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Mortgage rules have changed and evolved over the years.
I was chatting with one of my broker friends to clarify one of the newer guidelines and she sighed and commented how hard it it is to stay on top of the policies when they shift so often.
With the introduction of the Stress Test in 2016 we were qualifying clients either the Bank of Canada Benchmark rate (which changed multiple times) or the clients’ interest rate plus two per cent. Most of my clients that are coming up for renewal now had to qualify at 4.94 per cent or even 5.25 per cent.
Interestingly this is the ballpark range of where interest rates with many lenders are sitting now.
I have been discussing his upcoming renewal with one of my favorite clients. His current lender offered him a renewal rate that he was not happy with. Because I have consent from the client I called the lender to double check if they could do any better than their initial offer.
They can’t. Because of their internal policy and the terms of this client’s mortgage it truly is the best they can offer him.
Because of a fairly recent change to qualification guidelines, other lenders are able to offer far more attractive rates because of the amount of equity he has in his home and the initial purchase price of his home five years ago.
His particular lender is one of my favorites and is usually highly competitive at renewal time. I was really surprised about this loophole in their policy.
Long story short, we will be switching to a different lender and saving my client .8 per cent on his mortgage rate which in his case equates to a savings of $21,315.00 over the next five years.
While rate isn’t always the deciding factor, it really pays to do your homework at renewal time.