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MORTGAGE INSURANCE: CMHC EXPERIENCE IN CANADA

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Title: MORTGAGE INSURANCE: CMHC EXPERIENCE IN CANADA


1
  • MORTGAGE INSURANCE CMHC EXPERIENCE IN CANADA
  • SELECTED COUNTRIES
  • The World Bank
  • Washington, March 12, 2003

2
OBJECTIVES OF THE PRESENTATION
  • Present the Canadian Experience with Mortgage
    Insurance
  • Share a few lessons learned through our
    involvement internationally

3
WHAT IS CMHC
  • Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation
  • A federally owned Corporation public agency with
    a private sector culture/structure
  • CMHC reports to parliament through its minister
  • A board of directors (10 members, majority from
    private sector)
  • manages the affairs of the Corporation.
  • A National Housing agencies with a broad mandate
  • THE PROMOTION OF
  • Housing affordability and choice
  • Housing construction, repair and modernization
  • Improvements to overall living conditions

4
COMMERCIAL AND PUBLIC MANDATEPUBLIC POLICY
COMMERCIALMANDATE MANDATE
5
CMHC IN NUMBERS
  • Income after taxes (2002) US 355 million
  • Income tax US 200 million
  • Units insured (2002) 529,000 units
  • 36 serving Canadian in areas
  • where competition is not active
  • Insurance in force (2002) US 143 billion
  • of outstanding mortgages insured gt45
  • Secondary market
  • Guarantees in force (2002) US 13.4 billion

6
HOUSING FINANCE IN CANADA
Not a stand-alone system, integrated into the
wider capital market
7
OUTSTANDING MORTGAGES TO GDP
  • SELECTED OECD COUNTRIES
  • (Source Centre for studies in Economics and
    Finance Financial Market Imperfections
  • and Home Ownership A Cooperative
    study July 2000)

8
HOMEOWNERSHIP
  • SELECTED OECD COUTRIES
  • (Source Centre for studies in Economics and
    Finance Financial Market Imperfections
  • and Home Ownership A Cooperative
    study July 2000)

9
TYPICAL MORTGAGE PRODUCT IN CANADA
  • Roll over mortgage
  • Equal payment
  • Loan amortized up to 25 years
  • Interest rate fixed for term ranging from 6
    months to 5 years
  • Mortgage insurance key pillar of system
  • Maximum loan without MI 75 LTV
  • Maximum loan with MI 95

10
TYPICAL MORTGAGE PRODUCT IN CANADA
  • Regulatory requirement for all loans above 75
    LTV
  • Between 15 and 20 of units insured have an
    LTVlt75
  • Introduced in 1954 to encourage banks to lend and
    reduce initial down payment
  • Protects lenders against all losses incurred as a
    result of borrower default
  • 100 coverage of losses (whole mortgage
  • outstanding balance eligible expenses) for
    life
  • of mortgage

11
MORTGAGE INSURANCE IN CANADA - Product
  • Single up-front premium (between 0.5 and 3.75
    according to LTV). Typically added to the loan.
  • Universal access everywhere in Canada for same
    kind of terms and conditions, for any kind of
    housing. Different for private competitor.
  • More than 95 underwritten by EMILI
  • Mortgage Insurance Fund operated on commercial
    and actuarial basis, no cost to government. In
    line with risk exposure and General Insurance
    Regulations
  • 200 approved lenders 6 dominant lenders

12
MORTGAGE INSURANCE IN CANADA - Impact
  • Increased supply of funds by making mortgage
    lending attractive
  • Increased mortgage market competition and reduced
    rates
  • Allowed government to withdraw from direct
    lending, interest rate subsidies and Federal
    loan-loss guarantee
  • Zero capital required by lenders instead of 4
    for non insured loans
  • Standardized mortgage terms and conditions

13
MORTGAGE SYSTEM COMPARISON
  • CANADA US
  • 1. National Regional Lenders 1. Regional
    lending
  • 2. 200 Lenders 2. 20,000 lenders Banks,
    SLs,
  • mortgage banks
  • 3. Womb to tomb lending process 3. Segmented
    lending process
  • 4. Variable Amortization 5, 10, 15, 4.
    Amortization typically 15 30 years
  • 20, 25 years
  • 5. Fixed interest rate term 6 months to 5.
    Interest rate fixed for life of mortgage
  • 5 years or variable
  • 6. No interest rate deductibility 6.
    Interest deductibility
  • 7. Capital Gains not taxable 7. Capital
    gains taxable
  • 8. Funds primarily from deposit base, 8. MBS
    major source of funds
  • 9. CMHC competes with private 9. FHA
    targets low income and avoids
  • insurance competition
  • 10. CMHC has a significant market share 10. FHA
    covers 10 of new
  • residential mortgage loan

14
CONCLUSION
  • The Canadian Housing finance system is performing
    well.
  • An effective balance between private and public
    involvement. Lending is done by private sector.
    Competition on a level playing field between
    private and public sector for mortgage insurance.
  • Mortgage Insurance played a key role in the
    development of Housing Finance.
  • Mortgage insurance an instrument of public
    policy.
  • IS THE CANADIAN MODEL EXPORTABLE
  • WITH ADAPTATION?

15
CMHC INTERNATIONAL INVOLVEMENT SO FAR
  • Mali 1998on going Support Housing Finance
  • development-Creation of FGHM
  • Palestine 1998on going Preparation of a
    business plan
  • implementation of PMHC
  • India 2001-on going Introduction of Mortgage
  • Insurance Business plan
  • for IMGC

16
CMHC INTERNATIONAL INVOLVEMENT SO FAR
  • Lithuania 2001-2002 Training program on
    Mortgage Insurance Market Analysis
  • Latvia 2002 Training program on Ml. Market
    research on mortgage products
  • China 2001-on going Feasibility study on the
    introduction Ml
  • Serbia 2002-on going Business plan for a
    National Housing Agency

17
Possible Objectives for Mortgage Insurance in
Emerging Economies
  • Increase access to housing finance
  • Reduce down payment required
  • Reach out the underserved borrower
  • Encourage lenders to lend
  • Increase level of home ownership
  • Standardize legal and lending practices
  • Deepen financial system different types of
    lenders broader access to capital market
  • Impacts growth in job creation building
    materials taxes
  • personal wealth financial professional
    services
  • 7. Develop new and resale housing markets

18
Pre-requisites for Mortgage Insurance
19
CHALLENGES
  • Legal/Regulatory framework sub-optimal
  • Foreclosure an issue everywhere. Cultural
    sensitivity to the concept.
  • Title registration complex, lengthy, costly or
    ineffective.
  • Lenders No experienced lenders or just a few,
    limited appetite.
  • Long term resources unavailable or very limited
  • Historic data very limited or unavailable
  • Professional services for transaction Credit
    Bureau,
  • Real Estate professionals, market analysis
  • very limited everywhere.

20
OPPORTUNITIES
  • A clear priority in all countries where we are
    working.
  • Clear recognition that the housing sector could
    be an engine of economic growth a factor of
    social stability (India)
  • Huge housing needs (India, China, countries in
    transition)
  • Macro-economic conditions improving (Inflation
    under control, rate of interest declining)
  • Strong lenders (India, Baltic States)
  • Better understanding of the need for a strong
    primary market to develop a secondary market
  • Transition to market economy (Baltic States,
    Serbia)
  • Reduce need for government direct support
  • Need for standardization is well understood

21
LESSONS LEARNED - Impact
  • To early to measure the impact
  • New companies are viable in the very short term
  • Investors could be mobilized for MI companies in
    the most difficult environment (Mali, Palestine)
  • Need a full economic cycle to draw more
    definitive conclusions

22
LESSONS LEARNED Institutional Model
  • Need to be pragmatic, not ideological.
  • What is possible?
  • What is feasible?
  • Why not a Private-Public partnership?

23
LESSONS LEARNED - Product
  • Need to be specifically design to meet each
    specific circumstances
  • Crucial to share the risk (partial coverage)
    initially
  • Creativity is required (gradual risk sharing,
    capon portfolio, etc)

24
LESSONS LEARNED - Regulation
  • An absolute prerequisite
  • A difficult and lengthy process
  • What comes first the regulator or the operator
  • Is it possible to implement a new set of
    regulation over time? By regions?
  • Need to regulate who can provide mortgage
    insurance/guarantee
  • Need to regulate the reduced risk for the lender
  • of an insured loan

25
LESSONS LEARNED - Markets
  • Need for a push strategy
  • Lenders need to be convinced proactively
  • Providing information/training is key
  • Potential borrowers (looking to get access to a
    mortgage loan or looking for a larger loan) are
    willing to pay
  • more than what lenders perceive

26
LESSONS LEARNED - Process
  • The creation of a mortgage insurance institution
    can accelerate the implementation of
    prerequisites
  • The new institution can become an effective agent
    of change
  • An incremental approach is required
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