30-year mortgage amortizations are not the solution needed

The latest government initiative to try and keep home prices at unaffordable levels is to extend the term of debt amortization to 30 years from 25 for government-insured mortgages (available where property prices are $1 million or less). Making people debt slaves for even longer does little to help the housing unaffordability and debt weighing on Canada today. Lower shelter prices and less debt are the way back to greater stability.

The solution to debt is not more debt, says Doug Hoyes, Co-founder of Hoyes, Michalos & Associates. Here is a direct video link.

Andrew Chang lays out the worse-for-buyers-math in this segment.

The federal government is allowing longer mortgage repayment periods for first-time buyers with insured mortgages on newly built homes. Andrew Chang explores the pros and cons of 30-year amortization vs. the previous 25-year rule for prospective homeowners. CORRECTION: At 1:38 in this video, we miscalculated that 20% of $500,000 is $125,000. It’s $100,000. It has been edited out for clarity. Here is a direct video link.

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Danielle on CBC Weekend Business Panel

Danielle was a guest with Jacqueline Hansen and Elmer Kim on CBC’s Weekend Business Panel. You can view a video clip of the segment here.

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Rate cutting comes with deteriorating job market

Frances Donald, chief economist at Manulife Investment Management, and BMO Capital Markets head of US rates strategy Ian Lyngen explain the biggest economic challenges facing the Federal Reserve as the central bank’s 2% inflation target remains elusive. Frances and Ian speak with Tom Keene and Paul Sweeney on Bloomberg Radio.
Here is a direct video link.

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