Quote:
Originally Posted by NOWINYOW
They're not under water yet because we have unsustainable low interest rates. If interest rates can go down, they can also go up. Public debt, plus consumer debt isn't being paid off in any significant manner. Governments can only continue to print money for so long before the value decreases.
It's economics.
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Those are pretty generic economic principles you are raising. I think that the actual situation is a little more nuanced than that.
On the household side, I don't think that your logic holds - how would a rise in interest rates mean that mortgage holders would suddenly be underwater in large numbers, when most have significant equity in their homes? Only a massive price drop could lead to that result, and a interest rates going a few ticks upward is not going to do it.
Yes, household debt is high in Canada, but that is a very blunt measure of financial standing. The debt-to-equity ratio is far more useful in judging whether households can sustain some sort of external shock. The problem in the US was that a large proportion of mortgage holders had little to no equity in their houses, and when payments went up, they owed more than the value of their houses, and millions walked away, impacting the entire market.
That situation simply does not exist here, as Canadians have an average of 66% equity in their homes and most are well positioned to withstand a rate or price shock. Certainly a rapid rise in rates would likely affect the arrears rate, but that rate is so low at the moment that it would take a massive increase in the short term (which is very unlikely) to significantly impact the market.
As for government borrowing, have a look at Canada Savings Bond 30-year rates, which are largely influenced by the market. Government borrowing costs are anticpated to be reasonably stable for a generation or more. If this rate shock that you are predicting occurs, governments are going to be the last to feel it.