and Alberta.

“The biggest contributor to the downward revision in annual sales activity would be British Columbia, where affordability has begun to bite into sales activity. Their first quarter came in weaker than expected and that’s expected to carry throughout the year,” Klump said.

The association now expects 490,600 units will be resold nationally this year through the Multiple Listing Service. This is still up 5.5 per cent from 2009.

A number of temporary factors pulled sales forward to the latter part of 2009 and the first part of this year, including anticipation of higher mortgage rates, tougher mortgage lending regulations and new taxes in Ontario and B.C. that will add thousands of dollars to the final price tag of many houses starting July 1.

The association’s revision came a day after the Bank of Canada announced it was hiking its key lending rate from an emergency low of 0.25 per cent to 0.5 per cent. Many economists predict that the era of historically low interest rates has come to an end and that rates are now on an upward trend.

Although mortgage rates have gone up and are expected to rise further, the association says the higher cost of borrowing will have a minimal impact on the market this year. Instead, sharp price increases earlier in the year appear to have been the main factor for the expected decrease in demand in British Columbia and Ontario.

Dunning said while some buyers “could drive themselves crazy” trying to calculate whether it’s better to get into the market now while mortgage rates are low but prices are high, or to wait until the opposite is true, it’s so difficult to get it right that homebuyers should just buy when the time is right for them.

Rob Hafer, regional manager at Invis mortgage brokerage, agreed that market timing is tough, and generally not worth the headache since a house is such a long-term investment.

“If you’re going to buy real estate, it’s a long-term investment, so if you can afford the home now … no matter when you bought within a couple years you’re probably ahead of the game anyway,” he said.

“If you can get in now and you can hold it long term, it’s always a good time to buy,” he added.

Klump said the market adjustment will stop short of venturing into a buyers’ market as “a more challenging pricing environment” will deter some potential sellers and limit the supply of available homes.

“A lot of people who were thinking they were going to clean up on their asking price are going to be faced with a lot of competition from other sellers out there, and ultimately will take their house off the market and try again when the pricing environment becomes more to their liking,” he said

But Dunning said balanced markets don’t last very long and said he believes market conditions will soon favour buyers.

“It’s usually always one way or the other, and we’ve had this immensely powerful sellers’ market and …there could be a very rapid transition so that it now becomes a buyers’ market.”

The Canadian Press http://news.therecord.com/Business/article/721499

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Carney plots cautious rate path

Jeremy Torobin Globe and Mail

Mark Carney is taking a cautious approach to raising interest rates, weighing Canada’s powerful economic rebound against the uncertainty of an “increasingly uneven” recovery across the globe.

The Bank of Canada Governor became the first central banker in the Group of Seven to raise borrowing costs since the financial crisis and recession, increasing the benchmark overnight rate Tuesday by one-quarter of a percentage point to a still exceptionally low 0.5 per cent.

Policy makers will keep an eye on Europe’s troubles, and won’t move more aggressively than they see fit, the Bank of Canada suggested, even though the economy is rebounding rapidly and inflation will likely exceed its 2-per-cent target this year. Much like in 2008 when the U.S. financial crisis pulled Canada into recession, the country’s economic health depends in large part on policy makers in other countries successfully containing homemade problems.

“Interest rates are incredibly low, given the strength of the domestic economy, but the global story is where it’s at right now,” Eric Lascelles, chief economic strategist at TD Securities in Toronto, said in an interview. “The level of uncertainty suggests there’s not a lot of confidence in the forecasts.’’ The open-ended nature of the announcement sparked a fall in the Canadian dollar and yields on two-year government bonds as investors pulled back their bets on what they had expected might be a series of uninterrupted rate hikes going forward.

Monday, May 31, 2010

Carney's big call

Paul Vieira, Financial Post

Ottawa -- Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney has had a busy time of it since taking over as the country's central banker 27 months ago, mostly tackling the financial crisis, mapping out the road to recovery and reassuring Canadians that at the end of the day the bank's extraordinary policies would work.

The one thing he has yet to do during his term, however, is raise interest rates. That might be about to change on Tuesday. If he does pull the trigger - and that is what most analysts expect - it won't be after grappling with competing forces that convey two starkly different messages about the economic outlook.

"We are at point where it is a tug of war between structural issues that are facing the eurozone and a very strong economic cyclical backdrop," says Stéfane Marion, chief economist at National Bank Financial.

Weighing on the governor are the economic data, which call out for a rate hike - as much as 50 basis points, some reckon. The data have been consistently strong and surprising to the upside. Job creation is in full swing, with a record 109,000 workers added to payrolls in April; consumers are buying up goods at a healthy pace, tax credits or not; corporate profits are rebounding to pre-recession levels; and inflation is creeping closer to the central bank's preferred 2% target. The sterling fundamentals prompted the central bank last month to ditch its conditional commitment to keep its policy rate at a record low 0.25% until July, leading traders to price in a nearly 100% chance of a rate hike on June 1.

That was until sovereign debt worries exploded in Europe, once Greece formally asked for international help days after the last Bank of Canada rate decision. That sparked an across-the-board retreat in global equity markets, down 9.3% since the beginning of May, as traders sold stocks and poured into risk-averse U.S. treasuries and other government securities on fears that another credit crunch was at hand. Mr. Carney is likely aware of this better than most, given his capital markets background from Goldman Sachs.

The most worrying sign on Mr. Carney's radar screen might be the small but steady increases in the cost of borrowing among banks, a signal European lenders are finding it tough to access cash from their peers on concern over how much Greek, Portuguese and Spanish debt they hold.

In the end, the consensus is Mr. Carney is leaning toward a rate hike - a modest one, though, of 25 basis points. The thinking is, an ounce of prevention now is worth a pound of cure later.

"We can't look at things in a vacuum, because there are so many other factors besides Europe's issues" says Jonathan Basile, an economist with Credit Suisse in New York who closely watches Canadian markets. "The truth is the macroeconomic evidence is outweighing the financial risks right now."

The last time the Bank of Canada raised its benchmark rate was in July 2007, by 25 basis points to 4.5%. At the time, former governor David Dodge said the economy was operating above its production potential, and inflation was likely to stay above its 2% inflation target for longer than forecast.

Little did Mr. Dodge know that the U.S. subprime crisis would morph into the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, roiling markets and economies around the world. This is why Europe's recent fiscal woes have triggered a case of nerves, and might prompt Mr. Carney to rethink any rate move.

"The Bank of Canada wants to raise rates, but it doesn't have a crystal ball," CIBC World Markets said in a note to clients. "It can't be certain that the recent financial market downturn isn't going to morph into something more severe that would make a rate hike look out of place."

There's another school of thought, though, that suggests markets have overreacted to a regional problem. In this context, it is key to remember the Bank of Canada didn't expect the eurozone to contribute much to global growth, envisaging only 1.2% expansion this year and 1.6% in 2011.

"The European picture will calm down and people will realize it is not as dramatic as being played out," says Carlos Leitao, chief economist at Laurentian Bank Securities.

Yes, he acknowledges, the debt-ridden southern European economies have tough years ahead. But other countries, led by Germany and France, are going to capitalize on the lower euro and boost their exports to emerging economies and North America, which will help offset the drag from the so-called Club Med nations.

Besides Europe, Mr. Carney has other factors to consider.

Canada's sovereign debt levels are indeed much better than the industrialized world, as our politicians like to remind us. But the amount of debt held by households, measured as a percentage of disposable income, stood at a historical high of 146% - of which 98% is mortgage related - at the end of 2009, rating agency DBRS estimates. That would put Canadian households ahead of the United States but behind Britain on this measure. A rate hike would signal it might be time to live more modestly and refrain from too much debt-financed consumption (which helped fuel those nasty asset bubbles that central banks may want to pay more attention to in the aftermath of the subprime debacle).

Mr. Carney's other challenge is to explain why, and what's ahead. He has come off a period where he provided extraordinary guidance to markets. Don't expect similar language from the governor.

If anything, Mr. Marion warns the central bank should refrain from using the type of guidance the U.S. Federal Reserve deployed in 2004, when it signalled a period of "moderate" rate hikes were in the offing.

In retrospect, the Fed's use of the word moderate "encouraged more financial excesses," leading to the subprime bust, Mr. Marion says. "Carney doesn't have to be brusque about it. He has the luxury to start slowly, and leave his options open," from pausing should Europe deteriorate to hiking aggressively, by 50 basis points, if conditions warrant.

Mr. Carney reminded us recently that "nothing is pre-ordained" at the Bank of Canada. He's likely to drive home that point on Tuesday, rate hike or not.
Read more: http://www.financialpost.com/news-sectors/story.html?id=3084621#ixzz0pVYuP0cD

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Rate hike not guaranteed….Global financial chaos could override domestic factors

Emily Mathieu Business Reporter Toronto Star

Higher than expected rates of inflation and reports of record breaking retail sales means interest rate hikes will likely go ahead, according to a top economist with BMO Capital Markets. But domestic strength might not be enough to justify increases if the upheaval in global markets continues, said Porter.

“If the (Bank of Canada’s) decision was based solely on domestic factors, then this would be no questions asked, no debate,” said Doug Porter, deputy chief economist.

The central bank has long predicted rates would rise on June 1, but Porter said doubt over the future of global economic stability could cause them to go off course.

“It would take a very brave central bank indeed, I think, to raise interest rates in the face of the turmoil we are seeing in global financial markets right now.”

According to Statistics Canada’s Consumer Price Index, the core index advanced 1.9 per cent during the 12 months leading up to April, following a 1.7 per cent increase in March.

The boost in April was due mainly to a rise in prices for the purchase of passenger vehicles, passenger vehicle insurance premiums, property taxes, and food purchased from restaurants, the report showed.

The seasonally adjusted monthly core index rose 0.2 per cent in April, following a 0.3 per cent decline in March.

Consumer prices across the country rose 1.8 per cent in the 12 months leading up to April, following a 1.4 per cent increase in March. In Ontario, prices rose 2.2 per cent.

Porter said BMO has no plans to alter their position that rates will rise on June 1, but said that position could change if market upheaval continues into next week.

“If Canada were an island there would be no debate,” said Porter. “There is a very compelling domestic case for higher interest rates.”

Statistics Canada reported a 2.1 per cent increase in retail sales dollars in March, to $37 billion. Porter said earlier reports had predicted sales would be close to flat. “Instead we get one of the best gains on record.”

National energy prices rose 9.8 per cent between April and the same time the previous year, following a 5.8 per cent increase during the 12 months between March 2010 and the same time the previous year. Excluding the increase in energy the index rose 1.1 per cent, compared with a 1 per cent increase in March.

For the sixth month in a row, gas prices exerted the strongest upward pressure on the index. In April, Canadians paid 16.3 per cent more at the pump than they did the same time the previous year. That change follows a 17.2 per cent increase between March of this year and the same time in 2009.

Natural gas prices were up 3.3 per cent in April than the same time the previous year. Between March 2010 and the same time the previous year prices had dropped 22.4 per cent.

The cost of transportation was up 6.2 per cent in the 12 months to April and consumers paid a 5.6 per cent more for insurance premiums in April compared to the previous year.

Housing costs were up 0.8 per cent, after declining 0.7 per cent in March, with household utilities exerting the most upward pressure. The mortgage cost index fell 6.1 per cent, the report showed.

Food prices were up 1 per cent, following a 1.3 per cent increase in March. The 1 per cent rise, largely related to prices for food purchased in restaurants, was the smallest since March 2008.

Health care prices rose 3.3 per cent, the report showed. http://www.thestar.com/business/article/812567--rate-hike-not-guaranteed

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Friday's inflation rate expected to open door to interest rate hikes: economists

By Julian Beltrame, The Canadian Press

OTTAWA - Canadians likely have only two weeks left to enjoy historically low interest rates.

With global markets beginning to stabilize following the recent fears over a Greek debt default, economists say the pieces are falling into place for the Bank of Canada to move off its emergency 0.25 per cent rate on June 1.

Economists — and markets — have already pencilled in a doubling of the policy rate in two weeks. But that is only a beginning say analysts who believe governor Mark Carney will keep on hiking rates through the rest of the year.

Even the TD Bank, which only a few months ago was advising Carney to wait until at least the third quarter of 2010, is now calling for an incremental hike beginning in June.

The reason, says the bank's director of forecasting Beata Caranci, is that the Canadian economic recovery is well ahead of schedule with what looks like two consecutive quarters of five per cent and beyond growth, a jobs recovery more robust than predicted with another 109,000 added in April, and inflation — the key indicator for the central bank — heading toward two per cent.

"The bank is looking a year or year-and-a-half out, and they are looking at an output gap that is not going to be there anymore, so they've got to start adjusting now to get the interest rate at what would be considered more neutral," she explained.

"And if they don't go now, it could mean we see bigger adjustments down the road," she added.

Higher rates are meant to slow down excessive borrowing and head off asset bubbles like an overheated housing market, which the central bank has already highlighted as a risk. Cheap money is also seen as destabilizing in the long term, much as happened in the United States in the early part of the decade and eventually led to the most recent crisis.

Economists caution that the anticipated hikes by the central bank should not be seen as an attempt to slow down activity, but merely as moving to a more traditional posture. With inflation at near two per cent, the current 0.25 per cent level is actually a negative interest rate, they note.

The TD Bank and many others believe Canada's policy rate will hit 1.5 per cent by year's end, more in line with inflation.

Carney gave a strong hint last month that he was preparing to move, surprising observers by dropping his year-long conditional pledge not to hike rates until at least July.

He has since added an element of doubt into expectations by noting that he considered the very act of removing the conditional commitment to have been a policy tightening measure. The rate-hiking narrative took another detour earlier this month with the recent turmoil in equity and financial markets over government debt issues in southern Europe — that added new uncertainty to the global recovery scenario.

But unless Europe again flares up in a major way, the only question remaining for Carney will likely be answered Friday with the release of April inflation data by Statistics Canada, say economists.

The consensus is that headline inflation will rise to 1.6 per cent and core underlying inflation — the index the central bank closely watches — will edge up to 1.8 per cent.

Those numbers are still below the bank's two per cent target but economists say they are worried because inflation is digging in at a time when the economy is still operating far below capacity, and at a time when the Canadian dollar is near parity.

That is not the case in the U.S., where inflation is actually heading south and could once again approach zero by year's end.

"Even with the current volatility in financial markets, the Canadian story remains intact as underlying fundamentals continue to improve alongside strong corporate and household balance sheets," write Scotiabank economists Derek Holt and Karen Cordes Woods in forecasting an interest rate hike.

Bank of Montreal economist Douglas Porter says there is still a chance Carney will wait until July 20, or even later, especially if the European crisis threatens to leak into North American credit markets, or if there's a big downward surprise in underlying inflation Friday.

Increasing rates in Canada, especially since the U.S. is likely to keep its policy rate at zero until 2011, will put added upward pressure on the Canadian dollar, which will further depress the country's manufacturing and exporting sectors.

But Caranci believes the dollar impact will be minor, because markets have already priced in several moves by Carney ahead of the U.S. And the loonie's recent dip below parity to about 96 cents US has partly removed an important impediment to act on rates for the Bank of Canada, she adds. http://ca.news.finance.yahoo.com/s/18052010/2/biz-finance-friday-s-inflation-rate-expected-open-door-interest.html

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Housing prices jumping

Market shows signs of recovery

Canwest News Service May 13, 2010



Prices for new homes in Canada rose 0.3 per cent in March, following a 0.1- per-cent increase the previous month and extending gains that began in July 2009, Statistics Canada reported yesterday.

The increase was in line with economists' forecasts.

Statistics Canada said its new house price index also was up 1.6 per cent in March from a year earlier, compared with an annual increase of 0.9 per cent in February.

"The growth in March was mostly due to higher prices in Vancouver," the agency said.

The new housing price index measures changes over time in the selling prices of new houses.

Higher material costs helped boost the index in Montreal and the Ontario cities of Kitchener and London, where prices saw the biggest month-to-month jump.

In Charlottetown and Hamilton, which saw the biggest decreases between March and February, "some builders negotiated lower selling prices," StatsCan said.

Of the 21 metropolitan regions included in the index, the agency reported that Victoria, Edmonton and Charlottetown were the only ones to report year-over-year declines.

On Monday, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. reported home construction rose 1.3 per cent in April as the real-estate market continued to show signs of recovery.

Housing starts were up by a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 201,700 units last month, up from a revised 199,200 units in March.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Feds want tighter rules to ground fly-by-night movers

By Dean Beeby, The Canadian Press

OTTAWA - The federal government is putting the moves on movers.

Industry Canada wants to tighten the rules for moving companies after a deluge of complaints from consumers who say they've been ripped off by crooked operators.

Armed with a cellphone and a Kijiji or Craigslist ad on the Internet, scam artists are preying on Canadians looking for cheap moving help, says the department.

"Complaints include holding furniture hostage at the destination until consumers pay more than the original estimate and producing new hidden costs such as packaging," says an internal document.

"In some cases, the belongings are not delivered but are dumped or remain in warehouses and storage facilities. Consumers in this market are particularly vulnerable to such practices because of the ability of movers to confiscate or ransom their belongings."

The Consumer Measures Committee, a federal-provincial group run by Industry Canada, launched a project last July to better monitor the household moving sector by analyzing consumer complaints.

"This work is in the very early stages of development and findings are not yet available," department spokesman Michael Hammond said.

Regulation of the moving sector is largely a provincial responsibility, even though some moves cross provincial boundaries. Eight provinces have highway traffic legislation that governs the household-goods moving trade, with Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador the exceptions.

Many provinces also have consumer protection laws, as does the federal government.

But industry players contacted by the committee in the last few months say officials want to end that patchwork coverage by harmonizing laws, regulations and practices across the country.

The 2006 census of Canada found that 1.2 million households had moved in the last five years. Some estimates say Canadians change addresses an average of 13 times through their lifetimes.

And the Canadian Council of Better Business Bureaus says complaints about movers were No. 7 on its Top 10 list of consumer beefs in 2009. Just over half of the 636 formal complaints about moving firms last year were settled.

An Industry Canada briefing note, obtained under the Access to Information Act, suggests about one of every four moves generates a consumer complaint.

The head of Canada's largest industry group, the Canadian Association of Movers, supports harmonization but says the best protection for consumers is education.

"You have people having all their life possessions destroyed, stolen, rifled through, held for ransom, overcharged," president John Levi said in an interview from the group's Mississauga, Ont., headquarters.

But even with tougher regulations "there's no government agency out there that can help you in a timely fashion."

Consumers are understandably intimidated by large men suddenly demanding more cash before unloading the truck, Levi said.

"There's sufficient legislation and regulation in place — if it were enforced."

The best defence is to do some research, he said.

The mover's association — with about 200 members, including big operators like Atlas, Allied, Mayflower, United, North American — certifies its firms after checking their standards and reputations, and having them sign a code of ethics.

The Better Business Bureau as well as Industry Canada posts consumer checklists and advice on moving on their websites. A joint consumer tips release is also planned shortly by the movers' association and the business bureau.

Better Business Bureaus across Canada fielded almost 98,000 inquiries about moving companies last year, the second-most common query after consumer questions about roofing contractors.

Even recession didn't slow down Canadian's spending, report finds

By Julian Beltrame, The Canadian Press

OTTAWA - Neither recession, global uncertainty nor growing joblessness appears to have stayed Canadians' appetite for spending money they don't have.

A new report by the Certified General Accountants Association of Canada shows that household debt in the country kept rising through the recession and peaked in December at $1.41 trillion.

That's $41,740 on average per Canadian, or debt to income ratio of 144 per cent that is the worst among 20 advanced countries in the OECD.

"This report is another indication of Canadians' readiness to consume today and pay later," says association president Anthony Ariganello.

"The concern is do they understand the full cost of paying later?"

The Bank of Canada has also voiced similar concerns, with governor Mark Carney having repeatedly advised Canadians to ensure they will be able to meet their mortgage commitments once rates increase. Ottawa has put that cautionary principle into effect by stiffening the means test chartered banks must apply when issuing open-ended mortgages.

Most Canadians don't yet share that concern. The accountants' survey found that almost 60 per cent of Canadians whose debt had increased still felt they could manage it or take on more obligations.

But the accountants say many households could find themselves in difficulty when interest rates, as expected, begin to rise.

The report estimates that even a small two per cent increase in rates would mean that mid-income and higher income households would have to cut their outlays on non-essentials by between nine and 11 per cent.

The finding is similar to one reached by the Canadian Association of Accredited Mortgage Professionals in a survey results release Monday.

The survey showed that while Canadians appeared well positioned to absorb higher rates, there would be a significant number that would come under stress. The mortgage professionals estimated that 475,000 households would be challenged if mortgages rates rose to 5.25 per cent, and that 375,000 were already facing pressure paying their bills.

The most likely outcome for a debt squeeze is that households will stop spending on non-essentials, and that could ripple in a general slowing of economic growth.

Household spending, particularly in the housing sector, was a mainstay of the economy during the recession. But as interest rates grow, a bigger percentage of household income may need to be diverting into paying off debt, meaning less cash for other purchases, like autos, appliances, furniture and clothes.

BMO Capital Markets economist Sal Guatieri says that is the flip-side to the Bank of Canada's decision to slash rates to historic lows during the recession.

"That's why we did not experience a great recession," he noted. "That was the intention all along of the Bank of Canada, to get people borrow and spend. The problem is if that continued, Canada eventually would have a debt problem."

But that is why the central bank is preparing to reverse course and start increasing the cost of borrowing, he added.

Most analysts believe Carney will start moving on rates on June 1 with a small quarter-point hike. http://ca.news.finance.yahoo.com/s/11052010/2/biz-finance-recession-didn-t-slow-canadian-s-spending-report.html

Feds want tighter rules to ground fly-by-night movers

· By Dean Beeby, The Canadian Press

OTTAWA - The federal government is putting the moves on movers.

Industry Canada wants to tighten the rules for moving companies after a deluge of complaints from consumers who say they've been ripped off by crooked operators.

Armed with a cellphone and a Kijiji or Craigslist ad on the Internet, scam artists are preying on Canadians looking for cheap moving help, says the department.

"Complaints include holding furniture hostage at the destination until consumers pay more than the original estimate and producing new hidden costs such as packaging," says an internal document.

"In some cases, the belongings are not delivered but are dumped or remain in warehouses and storage facilities. Consumers in this market are particularly vulnerable to such practices because of the ability of movers to confiscate or ransom their belongings."

The Consumer Measures Committee, a federal-provincial group run by Industry Canada, launched a project last July to better monitor the household moving sector by analyzing consumer complaints.

"This work is in the very early stages of development and findings are not yet available," department spokesman Michael Hammond said.

Regulation of the moving sector is largely a provincial responsibility, even though some moves cross provincial boundaries. Eight provinces have highway traffic legislation that governs the household-goods moving trade, with Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador the exceptions.

Many provinces also have consumer protection laws, as does the federal government.

But industry players contacted by the committee in the last few months say officials want to end that patchwork coverage by harmonizing laws, regulations and practices across the country.

The 2006 census of Canada found that 1.2 million households had moved in the last five years. Some estimates say Canadians change addresses an average of 13 times through their lifetimes.

And the Canadian Council of Better Business Bureaus says complaints about movers were No. 7 on its Top 10 list of consumer beefs in 2009. Just over half of the 636 formal complaints about moving firms last year were settled.

An Industry Canada briefing note, obtained under the Access to Information Act, suggests about one of every four moves generates a consumer complaint.

The head of Canada's largest industry group, the Canadian Association of Movers, supports harmonization but says the best protection for consumers is education.

"You have people having all their life possessions destroyed, stolen, rifled through, held for ransom, overcharged," president John Levi said in an interview from the group's Mississauga, Ont., headquarters.

But even with tougher regulations "there's no government agency out there that can help you in a timely fashion."

Consumers are understandably intimidated by large men suddenly demanding more cash before unloading the truck, Levi said.

"There's sufficient legislation and regulation in place — if it were enforced."

The best defence is to do some research, he said.

The mover's association — with about 200 members, including big operators like Atlas, Allied, Mayflower, United, North American — certifies its firms after checking their standards and reputations, and having them sign a code of ethics.

The Better Business Bureau as well as Industry Canada posts consumer checklists and advice on moving on their websites. A joint consumer tips release is also planned shortly by the movers' association and the business bureau.

Better Business Bureaus across Canada fielded almost 98,000 inquiries about moving companies last year, the second-most common query after consumer questions about roofing contractors.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Housing starts expected to build on recovery data

'Housing starts have risen 80% from their cyclical lows'

Derek Abma, Financial Post

If record job gains from April weren't enough to convince you the Canadian economy is on solid ground, a few more measures are coming down the pipe over the next week that could support the case.

"In Canada, we're in the home stretch of reports on what was evidently a very strong first quarter, and the early news on Q2," CIBC World Markets chief economist Avery Shenfeld said in a research note on Friday, which followed Statistics Canada's report that 108,700 additional people found work last month-- about four times what was expected.

Today, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. reports its April housing-start figures. Economists anticipate an annualized rate of 205,000, up from a revised figure of 200,900 in March. The last figure marked a small decline from the previous month, on a seasonally adjusted basis, but things have come a long way since the market bottomed out at 112,000 in April 2009.

"To date, housing starts have risen a massive 80% from their cyclical lows, retracing over half of the peak-to-trough drop," Millan Mulraine, senior strategist with TD Securities, said in a report released on Friday.

Mr. Mulraine, who's forecasting a start level of 210,000 for April, attributes some of the current strength to homebuyers looking to avoid the new harmonized sales taxes taking effect in Ontario and British Columbia in July. He also noted that April was warmer than usual, helping along construction efforts.

Another big report comes Wednesday in the form of merchandise trade data for March. Economists anticipate a Canadian surplus -- the amount exported minus what's imported -- of $1.6-billion, up from $1.4-billion in February. If right, it would mark the fourth straight surplus.

CIBC World Markets economist Krishen Rangasamy credited improved economic conditions globally as probably helping Canada maintain it trading-surplus streak in March, including greater demand for vehicles in the United States.

"The merchandise trade report for March will likely add to earlier data that presages (Canadian economic) growth of around 5.7% (annualized) for the first quarter," Mr. Rangasamy said. "But the party won't last forever for exporters, given the lagged effects of a strong Canadian dollar and the expected slowdown in the U.S. economy later in the year."

Speaking of the auto industry, Statistics Canada on Friday will release data on domestic new-vehicle sales for March. A 4% monthly decline is expected following an 8.1% jump in February.

The federal agency will also release March figures for manufacturing sales that day. A one% rise in the value of factory transactions is expected by economists after the slim 0.1% gain in February.

"Canadian manufacturing-sector activity has been on a breathtaking run lately, with sales rising for six consecutive months on the back of strong domestic and foreign demand," Mr. Mulraine said.

Mr. Mulraine is in line the consensus of economists in his March manufacturing forecast, citing transportation equipment as well as products made of petroleum and coal as helping to fuel the gains.

Besides these reports, a number of Canadian companies, such as George Weston and Jazz Air, will release quarterly earnings. As well, the United States will see data on March wholesale trade toomorrow, its own March trade data on Wednesday and April retail sales on Friday.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Bank of Montreal alleges huge mortgage fraud

By Charles Rusnell, CBC News

This house in the Bearspaw district of Calgary was bought for  nearly $900,000 and in three years, its value was inflated to $2.3  million, a profit of $1.4 million for the alleged fraudsters.This house in the Bearspaw district of Calgary was bought for nearly $900,000 and in three years, its value was inflated to $2.3 million, a profit of $1.4 million for the alleged fraudsters. (CBC)

The Bank of Montreal is suing hundreds of people in Alberta, including lawyers, mortgage brokers and four of its own employees, in what is one of the largest alleged cases of mortgage fraud in Canadian history.

Legal documents obtained exclusively by CBC News allege the bank was the target of a sophisticated fraud operated by 14 inter-connected groups. The documents allege the scheme generated at least $140 million, about $70 million of which was for phoney mortgages.

The bank has estimated it may lose as much as $30 million.

Toronto forensic accountant Al Rosen said he has never seen anything like it.

"This is massive in the sense that it is so broad and so deep," Rosen said Tuesday. "This is [allegedly] a huge fraud. I can't think of any situation that has so many people involved and over a period of time like this one."

Problems detected in 2006

The bank said it first detected the alleged scam in 2006 when its security department noticed "irregularities" in a number of mortgages in Western Canada. Officials immediately hired a forensic accounting firm, which spent nearly a year unravelling what the bank calls a sophisticated scheme.

Legal documents allege millions of dollars have been transferred  to such countries as Lebanon, India, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab  Emirates and Pakistan.Legal documents allege millions of dollars have been transferred to such countries as Lebanon, India, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Pakistan. (CBC)

The bank's investigators say the scam's ringleaders would identify the worst house in a good neighbourhood. They would buy at an affordable, fair-market value price, but convince the bank it was worth much more because of the neighbourhood it was in.

The bank, which relies on a software program to determine house prices by neighbourhood, claims it would end up providing a grossly inflated mortgage, and the ringleaders would pocket the difference.

To carry out the alleged scheme, the bank claims masterminds would recruit what's known in fraud parlance as a "straw buyer." For a payment of $2,000 to $8,000, these straw buyers, mostly new immigrants, would allow their name to be used to obtain the mortgage on the house.

According to the court documents, the ringleaders allegedly created fake, inflated wage and net income documents for the straw buyers to make them appear richer than they were.

Lawyers, who are alleged to have been in on the scheme, would then produce the necessary legal documents for the house sale. Seventeen lawyers have been named in the bank's lawsuit.

House nets $180,000

In one case, a house in the Bearspaw district of Calgary was bought for nearly $900,000 and in three years, its value was inflated to $2.3 million, a profit of $1.4 million for the alleged fraudsters. An Edmonton house is alleged to have netted the scheme nearly $180,000.

During its investigation, bank investigators seized records that showed millions of dollars from the alleged scheme have been transferred to such countries as Lebanon, India, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Pakistan.

The Bank of Montreal said it conducted the investigation and filed the lawsuit for two reasons.

"One was to recover as much as possible of what was taken from the bank from the fraud," Ralph Marranca, the bank's spokesman told the CBC on Tuesday.

"And secondly was to send a very strong message to fraudsters and anyone who might contemplate something like this that the bank will pursue this very aggressively and will not tolerate fraud."

Other banks don't appear to be as aggressive in their approach, even though documents indicate they may have been targeted too. Bank of Montreal investigators found documents that showed one Calgary management company had 150 suspect mortgages from 16 different financial institutions.

Rosen said this alleged fraud illustrates how weak and ineffective the controls are in our banking system.

"To me the most exasperating part of our business is we are not doing what we are supposed to be doing," he said. "We are kidding ourselves that we have good systems, because we don't."