The low interest rate trap
I can't say it enough; this is an excellent opportunity to use
today's low interest rates to your advantage by paying extra on your mortgage.
I truly feel that if you cannot afford to do this, then you may be in way over
your head. A five year fixed rate of 2.89% is not "normal" and is artificially
low. My advice would be to pay your mortgage as if rates were at least 4%. Not
only will you be setting yourself up for less shock when rates eventually rise,
you'll make a big dent in your outstanding mortgage balance. As the article
says "If you owe lots of money, it’s a good time to pay it down. You can make a big
dent in what you owe with just a little discipline."
Why Canadians are stuck in a low interest rate trap
It started with NASDAQ plunge in
2000: Cheap credit is blessing and curse. Bank of Canada’s challenge is how to
let interest rates rise safely.
By:Adam MayersPersonal Finance Editor,
Published on Sat Apr 27 2013
Western economies are caught
in a low interest rate trap that is proving a difficult problem to fix.
Rates have been so low for so
long, that the trick is how to wean the patient off the cheap-money drug
without causing an economic collapse. Nobody knows how to do it safely, which
is why rates are bound to stay low for a while yet.My first mortgage in the early 90s was a one-year term at 14.25 per cent. It kept me awake at night, wondering how I’d cope if rates kept rising. This week you can get a five-year, fixed term under three per cent.
Back then, there wasn’t much borrowing slack either. A home-secured line of credit was a decade away. Businesses had credit lines, but everyone else had loans with fixed terms which meant you had to pay them off.
Now you can get a line of
credit with a 3.5 per cent rate, secured against your house, with an option to
pay only the interest every month. The banks use that as a selling feature. You
can spend $10,000 on a holiday, or a renovation, or new furniture, anything you
want and only pay $29.16 a month. Of course, you still owe the $10,000.
Savers, meanwhile, are being
punished by pitiful rates of return that are less than inflation. It takes one
dollar 37.9 years to double at a rate of 1.9 per cent, which is the best rate I
could find for a one-year Guaranteed Investment Certificate (GIC) last week.
These artificially low rates
have created the situation where, as of mid-March, according to Statistics
Canada, we owed $165 for every $100 of disposable income. This isn’t far off
where Americans were just as their housing market collapsed.
This great borrowing spree
has deep roots, which is why it’s such an intractable problem. Bank of Canada Governor Mark
Carney and Finance Minister Jim Flaherty go on about it, but they’ve
caused it, moving in lockstep with central bankers elsewhere.
This all began on March 11,
2000 when the U.S. Nasdaq technology stock index peaked and the ‘dotcom’ bust
began. Two years later, the Nasdaq had lost nearly 80 per cent of its value as
internet stocks with high hopes, but no businesses disappeared. In the middle
of that, on Sept. 11, 2001, came the attacks on the twin towers in New York
The George Bush administration
wanted to cushion the economic impact and to keep consumers borrowing, so the
U.S. Federal Reserve pushed rates down. The policy worked so well it created a super-heated housing boom. This
disaster in the making galloped along until 2008, when at its last gasp,
mortgages were being secured by people without jobs.
The housing collapse
threatened to create a new Depression. The Fed pushed rates down again, as low
as they could go. Not much more than a year later in 2009 came the European
debt crisis. Countries, rather than people, had been living beyond their means
for decades. With banking systems teetering, the answer was to lower rates.
Even so, Portugal, Ireland, Spain, Italy, Greece and more recently Cyprus are
all on life support.
The big surprise is that all
the cheap money hasn’t fixed a thing. It can’t because consumers everywhere are
tapped out. If not, we should have long since seen a wave of inflation leading
to rising rates. That expectation saw gold, an inflation hedge, gradually rise
to $1,900 (U.S.) an ounce by September, 2011. With no inflation in sight, gold
is down 24 per cent from its peak.
Not much inflation is on the
horizon either. In its recent quarterly report, the Bank of Canada downgraded
economic growth to a meagre 1.5 per cent this year. Better times return in
2015, the bank says.
In the meantime, if you have a
mortgage, you may want to lock in for five years and enjoy the security. A
recent Bank of Montreal survey found that about half of first time buyers are
doing that. If you owe lots of money, it’s a good time to pay it down. You can make a big dent in what you
owe with just a little discipline.
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