Advertisement

Coronavirus fears help push down mortgage rates

Passengers wear mask to prevent a new coronavirus outbreak at a Mass Transit Railway (MTR) subway train station in Hong Kong, China, January 29, 2020. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
Passengers wear mask to prevent a new coronavirus outbreak at a Mass Transit Railway (MTR) subway train station in Hong Kong, China, January 29, 2020. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu

The ripple effects of the coronavirus are being felt on Canada’s bond market, which is translating into lower mortgage rates.

Variable-rate mortgages are generally tied to the Bank of Canada’s overnight benchmark rate. Their fixed-rate counterparts depend on the five-year Government of Canada bond yield, which fluctuates with market forces. It’s fallen sharply since the coronavirus first surfaced.

“Fears of a possible coronavirus pandemic are sweeping the world,” said Scotiabank economists Rebekah Young and Nikita Perevalov, in a research note.

“Markets are jittery with little hard data to go on.”

When investors are fearful about global events and an economic slowdown, they tend to buy more government-backed bonds, often called safe-haven assets. This leads to something of a seesaw effect.

Government of Canada Benchmark Bond Yields - 5 Year (Bank of Canada)
Government of Canada Benchmark Bond Yields - 5 Year (Bank of Canada)

“When investors rush to buy bonds, bond prices go up, which pushes down bond yields. Lower bond yields drive down fixed-mortgage funding costs for lenders.” Rob McLister, mortgage expert at Rates.ca, told Yahoo Finance Canada.

“Lenders then typically pass through those savings to borrowers.”

McLister says 5-year fixed mortgage rates could drop at least 15 bps from here. In other words, a typical uninsured mortgage would cost you 2.69 per cent instead of 2.84 per cent today.

McLister said RBC (RY.TO) cut its discounted special offer and discretionary rates, but hasn’t cut its posted rate. He expects other banks to follow RBC’s lead.

Parallels to SARS

Fixed-rates fell slightly during the SARS outbreak, but there are already comparativelymore confirmed cases of the coronavirus for the stage of the outbreak and airlines are already cancelling flights.

“While it is premature to predict the path of today’s coronavirus outbreak, we estimate that a SARS-equivalent pandemic today could have a similar impact on the Canadian economy with an estimated hit of just over 0.1% on the level of GDP by mid-2020, at which point a pandemic should be contained,” said Young and Perevalov.

“This estimate is subject to a significant degree of uncertainty with risks skewed to a potentially larger impact.”

Scotiabank says industries tied to commodity prices and travel would feel it the most.

Out of luck if you’re variable

Brett House, Scotiabank’s deputy chief economist, says the Bank of Canada is likely unfazed by the situation. So variable-rate mortgages won’t be going down in the near future.

“Given the movement that has already taken place in medium-term yields, we would not expect a cut in the overnight rate target by the Bank of Canada to set off a substantial change in medium-term rates that would spur an increase in new borrowing by households,” he told Yahoo Finance Canada.

“Mortgage credit growth has already surged and is unlikely to lift further at current levels of household indebtedness and slowing growth in consumer debt.”

Jessy Bains is a senior reporter at Yahoo Finance Canada. Follow him on Twitter @jessysbains.

Download the Yahoo Finance app, available for Apple and Android.