Lexpert Magazine

Jan/Feb 2017

Lexpert magazine features articles and columns on developments in legal practice management, deals and lawsuits of interest in Canada, the law and business issues of interest to legal professionals and businesses that purchase legal services.

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60 LEXPERT MAGAZINE | JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2017 much as 20 per cent will only exacerbate a well-known problem." If the federal government is worried about a US-style housing crisis, Gale wants to remind us that Canada is not the US. While the US housing market crashed from 2007 to 2009, the Canadian market merely slowed. While dozens of financial institutions failed in the US and other countries, none did in Canada, where stricter financial regulation has already done much to prevent risky mortgages. Here in Canada, housing prices during the financial crisis only dipped for about eight months, then began recovering. "at was an example, I think, of the market taking care of itself. … And when you interfere with the market, it never turns out well." CAPITAL PROBLEMS Lawyers are typically loath to speculate on things like housing market crashes. John Jason, a partner with Norton Rose Ful- bright Canada LLP in Toronto practising in financial regulation, can't be tempted, though prior to joining Norton Rose he had insider big bank experience as Senior Vice-President, Deputy General Counsel and Chief Compliance Officer at BMO Financial Group. e big banks, he agrees, will likely benefit from rules changes an- nounced so far. "ey will certainly drive a bunch of borrowers out of the market," says Jason. ose will primarily be first-time buyers or those riskier borrowers with lower credit scores, who no longer qualify for mort- gages under the new rules. e changes could also drive out some competition for the big banks, as Jason explains, because it's "the small lenders who have a predominant share of that [riskier] market." ose al- ternative lenders — especially "monoline" lenders that don't use deposits to backstop their lending — could wind up with far less of the mortgage business. But if the big banks are encouraged by the recent mortgage crackdown, they're not about to admit it. No general counsel for Bank of Montreal, CIBC, RBC, TD, Na- tional Bank or Scotiabank agreed to speak with Lexpert on the subject. Even smaller lenders are keeping tight-lipped, with Eq- uitable Bank, Home Trust Co., MCAP and a number of other monolines declin- ing interviews. Echoing the sentiment of many others lenders, Hilda Wong, Vice- President and General Counsel at First National Financial, says her organization simply wasn't expecting the new federal rules. "I don't think the industry was. We ourselves have to digest the changes." One problem alternative lenders will face is how to the find the capital neces- sary to fund mortgages in this new regula- tory environment. Unbeknownst to most Canadians, insured mortgages are oen quickly bundled into portfolios, which are then securitized and sold off, mainly to institutional investors such as pension funds, other banks, trust companies, credit unions and major investment firms. "ese [mortgage] originators are re- ally in it for service fees and an originator fee," explains Michael Feldman, a Toronto partner with Torys LLP who has long expe- rience in residential and commercial mort- gage securitization. (Originator fees are tacked on to the principal and range from about 25 to 100 basis points on a mortgage, depending on its size and term.) Monolines can't securitize without mortgage insurance, which provide the triple-A ratings that most investors require before they're willing to buy. at insur- ance protecting lenders against defaults comes from three sources: CMHC and two private insurers, Genworth MI Can- ada Inc. and Canada Guaranty Mortgage Insurance Co. All insured mortgages are backed by the Canadian government, and thus taxpayers: 100 per cent for CMHC-insured loans if the Crown corporation fails to cover de- faults with its own reserves. e other two private insurers are subject to a 10-per-cent deductible. at means lenders carry little to no risk for the insured mortgage loans they give homebuyers. Nor do the investors who buy them. However, on October 21, the Depart- ment of Finance launched an industry consultation process on the best way to "modestly" distribute some risk of loan losses to lenders and away from taxpayers. e consultations will wrap up on Febru- ary 28. OSFI, in addition, issued a new advisory on January 1, 2017, updating its Minimum Capital Test guidelines for federally regulated mortgage insurers, in- cluding the CMHC. e regulator says it intends to force federally regulated banks, credit unions and trust companies to put more capital aside to ensure they "can ab- sorb severe but plausible losses." "e interesting thing about the consul- tations is there are a few different public- policy objectives that you are faced with," says Mark McElheran, a partner at Stike- man Elliott LLP in Toronto practising in corporate finance, including private and public securitizations. "On the one hand they're trying to en- courage lenders to take some of the govern- ment's exposure to the housing market. But by the same token you may ultimately reduce competition in the market because there are only so many institutions that can actually shoulder some of that risk. e big banks might be able to do that and might be quite happy about that. If they are com- pensated for it, they will take more of that risk in whatever form it is." Selling off mortgages to raise capital is a far less urgent matter for banks than it is for monoline lenders. Banks have their deposi- tors to fund future loans. e monoline and other lenders lacking depositors can't afford | IN-HOUSE ADVISOR: MORTGAGE REGULATION | CRAIG ALEXANDER CONFERENCE BOARD OF CANADA The metaphor I like to use is, imagine you are driving down the highway and all of a sudden the road has become very icy. So now there is risk. The one thing you don't do is slam on the brakes, because that is likely to cause the very accident you are worried about happening.

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