• @[email protected]OP
    link
    fedilink
    111 year ago

    CMHC allowing these kind of amortizations is what’s prolonging and worsening the affordability crisis in the country. Enough is enough!

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      141 year ago

      Not totally a CMHC issue here. People/businesses buying up housing as investments is the bigger problem and it should be clamped down on … ie: first 2 properties = basic taxes, increased by 2% for every additional property owned (3rd is basic + 2%, 4th is basic + 4%, etc).

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        171 year ago

        That’s not nearly enough tax to make it effective, you need to increase the amount 25 or 50% for each additional home. Nobody should be using housing as an investment, it’s for living. This should also include any corporations owning investment properties as well.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        61 year ago

        Unfortunately, I would expect increases like that to just be tagged onto the eventual selling prices.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          91 year ago

          Then gov’ts should be forced to jump in and start limiting how many units any single entity should own … because gov’ts are supposed to take care of the people who vote for them, not the businesses that donate to them – in a perfect world anyway.

          I always fall back on the fact that humans managed to survive millennia without big business while big business wouldn’t last one day without humans. Ergo we are the most important part of that equation.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        21 year ago

        If it’s purchased as an investment, but still rented out, how does that make housing less affordable?

        I fully support vacant home taxes, but the idea that investors (and people often blame foreign investors specifically) are to blame seems flawed to me.

        If there was enough housing supply, prices would drop, no?

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          131 year ago

          Housing becomes less affordable because suddenly rent has to cover the owner’s profit as well as the cost of the mortgage. No one is going to invest in housing if there is no profit, and they are going to do what they can to make the profit as high as possible.

          A landlord is essentially a middleman between the mortgage holder and the resident. Renting can make sense, especially for people who are not living somewhere for a long time, but currently people are renting simply because there is no way they can afford to buy a house.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            -31 year ago

            There’s nothing saying rent has to cover the owner’s expenses.

            If no one rents a home, the owner must either: leave the home empty, or lower the rent. Either way, if the home loses money, a rational investor has to sell. Enough people selling causes prices to drop.

            I guess what I’m saying is that taxing people who own multiple properties extra is a really weird fix.

            Wouldn’t building more homes be a better long term solution?

            • @sbv
              link
              71 year ago

              If no one rents a home, the owner must either: leave the home empty, or lower the rent. Either way, if the home loses money, a rational investor has to sell.

              Doesn’t the investor get to list the loss as a tax write-off?

              The investor can always wait. There’s a housing crisis, so people need somewhere to live.

              Wouldn’t building more homes be a better long term solution?

              We need to do both. Addressing the issue from the supply side and demand side makes sense.

              • @PizzasDontWearCapes
                link
                21 year ago

                Write-offs are only applicable if some other part of the business is making money

                If the entire business is owning a few properties and they are all in the red, there’s nothing to write off against

                • @sbv
                  link
                  21 year ago

                  For small-scale landlords the loss would count against their regular income. For professional landlords, they probably have other properties.

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                01 year ago

                Doesn’t the investor get to list the loss as a tax write-off?

                I’m not 100% certain on the details, but yes. A landlord can reduce their taxes on other income but that doesn’t mean they aren’t still losing money.

                The investor can always wait.

                That’s only true if the expected increase in value covers the cost in carrying the property. If property values don’t increase dramatically over time, waiting just loses money.

                There’s a housing crisis, so people need somewhere to live.

                Exactly what I’m saying. Demand is, for the most part, inelastic. Each person requires some amount of space. Owning multiple properties that are occupied satisfies housing demand as much as each person owning their own home. As far as I figure, only vacant homes artificially inflate home prices/rent.

                I don’t mean to say that people should be stuck renting forever. Everyone should have the opportunity to own their home.

                • @sbv
                  link
                  31 year ago

                  Owning multiple properties that are occupied satisfies housing demand as much as each person owning their own home. As far as I figure, only vacant homes artificially inflate home prices/rent.

                  As we said above, the renter has to cover the costs of the property, plus the landlord’s profit.

                  • @[email protected]
                    link
                    fedilink
                    11 year ago

                    That’s just not how rent works. Tenants don’t care what the landlord’s expenses are. If a home is priced above what people are willing to pay, it’ll sit empty.

        • lightrush
          link
          fedilink
          1
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          Investors overbid for properties at yesterday’s low interest rates that aren’t sustainable at the current rates but at yesterday’s rents. Investors didn’t take into account that interest rates can rise. Let me rephrase. Investors bet that interest rates will stay low and thus took on huge mortgages so they could outbid another investor or wannabe homeowner. This bet didn’t pan out. Instead of taking a loss and selling the properties, they increase rents to what makes the properties sustainable at today’s rates. That’s it. Investors are asking for renters to cover their failed bet. The amount of housing is a more or less fixed in this equation given the short time frame these effects occurred on. That’s how this investor behaviour is making housing less affordable. Moreover it has a larger negative effect on the economy by tying up income into an unproductive asset class instead of having it flow to productive areas of the economy. And so the argument is made that we should curb this behaviour by helping investors make the decision to sell, in the short term. That would lower prices and allow wannabe homeowners to buy as well as more rational investors who have the capital to buy and sustain at today’s rates but lower rents.

    • lightrush
      link
      fedilink
      51 year ago

      It’s important to note, said Sialtsis, that major banks aren’t handing out 90-year mortgages when people first buy a home; the changing amortization period is only happening on existing variable-rate fixed-payment mortgages.

      FTA

      • @sbv
        link
        41 year ago

        I think the original commentor is saying there should be a limit to variable rate amortization extensions. If the owner can’t afford the current rate, then the fall into arrears.

        • lightrush
          link
          fedilink
          11 year ago

          Well the fixed-payment mortgages aren’t exactly fixed. They will still get adjusted when the payment covers very little to no principal. For example mine got adjusted to get the amortization back in check when that happened. Maybe that’s a choice the banks make, maybe CHMC dictates what’s allowable or required there. If banks have to adjust the payments like they did for me, eventually the foreclosures will show up. Unless most of them are just under their trigger rates and the prime doesn’t push them over the edge for a while. 🤔

          I don’t disagree in the sentiment that payments should adjust and the non-viable ones should get foreclosed on, in general.