Posted July 18, 2022 at 2:02 pm
				Updated July 18, 2022 4:05 pm 				
		Smaller font Decrease the font size of the article

-ONE Larger font Increase the font size of the article A+ A senior economist at BMO Capital Markets says the Bank of Canada’s recent move to raise its key interest rate is setting the housing market up for an even deeper correction next year. Robert Kavcic says Gov. Tiff Macklem’s surprise one percentage point rate hike last week was like taking a hammer to the housing market. In a note to investors, Kavcic says the increase that prompted commercial banks to raise their prime rates has made it harder to qualify for a mortgage under Canada’s stress-test rules.

		Read more: Inflation could top 8% as early as next week, Bank of Canada chief says 		

The test sets the qualifying rate for unsecured mortgages at either two percentage points above the contract rate or 5.25 percent, whichever is greater. Trending Stories

			Pat King, organizer of the ‘Freedom Convoy’, was granted bail 	   				Jennifer Lopez, Ben Affleck Secretly Wed in Las Vegas Chapel 	     

Story continues below ad Cavcic says that before the move, floating-rate borrowers still qualified at 5.25 per cent, but that has now shifted to around 6 per cent, which he sees as “a huge pill for the market to swallow ». Fixed-rate borrowers qualify at around 7%, which he says will also affect their purchasing power. 1:39 Edmonton’s hot housing market cools down Edmonton’s hot housing market cools down © 2022 The Canadian Press