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Forcing banks to shoulder more mortgage risk still under consideration

TORONTO – Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation is continuing to explore the possibility of forcing banks to shoulder more of the risk associated with home mortgage loans.

During a speech in Calgary, CMHC president and CEO Evan Siddall said the option of requiring lenders to pay a deductible on mortgage insurance claims is still on a table.

According to speaking notes posted on the website of the federal housing agency, Siddall told his audience that the CMHC is working with a number of government entities, including the Department of Finance and the Bank of Canada, to examine ways of better distributing risk across the financial system.

The idea of having banks pay a deductible on mortgage insurance claims was first floated by CMHC under the previous Conservative government.

It’s been unclear whether the new Liberal government is interested in pursuing the idea.

Homebuyers with less than a 20 per cent down payment are required to obtain mortgage default insurance from either CMHC or one of the private mortgage insurers.

The Canadian Bankers Association warned the previous government that shifting more mortgage risk onto the banks could threaten the country’s financial stability.

The industry association laid out its position in a letter to CMHC penned in August 2014, which was obtained by The Canadian Press through an Access to Information request last year.

The Department of Finance said last November that it had undertaken preliminary research to examine the impact of shifting more of the risk to the banks.

Siddall made his comments Monday during a luncheon hosted by the C.D. Howe Institute, a think-tank that once called for the privatization of the CMHC.

During his speech, Siddall defended the organization’s status as a public institution, arguing that it played an important role during the 2008 global financial crisis.

“As a Crown corporation with a public policy mandate, CMHC needs to be present in the market through all economic cycles,” he said.

“This is a fundamental way in which we contribute to Canada’s financial stability. In fact, our role now in Alberta is to support continuous access for Albertans to the housing market, even if private insurers choose to pull back.”

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