Rising Interest Rates could Double your Mortgage Payments
For almost 30 years, interest rates have been declining in Canada. This has enabled more people than ever to buy homes, but it has also fueled a lot of spending. Record low interest rates have enabled homeowners to buy more expensive homes than they could previously afford. Vancouver is possibly the best example of this right now where last month, the average price of a house almost hit one million dollars.
Canadians have gotten use to low interest rates—they are almost viewed as normal. But how “normal” are they? Most people are vaguely aware of the extremes. In 1981, the five year mortgage rate peaked at over 21% percent, and since then, mortgage rates have fallen to one of the lowest points in history where some people are now paying about 2% on their variable rate mortgages.
Okay, so 21% and 2% are extremes, but where is the middle ground? For someone who wants to plan for the future, what is an average interest rate? Good question. Now hold onto your seat. The average 5 year interest rate for the past 60 years is 8.95%! So what would your mortgage payment look like if interest rates went back to “average”?
If your mortgage is $100,000 and your interest rate is 3%, then your monthly payment would be $474. Now if you had to pay 8.95%, your payment would jump to $825 per month. That is close to double your current payment.
Nobody is saying that mortgage rates are going to 8.95%. In fact CIBC World Markets has just come out and said that they think that interest rates will remain very low until the end of 2011. However, historically low interest rates won’t last forever because what goes down must at some point go back up again. Make sure that you are prepared for the future, and that your mortgage payment is as comfortable as your home.
For some ideas on how to prepare for rising interest rates see our previous blog post, 7 Ways to Protect Yourself from Rising Interest Rates.