Monday 27 April 2015

Canada’s Whitecap Attracts Bank of Montreal as Investor for New Fund

Canadian venture-capital firm Whitecap Venture Partners has raised 70 million Canadian dollars ($57.5 million) for its latest fund, counting one of Canada’s big banks among its investors.

Whitecap has attracted funding from Bank of Montreal, the country’s fourth-biggest lender by assets, and Kensington Venture Fund, a new fund of funds backed by Kensington Capital Partners and partly seeded with money from the federal government as part of its plan to spur domestic innovation through increased venture-capital investments. Other investors include several high-net-worth families, and Whitecap expects to raise a total up to C$100 million for the new fund when it closes in sometime later this year.  Read More

(Source: www.wsj.com)

Thursday 23 April 2015

Here’s what’s really scary about high-ratio mortgages in Canada

Canadians buying (overpriced) houses this spring with little money down, now face an additional burden with the recent announcement by CMHC – quickly followed by Genworth — that mortgage insurance will rise in price come June 1 of this year. Remember, this is the (bizarre) coverage that most homebuyers must pay for, which protects and indemnifies the lender in the event they (the homeowner) defaults.

Absurdly, this insurance stands in contrast to every other policy known to mankind, where the insurance premiums you pay are meant to protect you and not the payee. In contrast, with mortgage insurance you pay the premiums now when you buy the ( Read More: business.financialpost.com )

Wednesday 22 April 2015

Overvalued home prices could put new owners at risk

For Sale
When Hilliard MacBeth sees construction cranes rising above condo across Canada, the bearish housing analyst thinks: seven per cent.

That's the percentage of gross domestic product represented by Canada's annual investment in housing, or roughly $120 billion of $1.8 trillion in GDP.

However, in light of a recent Economist magazine analysis that tracked Canada's housing prices as being overvalued by 35 per cent, MacBeth says it's clear the world is forecasting grim tidings for Canadian real estate. 
(Source : cbc.ca)

Monday 20 April 2015

The commercial rental market in this city is set to change


Rental market in Canada

The rental market in Canada’s capital is set for a shake-up, according to a new report that shows the office market is beginning to show some signs of recovery.

“We believe that now is a good time for tenants to relocate because the current low net effective leasing rates will likely shrink over the next 12 to 24 months, as the market continues to recover and vacancies drop,” said Kelvin Holmes, managing director, Ottawa Brokerage, for Colliers, which released the report.


“The Ottawa office market continued to be tenant driven in Q1-2015 with tenants taking advantage of low rental rates and high incentives offered by landlords.”


(Source: canadianrealestatemagazine.ca )

Delays put real estate clients at risk, province warned


They're tardy deeds but they're not dirt cheap.

Staffing shortages at the province's Registry of Deeds created a paperwork backlog last fall, and sparked a series of warnings from the legal community to the government about how those delays could hit their clients in the pocketbook.

The Law Society of Newfoundland and Labrador wrote government officials about the "very serious matter" on Nov. 25, 2014.

"I have received a number of messages from members expressing serious concern about the impact that the current issue with the Registry of Deeds is going to have on the public  (Source : https://ca.news.yahoo.com)

Thursday 16 April 2015

Here’s the real reason mortgage rates are so low in Canada

Canada’s overheated housing market is starting to feel the effect of Europe’s negative interest rates.

Yields on about $8.8 billion of Canadian mortgage bonds denominated in euros and francs are being pushed below zero as European Central Bank asset purchases help to drive down borrowing costs worldwide.
How to get the best possible mortgage rate

Homeowners can do much better than the banks’ advertised mortgage rates. Here’s what you need to know to get the best mortgage available


Canadian banks turned to Europe for cheap funding over the past few years as regulators and the Bank of Canada sought to keep the housing market from turning into a bubble. Although Europe is only one avenue for financing, that European investors are willing to pay for the privilege to park cash in the bonds shows how the ECB’s program is being felt across the Atlantic.

“That’s why you’re seeing five-year mortgage rates where they are,” Altaf Nanji, who helps oversee $17 billion for Manulife Asset Management, said by phone from Toronto. “Regardless of what the Bank of Canada does, it’s really a reflection of where the yield curve is.”

The Bank of Canada has provided stimulus of its own this year by cutting its benchmark interest rate in January by 25 basis points, or 0.25 percentage point, to 0.75 per cent. It called the move insurance against a collapse in the price of crude oil, Canada’s largest export.

Domestic Risk

Canada’s five-year government bond yield, the benchmark for the part of the domestic market where banks look when they want to finance mortgage lending in their home currency, fell to a record low of 0.58 per cent after the rate cut.

At the same time, the Bank of Canada has said the housing market is as much as 30 per cent overvalued and singled out the combination of record consumer debts and inflated home prices as a major domestic risk.

Home resale values hit a record in March, according to the Teranet-National Bank National Composite House Price Index.

 Regardless of what the Bank of Canada does, it’s really a reflection of where the yield curve is

Canadian lenders have been cutting rates on mortgages in the past month to the lowest levels in history, including a rate of 2.74 per cent on a five-year fixed mortgage by Toronto-Dominion Bank.
At the same time, the national housing agency has increased the cost of mortgage insurance for borrowers with less than a 10 per cent down payment.

“Lower yields globally are holding down our yields, too, and further juicing the housing market,” said Doug Porter, chief economist at BMO Financial Group, by phone from Toronto. “The extremely low yields in Europe will get money gravitating to North America, where yields look fat.”

Covered Bonds


Canadian banks use the European market to fund their mortgage lending because it is home to the largest and oldest market for a certain kind of mortgage backed security called covered bonds, first developed in Prussia during the 18th century.

In a bid to spark growth and inflation among countries that use the euro by getting cash flowing through the economy again the ECB now charges 0.2 per cent interest for cash deposits and plans to buy 1.1 trillion euros ($1.2 trillion) of assets by September 2016.

In an attempt to deter money flooding from the euro region into its own currency, the Swiss National Bank also dropped its deposit rate into negative territory.

That in turn has dragged yields negative on ultra-safe assets, such as many European sovereign bonds, mortgage-backed debt from Europe, and now Canada.

Negative Yields


The yields on Bank of Nova Scotia’s 1.25 billion euros of 0.25 per cent covered bonds maturing November 2017 and Royal Bank’s 1.25 billion euros of 4.625 per cent notes maturing in January 2018 both fell below zero April 8 and now each yield negative 0.02 per cent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Five smaller issues from Canadian banks denominated in francs have also gone negative and another euro issue from Toronto-Dominion Bank, which comes due in a month, also has a yield below zero, according to Bloomberg data.

The idea is to push cash out of safe assets and into riskier investments that will drive growth, but one unintended consequence, aside from negative yields on covered bonds from Canada, is that some of that money will find its way to Canada directly, according to Luc de la Durantaye, who oversees $19 billion in assets as head of currency management at CIBC Asset Management.

“You’ve got foreign money coming into Canada, and helping to keep yields lower than probably they should be,” he said by phone from Montreal. “Part of the consequences of the decisions of the ECB is impacting the level of interest rates in Canada.”

Source: http://business.financialpost.com

Monday 13 April 2015

Sunil Tulsiani – Start investment in Real Estate

Sunil tulsiani, A well known name in Canada. He is the one of most popular name in real estate Canada aka
Canada Real Estate
Canada Real Estate
“The wealthy cop”. Now He is an owner of real estate club. After quitting job of police cop he became a real estate investor.  In first year he bought 77 properties. Yes, you heard it right. Its show that excellent knowledge of real estate.  Not like other who spread rumors about themselves.  He also train others.  He recently became an award winning best-selling author with Jack Canfield  for “Chicken Soup For The Soul”. With Sunil Tulsiani you can invest your money in real estate without any hesitation. And I’m damn sure about it.