TORONTO (Reuters) – Canadian non-bank mortgage lenders raced to shore up confidence in their model on Monday as depositors pulled more money out of Home Capital Group Inc’s high-interest savings accounts while a second lender lined up C$ 2 billion (£1.1 billion) in emergency funding.
Canada’s No. 2 listed alternative lender Equitable Group said it has taken steps to reinforce its liquidity position on Monday after it experienced a quickened pace of withdrawals late last week.
Meanwhile, Home Capital, Canada’s biggest alternative lender, said it expected to draw down half of a C$ 2 billion ($ 1.46 billion) credit line that it secured last week, as it seeks to offset the impact of a steep fall in high-interest savings accounts (HISA) deposits.
Withdrawals from Home Capital’s HISA accelerated last week after its founder joined the ranks of recent executive exits tied to a securities regulator probe.
The troubles at Home Capital, which provides subprime mortgages and has seen a 73-percent decline in HISA deposits since March 30, has raised fears it may be the first sign of a crack in Canada’s red-hot housing market, which some have called a bubble.
In Toronto alone, house prices surged 33 percent in March from a year ago, prompting authorities to take a series of measures, including a 15-percent foreign buyers’ tax, last month.
Equitable said it got the C$ 2.0 billion funding facility from a syndicate of Canadian banks on Monday..
“We are confident in the fundamentals of our business and our funding model, but owing to these recent events we have taken steps to reinforce our liquidity position,” it said in a statement.
Equitable shares were up 32 percent at C$ 47.87 in Monday late morning trade.
Home Capital’s shares slumped as much as 29 percent to C$ 5.75 in early trading, after the company on Monday also reiterated it would miss its financial targets.
The lender, which has hired bankers to help it secure additional funding and assess options, has seen its shares plummet since a securities regulator last month alleged its top executives hid mortgage broker fraud from investors.
“It’s a blow for the nonbanking mortgage lending sector,” said David Cockfield, managing director and portfolio manager at Northland Wealth Management. “Anything that diminishes the scope of the mortgage market will leave people high and dry. It has an economic impact.”
MUTED IMPACT?
However, Home Capital has low delinquency rates and services less than 1 percent of the Canadian housing market, Karl Schamotta, director of global product and market strategy at Cambridge Global Payments, said in a briefing note.
“In contrast with the meltdown that triggered the global financial crisis almost a decade ago, Home Capital’s problems do not relate to underperformance in the underlying loan portfolio – and are likely too small to generate real systemic risk.”
Depositors have been withdrawing more cash from savings accounts that help fund Home Capital’s mortgage book.
The company said the balance in its high-interest savings accounts (HISAs) was expected to slump to about C$ 391 million on Monday, from C$ 521 million on Friday. The balance was C$ 1.4 billion a week ago.
“While the pace of withdrawals does appear to be slowing, funding is expected to remain a material constraint,” Raymond James analysts wrote in a client note.
Home Capital said Friday about C$ 290 million had been withdrawn from its HISAs the previous day, compared to C$ 472 million on Wednesday.
The company on Thursday said Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan had agreed to provide a C$ 2 billion credit line to its Home Trust unit.
Total deposits in Home Capital’s less-liquid Guaranteed Investment Certificates stood at C$ 12.86 billion as of April 28, marginally lower than the C$ 12.97 billion, as of April 26.
The alternative lender is expected to report first-quarter results later this week.
($ 1 = 1.3651 Canadian dollars)
(Reporting by Swetha Gopinath and Arathy S Nair in Bengaluru, John Tilak and Solarina Ho in Toronto; Editing by Sai Sachin Ravikumar and Nick Zieminski)