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Mortgage Rule Changes over the last 13 years

The History of Canadian Mortgage Rule Changes are listed below. It’s not as easy as it once was to obtain a mortgage in Canada with the history of Mortgage Rule Changes implemented over the last decade plus. Government has imposed over 60 housing finance restrictions since 2008. These policies shrank the number of qualified borrowers and inflated mortgage costs. And yet, far from collapse, the market is up 64%+ since the changes began.

YearEntityMortgage
Rule Changes
The Details
July 2008Department of FinanceAmortization reductionThe maximum amortization period is shortened from 40 years to 35 years.
July 2008Department of FinanceMinimum down paymentThe requirement for a 5% minimum down payment is established.
July 2008Department of FinanceNew loan documentation standardsNew minimum documentation requirements are introduced. Lenders are required to ensure sufficient evidence of a property’s value and the borrower’s sources and level of income.
July 2008Department of FinanceEstablishment of minimum credit scoreThe new mortgage rule changes establish a credit score floor of 620, but allow for some limited exceptions.
February
2010
Department of FinanceQualification change for terms under 5 yearsVariable and fixed rate mortgages with terms less than five years are required to be qualified using the 5-year posted rate (qualifying rate).
February
2010
Department of FinanceReduction of insured refinancingThe maximum amount for insured refinances is reduced to 90% from 95%.
February
2010
Department of FinanceRental property down paymentsA 20% down payment is implemented for small rental properties.
January
2011
Department of FinanceAmortization reductionThe maximum amortization period is shortened to 30 years from 35 years on insured mortgages.
January 2011Department of FinanceReduction of insured refinancingThe maximum amount for insured refinances is reduced to 85% from 90%.
January 2011Department of FinanceHELOC insurance removalHome Equity Lines of Credit (HELOCs) no longer qualify for government mortgage insurance. This rule took effect on April 18, 2011.
June 2011OSFIReduction of insured refinancingThe maximum amount for insured refinances is reduced to 80% from 85%.
June 2012OSFIMortgage insurance restrictionThe government announces mortgages of more than $1 million are no longer eligible to be default-insured.
June 2012OSFIAmortization reductionThe maximum amortization period is shortened to 25 years from 30 years on insured mortgages.
June 2012OSFIMinimum credit scoresNew gross debt service (GDS) and total debt service(TDS) limits of 39% and 44%, respectively, are implemented for borrowers with a credit score of 680+.
August
2013
CMHCSecuritization changesCMHC introduces a new allocation procedure for market NHA-MBS. Issuers are required to file quarterly allocation requests as the new procedure is determined quarterly based on available capacity for new guarantees.
August
2013
OSFISecuritization changesOSFI announces that federally regulated lenders who securitize mortgages to third-party investors will be granted off-balance sheet treatment. This allows OSFI-regulated lenders to increase their origination capacity.
November
2013
CMHCInsurance changesCMHC announces it will start paying a risk fee of 3.25% of all insurance premiums written, as well as 0.10% of bulk, portfolio, and low-LTV insurance premiums. The change took effect January 1, 2014.
December
2015
CMHCCMHC changes to securitization programCMHC announces changes to its securitization programs (NHA-MBS and Canada Mortgage Bond):
* For 2016 CMHC increased the amount of mortgages it will provide its guarantee of timely payment of interest and principal on insured mortgages to $145B, up from $120B in 2015.
*CMHC also increased government guarantee fees under the NHA-MBS and CMB programs.
September
2016
OSFIOSFI capital requirement changesOSFI releases its draft advisory regarding revised capital requirements for mortgage insurers, which came into effect January 1, 2017. The new requirements increased the amount of capital required to be held by mortgage insurers due to more drivers involved in the required capital formula. Some of the key determinants of the new capital requirements are:
* LTV and type of mortgage
* Credit score
* How long it has been since the credit score was last pulled
* The likelihood of a borrower’s credit score moving materially up or down
* Amortization period
* How long the mortgage insurance policy has been in force
* Which region the underlying home is located
October
2016
Department of FinanceMortgage qualification changeAll insured mortgages must now be stress tested using the 5-year posted rate (qualification rate). This includes low-ratio portfolio insured mortgages. This came into effect October 17, 2016.
October
2016
Department of FinanceElimination of low-LTV insurance for certain mortgagesThe Government of Canada eliminates the availability of low-LTV insurance for certain types of mortgages (e.g., borrowers taking equity out of their home; mortgages with amortization periods over 25 years; home purchase prices over $1 million; borrowers with credit scores under 600; investment properties, etc.). Low-LTV mortgages must also meet the same eligibility requirements as high-LTV mortgages. This took effect November 30, 2016.
October
2016
Department of FinanceCapital gains exemptionsThe government introduces a principal residence capital gains exemption. Any individual who was not a resident in Canada in the year the property was acquired will no longer be able to claim the exemption. Effective October 2, 2016, taxpayers claiming the exemption must also file the claim through the CRA (previously documents were only produced if audited).
October
2016
Department of FinanceMortgage insurer-lender risk sharing explorationThe government launches a public consultation on the potential to introduce some form of mortgage insurer-lender risk sharing. A consultation paper was released in late October 2016.
November
2016
Ontario GovernmentOntario government’s land tax rebate changesThe Ontario government proposes to double the maximum Land Transfer Tax refund for eligible first-time homebuyers to $4,000, effective January 1, 2017.
November
2016
City of VancouverVancouver vacant homes taxVancouver city council approves a 1% tax on vacant homes that are not principal residences or are not rented for at least six months of the year. The tax was implemented in 2017 with the first payments due in 2018. Home owners are required to self-report vacant homes.
December
2016
B.C. GovernmentVancouver first-time homebuyers assistanceThe B.C. government announces the B.C. Home Owner Mortgage and Equity (HOME) Partnership program. The program aims to assist first-time homebuyers by matching the buyer’s down payment contribution to an amount up to 5% of the home’s purchase price (maximum purchase price of $750k). The matching contribution comes in the form of a 25-year second mortgage, which is interest-free and payment-free for the first five years.
January
2017
CMHCCMHC fee increasesNew OSFI Capital Requirements for Federally Regulated Mortgage Insurers takes effect January 1. Soon after, CMHC announces premium price increases for borrowers with down payments between 5% and 25%, effective March 17, 2017. These mortgage insurance price increases reflect OSFI’s significantly higher capital requirements for mortgage insurers. The price changes represented an approximate 12%–15% increase to high-LTV mortgage insurance. Genworth MI Canada and Canada Guaranty followed suit and matched CMHC’s price increases.
April
2017
CMHCCMHC introduces new feeCMHC introduces a 0.01% administration fee that will be assessed against a portion of an issuer’s unused NHA-MBS guarantee allocations beyond a specified threshold.
April
2017
Ontario GovernmentOntario announced Fair Housing PlanThe Ontario government announces the “Fair Housing Plan” that includes measures to cool the housing market, contain rent increases, curb speculative practices and increase housing supply. The two key changes implemented included a 15% foreign buyer’s tax and an expansion of rent controls. The measures took effect immediately.
October
2017
OSFIOSFI announces final B-20 guidelinesOSFI unveils its final B-20 guidelines regarding residential mortgage underwriting practices and procedures for federally regulated financial institutions. It includes a new stress test that would require potential borrowers to qualify for underwriting using the higher of their contracted mortgage rate + 200 bps or the 5-year benchmark fixed rate published by the Bank of Canada.
October
2017
OSFIOSFI announces final B-20 guidelinesAs part of OSFI’s final B-20 guidelines, federally regulated financial institutions are disallowed from arranging (or appearing to arrange) a mortgage or combination of mortgages secured by the same property that would circumvent the maximum LTV ratio as defined in a lender’s underwriting policies or legal requirements.
October
2017
OSFIOSFI announces final B-20 guidelinesFinally, OSFI’s new B-20 guidelines introduce greater due diligence, including: intended use of loan (e.g., purchase, refinancing), type of purchase (owner-occupied, recreational, investment, etc.), and type of refinancing (if applicable).
November
2017
B.C. GovernmentVancouver unveils 10-year housing strategyVancouver releases its 10-year Vancouver Housing Strategy and three-year action plan in November 2017, which includes references to a desire to introduce and/or work with other levels of government to potentially introduce more changes to the housing market (e.g., tax reform relating to real estate, restrict property ownership by non-permanent residents, etc.).
January
2018
OSFINew Stress Test BeginsOSFI’s uninsured mortgage stress test begins January 1.

History of Mortgage Rule Changes Continues:

February
2018
B.C. GovernmentSpeculation tax A tax of 0.5% of a home’s value was introduced to target foreign and domestic speculators. The tax is exempted on homes that are an owner’s primary residence and on those that are rented out for at least six months of the year (in addition to other examptions). The tax came into effect in select regions and municipalities.
March
2018
B.C. GovernmentChanges to B.C.’s Speculation tax Responding to criticism over its speculation tax, the government reduced the number of geographic areas affected by the new tax and introduced a new rate system that distinguished between B.C. residents, out-of-province Canadians and foreign buyers.
March
2019
Department of FinanceHigher RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP) LimitsAnnounced in the Liberal government budget of 2019, the RRSP withdrawal limit under the Home Buyers’ Plan was raised to $35,000 from $25,000. It took effect March 20, 2019.
March
2019
CMHCFirst-Time Home Buyer IncentiveAnnounced in the Liberal government budget of 2019, this plan will provide down payment assistance to first-time homebuyers by way of a shared equity program, in which CMHC will provide 5% of the purchase price for existing homes and 10% for new builds. For default-insured purchases only; annual household income must be less than $120,000; the insured mortgage plus incentive amount cannot exceed four times the participants’ annual household income. The official launch was September 2019.
February
2020
Department of FinanceNew insured stress-test qualifying rateThe Department of Finance announced changes to Canada’s benchmark
qualifying rate, a key component used in stress-testing insured
mortgages. Under the new formula, insured borrowers will have to prove  they can afford a monthly payment based on a rate that equals the weekly median 5-year fixed insured mortgage rate, plus 2%. The change was set to come into effect on April 6, 2020.OSFI announced that it was considering using the same revised benchmark rate for uninsured
mortgages, or the borrower’s contract rate plus 2%, whichever is greater. It will confirm its new rule after a public comment period, saying it aimed to revise its stress test on the same April 6 date as the Department of Finance. 
March
2020
Department of Finance, CMHC, Bank of CanadaMeasures to Support Continued LendingThe Bank of Canada, Department of Finance and CMHC announced several mortgage measures to support liquidity in the mortgage market and those facing hardship related to the COVID-19 outbreak. Among them:
Launch of a $150 billion Insured Mortgage Purchase Program (IMPP).
Eligibility criteria for portfolio insurance were temporarily relaxed to help mortgage lenders access the IMPP. The change allows previously uninsured mortgage loans (e.g., those with 30-year amortizations and refinances) that were funded before March 20, 2020, to be eligible for mortgage insurance and to be included in future NHA MBS issuance, including:
1. Low loan-to-value mortgages with a maximum amortization term 
up to 30 years commencing from when the loan was funded.
2. Low loan-to-value mortgages whose purpose includes the purchase of a property, subsequent renewal of such a loan, or refinancing.
Canada Mortgage Bonds Buyback: The BoC said it “stands ready, as a proactive measure, to provide support to the Canada Mortgage Bond (CMB) market so that this important funding market continues to function well. This would include, as required, purchases of CMBs in the secondary market.” (Source)
The Bank of Canada also said it would broaden eligible collateral for its term repo facility to include the full range of collateral eligible under the Standing Liquidity Facility, with the exception of the non-mortgage loan portfolio.
OSFI relaxes the capital buffer required for domestic systemically important banks from 2.25% of risk-weighted assets to 1%. This results in an estimated $300 billion in added lending capacity.
June
2020
CMHCStricter Underwriting Rules for CMHC-Insured MortgagesCMHC announced the following underwriting changes for CMHC-insured mortgages that took effect July 1, 2020:
1. Lowering the maximum gross debt service (GDS) ratio from 39 to 35
2. Lowering the maximum total debt service (TDS) ratio from 44 to 42
3. Raising the minimum credit score from 600 to 680 (for at least one household borrower)
4. Banning several types of borrowed down payments
June
2021
OSFIHigher minimum qualifying rate for uninsured mortgagesIn April 2021, OSFI unveiled a proposed higher minimum qualifying rate for uninsured mortgages. Starting in June 2021, borrowers will be stress tested at the higher of their contract rate plus 2% or a 5.25% floor rate, up from a minimum rate of 4.79% at the time. OSFI also announced it will revisit the calibration of the qualifying rate each December, at a minimum, “to ensure it remains appropriate for the risks in the environment.”
June
2021
Department of FinanceHigher minimum qualifying rate for insured mortgagesIn May 2021, the Department of Finance announced it would
implement a stricter stress test for insured mortgages, identical  to the stress test changes announced by OSFI for uninsured mortgages. As of June 1 2021, borrowers will be stress tested at the higher of their contract rate plus 2% or a 5.25% floor rate, up from a minimum rate of 4.79% at the time. The DoF said it will revisit the calibration of the qualifying rate each December,  at a minimum.

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