Mixed Messages from TD Bank

mouse-trap

The only man who sticks closer to you in adversity than a friend is a creditor.

~Author Unknown

Update: This article was included in the Carnival of Personal Finance #281 posted at Consumerism Commentary. Thanks!

Last week Gail Vaz-Oxlade wrote a really interesting article about The New TD Collateral Mortgage. I was very surprised that I had not heard more about this given that it seems like a pretty big deal to me. As of October 18, 2010, TD will register all new mortgages as collateral mortgages rather than conventional mortgages.

If you’re asking yourself what in the world a collateral mortgage is, you’re not alone. I didn’t know either. Gail goes on to explain it very well in the article. The mortgages most of us have in Canada are conventional mortgages. We have a set amount of principal that we’re borrowing, [...]

Read on and enjoy … Mixed Messages from TD Bank

Nightmare on Wall Street II

Subprime Crisis Part II

There is nothing that gives more assurance than a mask.

~Colette

At the risk of using hyperbolic Halloween metaphors too early in October, I’d like to point out an issue that has, until very recently, received very little attention in the mainstream media. It’s the resurgence of trouble in the banking sector due to toxic mortgages that caused the Nightmare on Wall Street in 2008. You wouldn’t know it from the best September stock market performance since 1939, but the mortgage monster that terrorized global financial markets may be ready to trounce Manhattan once more.

Many have been warning that central bank and government interventions could divert attention from the toxic assets on bank balance sheets for awhile, but that they wouldn’t get rid of them once and for all. Like the millions of barrels of oil in the Gulf of Mexico, trillions [...]

Read on and enjoy … Nightmare on Wall Street II

CMHC: Fannie Mae Canadian Style?

The only reason a great many American families don’t own an elephant is that they have never been offered an elephant for a dollar down and easy weekly payments.

~ Mad Magazine

Update: This article was included in the Carnival of Financial Planning #142 posted at The Digerati Life. Thanks!

I’ve heard a lot of people on both sides of the border extolling the virtues of the Canadian mortgage and banking system over the past year. Our mortgages are recourse loans, mortgage interest is not tax deductible, and our banking regulations are more stringent. We crafty Canucks have even managed to inflate a housing bubble during the worst recession since the Great Depression. Wait. Is that good?

If it sounds like that makes no sense, maybe it’s because it shouldn’t. Recessions are supposed to be a pause that refreshes [...]

Read on and enjoy … CMHC: Fannie Mae Canadian Style?