Archive for March, 2020

Groups urge realtors to stop open houses

Wednesday, March 25th, 2020

REBGV recommends that members do not hold open houses

Gerv Tacadena
REP

Several regional real estate groups are urging their members to stop conducting in-person open houses during the COVID-19 outbreak.

Michael Collins, president of the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board (TRREB), said the group is committed to the protection of health and safety not just of its members but also of their clients and the general public.

“In light of provincial government restrictions on public gatherings and guidance regarding social distancing, TRREB recommends that members do not hold open houses for the time being,” he said.

Collins recommends that real estate agents make use of alternative marketing strategies such as video and virtual tours to minimise in-person interactions.

TREBB also released resources to assist their members in offering best practices.

“TRREB continues to encourage all members to follow the advice of public health authorities and exercise reasonable precautions as needed to ensure the safety of all members and their clients,” Collins said.

The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV) also called for its members to refrain from holding open houses.

“Realtors want to do their part to help prevent the spread of illness in our communities and to meet the housing needs of residents in a responsible way,” REBGV President Ashley Smith said.

Smith also asked for understanding from clients who might be affected by the recommendations.

“We’ve heard from some in the community who are unhappy that their realtors are not holding open houses. To those people, we ask for your understanding given the public health crisis we all face today,” she said.

The British Columbia Real Estate Association (BCREA) supports the recommendations made by local real estate boards.

“As British Columbians face this unprecedented health risk, it is vital that everyone does their part to help slow the spread of the COVID-19,” said Darlene Hyde, CEO of BCREA.

Hyde said the group is working with the government to ensure realtors’ access to emergency relief funding, especially given the weak outlook for the real estate market as a result of the pandemic.

“We are seeing the curtailment of face-to-face commerce across all sectors and real estate is no exception. The sooner we act to slow the spread of this virus, the sooner we can help our communities and economy recover,” Hyde said.

Copyright © 2020 Key Media Pty Ltd

Struggling borrowers to be prioritised by lenders – CMHC

Wednesday, March 25th, 2020

If in need talk to your bank for help

Gerv Tacadena
REP

The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) said homeowners and landlords who are struggling with their finances will be the priority of banks and lenders amid the COVID-19 outbreak.

In a TV interview with BNN Bloomberg, CMHC CEO Evan Siddall said borrowers who need help should be eligible for the relief being offered by lenders and banks.

“If you can tell your bank the reasons why you need help, it’s as simple as that, you will get help. What we don’t need right now are people who are going to be okay jamming up phone lines to banks because they’re crowding other people that are in true need,” he said.

Several mortgage lenders in Canada have already put in place measures, such as repayment deferral for up to six months, to support their affected clients.

“We have to implement a program that people can take comfort in. People who should not apply are obviously people who can pay their bills — whether it’s rent, mortgages, their utility bills — to do that because our economy needs your help right now,” Siddall said.

Siddall said it is also crucial to help landlords amid the outbreak to prevent evictions.

“A number of provinces have enacted eviction prohibitions — it’s going to be hard to evict anybody right now,” he said. “But we’re giving support to all the multi-unit insurance clients at CMHC, and that’s a huge amount of the marketplace — people who have constructed or bought multi-unit buildings and have tenants, we’re extending the same or similar support to them in return for a no-evictions agreement.”

Several mortgage lenders in Canada have already put in place measures, such as repayment deferral for up to six months, to support their affected clients.

“We have to implement a program that people can take comfort in. People who should not apply are obviously people who can pay their bills — whether it’s rent, mortgages, their utility bills — to do that because our economy needs your help right now,” Siddall said.

Siddall said it is also crucial to help landlords amid the outbreak to prevent evictions.

“A number of provinces have enacted eviction prohibitions — it’s going to be hard to evict anybody right now,” he said. “But we’re giving support to all the multi-unit insurance clients at CMHC, and that’s a huge amount of the marketplace — people who have constructed or bought multi-unit buildings and have tenants, we’re extending the same or similar support to them in return for a no-evictions agreement.”

Copyright © 2020 Key Media Pty Ltd

Coronavirus could cause 28% drop in Canadian home construction: Altus

Tuesday, March 24th, 2020

The depth and duration of the economic disruption remain very uncertain

Sean MacKay
Livabl

It’s become a common refrain in Canadian housing market reports published over the last two weeks: The national market, along with many of the local markets that comprise it, were set up for a strong year that would build upon the momentum established in 2019.

And then the coronavirus spread accelerated beyond the expectations of most people who don’t possess significant expertise around infectious diseases. This has resulted in housing projections being reevaluated, reports rewritten and experts asking for patience as they assess the impact to the market and broader economy over the next few weeks.

Real estate data tracker Altus Group had its quarterly Canadian home construction report ready to publish as of two weeks ago and even ensured the requisite coronavirus-influenced projections were included. But two weeks proved to be too long a timeline for the report to continue to be relevant for the point at which we find ourselves today.

Altus Group opted to publish its report with a newly added and lengthy introduction that notes that the data primarily tracking where Canadian home construction activity was heading for the year is still useful to share.

“As we go to press, the depth and duration of the economic disruption remain very uncertain,” wrote Patricia Arsenault, the editor of Altus Group’s Housing Report. While she noted in the recently penned introduction that the Canadian housing market has a potential buffer with the significant cuts to interest rates initiated over the last few weeks, Arsenault said more mortgage rate declines would be required to “help offset the current economic shocks on housing starts.”

“So what might we see for Canadian housing starts this year and next? The current turmoil makes it too early to provide ‘best estimates’ but we have prepared a few initial ‘what if’ scenarios,” wrote Arsenault.

According to Arsenault, the Altus Group team will aim to provide a more concrete “best estimates” projection for Canadian housing starts by early May.

In the meantime, the three scenarios outlined are delineated by the severity of the demand and supply disruption caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

The worst case scenario outlined in the report “assumes more serious supply constraints in 2020, and more prolonged demand impacts. It would be more in line with the degree of adjustment during the global financial crisis in the latter 2000s.” In this scenario, housing starts in Canada would fall to approximately 150,000 units over 2020, a 28 percent decline from 2019.

On the opposite end, a scenario with “minimal” disruption to supply and demand. According to Altus Group, this scenario “acknowledges that housing starts in 2020 would, other things being equal, largely reflect sales – “demand” ‐ that has already occurred, given the limited extent of speculative building and inherent sales to start lags. But it also assumes that the construction industry is only slightly impacted by labour and/or material shortages or full site shutdowns.”

With only minimal disruption, Altus Group estimates that Canadian homebuilders would begin work on 200,000 units of housing over the year. This would be a much smaller decrease over 2019’s total, though it would also still fall short of the “pre-pandemic base case” that Altus developed ahead of the outbreak taking hold.

Another important point contained in Arsenault’s introduction is her team’s skepticism over the claim that the post-pandemic rebound in homebuilding will be comparable to that experienced following the 2003 SARS outbreak.

“SARS was a very localized situation in Canada, primarily concentrated in Toronto, and with far less impacts to the broader economy. Moreover, housing starts had just started to ramp up, after a very slow decade in the 1990s,” she wrote.

© 2019 BuzzBuzzHome Corp.

Federal gov’t promises support for the Canadian mortgage industry

Tuesday, March 24th, 2020

Canada’s mortgage lenders are slated to receive a $50-billion federal boost

Ephraim Vecina
Mortgage Broker News

Canada’s mortgage lenders are slated to receive a $50-billion federal boost so that they can remain operational amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

The tranche is among the adjustments made late last week to a $565-billion-plus stimulus package intended to ensure “credit and liquidity support,” in the hopes of reinvigorating an economy ravaged by the outbreak. This came in the wake of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s pledge to inject $82-billion into the financial system.

The $50-billion war chest will “help provide stable funding and liquidity to financial institutions and mortgage lenders and support continued lending to Canadian businesses and consumers,” the government stated.

Said funding will also give the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) the means to insure and purchase previously uninsured loans, the Financial Post reported.

“The government will do whatever it takes to support Canadians and we are prepared to take further action as necessary to meet the challenges ahead,” Finance Minister Bill Morneau assured.

Housing has been one of the sectors hardest hit by the coronavirus, with the desire for buying homes in Canada significantly dwindling over the last few weeks, Point2 Homes reported.

“The outbreak has shattered seasonality, transforming the spring months, which was normally the time when the housing market was starting to pick up speed, into a period of anxious down time,” Point2 Homes noted.

“Much of the activity associated with homebuying and home selling is simply on hold, as people and institutions alike are trying to see where the pandemic is headed.”

Copyright © 2020 Key Media

Will house prices in BC fall amid the COVID-19 outbreak?

Tuesday, March 24th, 2020

Experts say lower qualifying rate is needed

Gerv Tacadena
Canadian Real Estate Wealth

The impact of the coronavirus outbreak on the housing market of British Columbia remains uncertain, but analysis of possible scenarios paints a need for a lower qualifying rate for home loans for prices to recover.

According to the British Columbia Real Estate Association (BCREA), the COVID-19 outbreak is occurring at a time in which the province’s housing markets are recovering from a two-year slowdown. This recovery is supported by the growth in home prices due to the lack of supply of homes.

However, taking into consideration the impact of the COVID-19 on the economy, the turnout in the next coming months could remain muted.

“Unsurprisingly, the results of our simulations show a steep decline in home sales in the second quarter of this year as economic activity becomes eerily quiet,” said Brendon Ogmundson, chief economist at BCREA.

Still, Ogmundson expects home sales to slowly recover from the quarter. However, this growth will remain below the baseline for the year.

A more profound and more prolonged recession could derail this growth, with home sales falling 20% below the baseline for the remainder of the year.

Ogmundson said the pass-through of falling interest rates to the qualifying rate makes a large difference.

“Our simulations show that a much lower qualifying rate would lead to home prices in some BC markets ending the year higher than our pre-COVID-19 baseline,” he said.

Ogmundson said if the growth outlook deteriorates, the housing market “may need a lower qualifying rate to fully recover.”

Copyright © 2020 Key Media Pty Ltd

Real estate in the time of COVID-19

Tuesday, March 24th, 2020

Whatever the details, the message is simple: Stay. Home. And if you absolutely have to be in public, keep your distance

Clayton Jarvis
Canadian Real Estate Wealth

When CREW was putting together its most recent Property Forecast issue last fall, every economist we spoke to hinted at the potential for a recession in 2020. Trump-fuelled trade uncertainty would be the most likely culprit and the effects, while uncomfortable, would be minimal.

Now, not even three full months into 2020, the world is confronting a black swan event that has wrapped its wings around the entire planet, suffocating the global economy.

Real estate, as reliant as it is on human interaction, has been hit hard by COVID-19. Rather than simply speculate on how prices and sales will respond to the lack of activity, CREW instead reached out to some of our most trusted realtor friends to get a sense of what has happened to homebuying in various Canadian markets in the wake of the coronavirus outbreak.

Whatever the details, the message is simple: Stay. Home. And if you absolutely have to be in public, keep your distance.

How has COVID-19 affected your market in the past two weeks? Vanessa Roman, Pemberton Homes (Victoria, BC): We have seen a substantial shift in buyer and seller activity over the last couple of weeks. We’ve moved from the fast-paced spring market conditions to an almost complete halt in our day-to-day operations. For some sellers, this means cancelling their MLS listings completely. For others who have to sell or are selling vacant properties, it means no open houses, restricted viewing times to avoid people coming into contact with each other, and increased hygiene practices before and after showings. 

For buyers, we are seeing our already low inventory levels drop further as sellers remove their listings from the market. The properties which remain are selling very quickly and in a flurry of multiple offers. 

Brett Turner, Redline Real Estate (Calgary, AB): The market is currently winding down from the buyers and sellers who were actively in the market prior to the ramp up of social distancing measures.  There are a lot of questions from both buyers and sellers regarding what to do and how to approach their spring and summer plans for real estate in the wake of social distancing measures and changes to the economy.  Our associates are taking a lot of questions now about what consumers can expect in the coming months.

Taylor Hack, RE/MAX River City (Edmonton, AB): Our market has been heavily affected by COVID-19 over the last two weeks. Our only consolation was that we were ahead of the curve on this one. The daily stats showed house sales dropping 12 percent and condos close to 25 percent near the end of last week – before the announcements of schools closing. This allowed us to check in with our listed clients and start taking action to help the families we serve as they dealt with the uncertainty of this announcement.

Brett Ackerman, Royal LePage Regina Realty (Regina, SK): COVID-19 has been changing the way we do business every day.  We are seeing action from sellers screening or not allowing showings at this time, which is unprecedented in a spring market.  

Jordan Boyes, Boyes Real Estate (Saskatoon, SK): It hadn’t prior to last week, but we’re really starting to see it slow down now. Open houses have been taken down by our real estate board. 

Marco Silvestri, RE/MAX Professionals (Winnipeg, MB): Our market here in Winnipeg has had a slowdown. Deals are still happening, but not anywhere near normal numbers for this time of year. We have had folks delaying the listings of homes and buyers are reluctant to enter people’s homes at this time. Our Spring Parade of Homes has been officially cancelled.

Thomas Pobojewski, Royal LePage Signature Realty (Mississauga, ON): Up until March 13 our market was firing on all cylinders. In fact, we had a home for sale in Mississauga that had 27 offers and sold for a record price. (The sellers debated whether to wait till April and I advised them to put the property on the market ASAP. Needless to say they were happy with the decision.) Since March 13, we have seen a decrease in the number of showings per listing and in new buyers entering the market.

Angela Langtry, Century 21 Immo-Plus (Montreal, QC): We are starting to feel a slowdown while people isolate themselves and are cautious about the economy. Some buyers have pulled back to wait-and-see mode. Many realtors are canceling open houses.

Thomas Bagogloo, RE/MAX Nova (Halifax, NS): There are fewer buyers in the market, more hesitation to view properties, and the buyers that were coming from out of town have cancelled their trips for the most part. What we have to be careful of is: will anybody putting an offer in still have the income required to close on it later on. Associated closing professionals, such as appraisers and banks and lawyers, will be limiting how they work, too. In changing how they work, this will affect, or delay, the closing process.

Mary Jane Webster, RE/MAX Charlottetown (Charlottetown, PEI): We have made the move to get everyone working from home.  If an individual needs to show a property, it is policy for most offices to mandate hand sanitizer prior to and upon exiting a property.  If a homeowner declines the showing, that is totally fine; it is not an issue of not acting in good faith, it is just the opposite. If we can do virtual showings, that is advised. Strict social distancing measures are in place.

Are people still looking at properties in person? What is your message to consumers who are still behaving as if a global pandemic is not occurring? Vanessa Roman: I am not doing any in-person meetings or property viewings. My entire business has moved to electronic mediums. As realtors, we can still work but we need to adapt to the rapid changes in our business practices and do our part to limit the spread of the virus. 

Brett Turner: There are still viewings happening, although the pace is slowing dramatically. Our brokerage made the proactive decision to cancel open houses, in-person meetings and client meetups.  As for showings, it is up to the seller if they wish to allow people into their properties.  In Calgary, if sellers are declining showings then they are asked to remove their properties from the market; at present, this is being managed on a case-by-case basis according to the preferences of the seller. We are asking all of our clients, agents and staff to observe the social distancing guidelines set forth by AHS. 

Taylor Hack: As our province has declared a state of emergency, it’s key for us to talk to them about what’s required to be safe to be safe ourselves. Our message to our clients has been specific to them depending on their circumstance.

First, we want to talk about safety. For our sellers, if anyone in the property we have for sale is over 65 years of age or has increased risk due to an immunological challenge or other factors we will immediately cease showings and talk about options to withdraw their property from the market. Also, has anyone in their home recently travelled? Are they aware of guidelines related to self-quarantine?

For our buyers, what needs to change about our process in this new reality? Is there a decision maker that should not be viewing properties due to health reasons?

Also, we’re having the necessary conversations with the listing agent of the properties we intend to show so we can get an understanding of how informed they are of these evolving guidelines and their levels of precaution and risk management related to their listings.

We also talk about need. For any clients that have bought before they sell or are experiencing vacancy on a property, we have to recognize their concern for their financial wellbeing. How does this situation relate to the supply and demand of real estate daily and how can we adapt our strategy to execute?

Brett Ackerman: Showings from buyers have been slightly reduced, but I am still getting requests from agents on properties that are vacant.  I think everyone right now needs to take a sober look at the urgency of the situation and decide if what they are doing is in the best interest of the general public and not a selfish personal decision.  

Jordan Boyes: Some people are still looking, but it’s beginning to slow more and more. There’s hand sanitizer at the entrances, all lights are turned on prior to showings and we’re keeping doors open so people don’t have to touch anything.

Marco Silvestri: I have had a number of buyers showing homes but with extra precautionary measures for sure. Some of these homes are now not currently lived in, so I am being very careful. Virtual tours and Facebook Live is also another way to show a home.  

Thomas Pobojewski: Many would-be buyers have decided to put their plans on hold and will wait to see what is the fall-out of the COVID-19 situation. That being said, there are “serious” buyers out there who have purchased since March 13. These are often people who have sold their existing homes and need a place to live. For the duration of social distancing, I would expect less competition for buyers.

Angela Langtry: Yes, people are still looking at properties in person, although not as many. Last week we were laughing about the pandemic being overblown by the media. This week it became real. I have not been in touch with anyone this past week who is not taking the situation seriously.

Thomas Bagogloo: Fewer people have been listing their properties because they don’t want to have people in their homes. But there are still some people who want to move forward with selling because they have their own personal reasons. They’re wiping down surfaces after every showing.

My message to consumers is to take this situation very serious because it can be transmitted without you even knowing about it. From what I understand, it can take up to 14 days to show symptoms, so on the tenth day you could think you’re healthy, but you’re actually exposing everyone you’re in contact with, which allows the virus to grow exponentially. Learn from the countries that have experienced more chaos and more casualties than us so we can limit what happens to our communities and country.

Mary Jane Webster: Some are still looking.  We have left this up to individual realtors to assess their own level of comfort.  If a client is looking, they must be in need of housing, which is a whole other subsequent consequence to what we are experiencing.  Most are adhering to the guidelines set out by the Chief Health Officer and World Health Organization. Our best advice has been “the best way to come together is by staying apart.”

How big an impact do you think the current COVID-19 destabilization will have on prices and selling activity this year? Vanessa Roman: In my business, the virus has caused sale prices to climb as buyers scramble for the quickly dwindling pool of available properties. However, one thing we’ve learned from watching other countries – and real estate markets – deal with the virus around the world, is that change is the new constant. It’s difficult to predict whether this trend will continue in Victoria through the spring and into the summer as so much will depend on our infection rates. 

Brett Turner: I think it’s obvious there will be far fewer transactions this year and prices may show a decline, but volumes will be lower so consumers shouldn’t read into the changes too much. 

Consumers are facing very uncertain times, so most will choose to sit tight for now because the situation is unfolding so rapidly and there are more questions than answers at present, which does not create the environment conducive to big-ticket purchases like real estate. 

If someone wanted to move prior to COVID-19, they will still be thinking about it.  Canadians are now being asked to spend a lot more time in their properties and consume more of their own real estate.  That will cause people to ask themselves if they are content with their housing, so while transactions will pause, I don’t feel that buyers will leave the market indefinitely.  If the broader economy returns to normal, so will real estate.

Taylor Hack: Every situation is going to have strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats. The impact to the most common buyer, which is the average family, will likely be inventory shortages in the weeks after the state of emergency is lifted. Given that families are locked up in their homes, their ability to prepare for sale will likely be slowed.

In the months that follow we expect all the hallmarks of a damaged economy. Cost of funds my rise for lenders based on the losses they are experiencing for deferred mortgage payments. People may have lost their jobs or have to find different ones so their qualifications for financing may be affected.

Next year, this will likely have strengths for us here in Alberta. We’ve been in recession for a long time, so we welcome the other provinces to our boat and ask that they kindly grab a paddle. I think that the universal need to recover from the cost of the stimulus package will do great things for commodities that create the foundation of economies. Shopping local will have new meaning as the world is slowly unlocked based on each country’s ability to maintain a public health policy.

Brett Ackerman: The overall impact will depend on the length of time this lasts.  My personal view is the market will be like a boiling pot of water with listing inventory piling up during this time of uncertainty.  When the situation passes, I feel the market, especially considering the lower interest rates, will have many buyers jumping on the inventory. We may possibly even see an increase in prices in Regina’s market. 

Jordan Boyes: I actually don’t think it’s going to change prices a ton right now. It will just slow transactions and increase the time properties spend on the market. I don’t think prices will begin to dip until things really drag out.

Marco Silvestri: I believe this too shall pass. The important thing right now is that we need to help out the people who need it. 

Thomas Pobojewski: [The Toronto Real Estate Board] predicted double digit price growth in the GTA this year. I believe we will see 3-5% growth going forward. The economic fallout and possible recession will certainly have an impact.

Angela Langtry: Our real estate board is predicting a bit of a slowdown for the spring market and say that, in the short term, we can expect COVID-19 to have a negative impact on jobs and consumer confidence. However, they feel that overall impact will be temporary and will not have catastrophic consequences on property values, given the low inventory supply in Montreal and the recently lowered interest rates.

Thomas Bagogloo: We’re having our best year in decades in Halifax, with most properties generating competing offers. That has slowed down because there are fewer buyers, but we’ve been holding strong price-wise so far. There has been a slight softening, which I believe will continue. As a result, competing offers will be limited and I believe we will be back to more of a balanced market in the next couple of weeks.

There will be a continued slowdown, but this is a moving target and no one knows where it’s going to go.

Mary Jane Webster: Our year-to-date is very similar to 2019.  The impact will be felt in the coming months and weeks.  Our province is down to essential services and real estate and law firms fall into that grey area of “Is this essential?”  Housing is obviously an essential need, and how the related services are effected will truly impact how we are able to meet the housing needs of our communities.  We are all learning as we go.

Copyright © 2020 Key Media Pty Ltd

Investing in CRE? Devastation could be ahead warns lender

Monday, March 23rd, 2020

The US commercial mortgage market is on the brink of collapse

Steve Randall
Canadian Real Estate Wealth

The chief executive of a major US nonbank commercial lender in the US has made a stark prediction about the industry as the COVID-19 coronavirus rips holes in the economy.

Tom Barrack, chairman and chief executive of Colony Capital Inc., wrote a white paper Sunday that warned that the US commercial mortgage market is on the brink of collapse.

He sees a devasting domino effect if policymakers don’t take appropriate action to avoid defaults.

“Loan repayment demands are likely to escalate on a systemic level, triggering a domino effect of borrower defaults that will swiftly and severely impact the broad range of stakeholders in the entire real estate market, including property and home owners, landlords, developers, hotel operators and their respective tenants and employees,” he wrote.

He is calling for policymakers to shore up liquidity for real estate investment trusts, credit funds, and lenders; and to allow banks to provide loan forbearance without triggering bank-capital rule violations.

Without action for the real estate industry – and its lenders – Barrack says there will be far-reaching consequences for the US economy.

“Across the entire real estate ecosystem including construction, retail, healthcare, leisure and hospitality, and real estate services there are almost 63 million jobs at stake. This real estate ecosystem represents ~$7.1 trillion of GDP, out of $20.3 trillion total US GDP,” he wrote.

His white paper is available here: https://medium.com/@tombarrackjr/preventing-covid-19-from-infecting-the-commercial-mortgage-market-e7444701745e

Copyright © 2020 Key Media Pty Ltd

Canadians have become much less interested in buying homes

Monday, March 23rd, 2020

The imposition of policies like social distancing and isolation having effect of home buying

Ephraim Vecina
Mortgage Broker News

COVID-19 has reverberated across all segments of Canadian society and has become particularly acute in the housing sector.

Open houses and inauguration events have fallen out of favour, amid the imposition of policies like social distancing and isolation.

Interest in buying homes across Canada has also substantially plummeted over the past few weeks, if new data from residential information portal Point2 Homes is any indication.

“The outbreak has shattered seasonality, transforming the spring months, which was normally the time when the housing market was starting to pick up speed, into a period of anxious down time,” Point2 Homes stated in its analysis. “Much of the activity associated with homebuying and home selling is simply on hold, as people and institutions alike are trying to see where the pandemic is headed.”

The decline in home searches made through the portal reached as much as 32% by March 16. The downward trend has been clear, with an 8% drop registered on March 11, a 20% decrease on March 12, and a 24% plunge on March 13.

And the impact upon Canadian housing does not stop there, as the societal effects of the disease are likely to change some aspects of the homebuying and selling business permanently.

“There certainly could be long-lasting impacts in terms of shifts in preferences for location and even features of homes,” according to Jim Clayton, director of the Brookfield Centre in Real Estate & Infrastructure at York University’s Schulich School of Business.

“Some people may be more hesitant about being part of a crowd and hence avoid mass/public transit. The work, and learn, from home revolution that many have been calling for over the past decade could become much more of a reality and may change how and where people want to live,” Clayton explained in an interview with Point2 Homes.

Copyright © 2020 Key Media

How to Get Mortgage Relief

Monday, March 23rd, 2020

Federal regulators have stepped in to offer coronavirus mortgage relief

Jim Probasco
other

The federal government, through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, is telling associated lenders to lower or suspend borrowers’ mortgage payments for up to 12 months if they have lost income because of the coronavirus outbreak. Regulators expect other lenders to follow suit.

Reduced or Paused Payments

According to the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), your individual situation will determine your eligibility, whether your monthly mortgage payment will be reduced or paused, and how long the relief will last. Both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are promising that in addition to reduced or suspended mortgage payments:

  • You won’t be charged penalties or late fees.
  • Your delinquent payments will not be reported to credit bureaus.
  • Any foreclosure action against you will be suspended1

No Late Fees

Both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will waive all penalties and late fees for the duration of your mortgage forbearance. Interest, however, typically continues to accrue when a mortgage loan is paused.1 3

No Reporting to Credit Bureaus

Lenders are directed not to report you to credit bureaus for late or missed payments provided you are in one of the forbearance programs. This means the fact you are not making full payments or not paying at all, will not affect your credit rating.1

No Foreclosures or Evictions

On March 18, 2020, the FHFA directed Fannie Mae and Feddie Mac to suspend foreclosures and evictions for at least 60 days, provided your home loan is backed by either company. FHFA says it will continue to monitor the coronavirus situation and update policies as needed.4 Federal Housing Administration (FHA) insured mortgages are also under a 60 day order suspending foreclosures and evictions. This order was effective March 18 as well.5

Additional Help Possible

Once you reach the end of your forbearance period, you may qualify for additional assistance if you need it. Work with your servicer and, if possible, resume making your regular payments. If you still need assistance ask your servicer what other options are available. This could including reducing your monthly payments or some other type of loan modification.

Forbearance, which this is, is not the same as forgiveness. You will still owe the amount you didn’t have to pay, plus interest, during the forbearance period.

Loan Lookup Tools

To find out whether your loan is backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, use the appropriate loan lookup tool below.

Fannie Mae Loan Lookup

Freddie Mac Loan Lookup

Fill in the required information to determine whether the FHFA-specific options listed here are available to you. If not, don’t despair (see below).

Other Lenders Expected to Follow Suit

Federal regulators believe most non-government-backed lenders and servicers will adopt policies similar to those adopted by the FHFA. To find out, contact your lender or loan servicer (the company you send your payment to), ask what programs they have in place to help homeowners impacted by the coronavirus outbreak and follow any instructions you are given.

Don’t Just Stop Making Payments

Whether your loan is backed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, or a private lender, the one thing you should not do is to just stop making payments. You must contact your lender or servicer to let the company know you are having trouble making payments. Failure to contact your lender will result in all of the negative things mentioned above including penalties, bad credit, and ultimately, perhaps, foreclosure and eviction.

Not for Renters

These actions do not apply to you if you are renting, either an apartment or a house. Some cities have halted evictions for renters and national housing advocates have urged the federal government to enact legislation to help renters.

Video ***2 Videos for you to reflect on what is happening these days

Sunday, March 22nd, 2020

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