Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Inside Mortgage Investment Corporations

To learn about an exciting and fast-emerging investment class, Rob McLister, editor of Canadian Mortgage Trends, interviewed veteran investor and mortgage lender, Wayne Strandlund, who is the founder and CEO of Fisgard Capital, a $250 Million Canadian Mortgage Investment Corporation (MIC). In this wide-ranging interview Wayne shares his thoughts on how the simple, interesting and unique tax-exempt MIC works, how it is managed, its formidable investment potential, and how investors can take advantage of the opportunities the MIC offers.

Intro to MICs



Before we begin, let’s define what a MIC is.


A MIC is an investment that lets people pool their money to be lent out as mortgages. 100% of the net profits from those mortgages flow through to the investors.


MICs have been around since 1973 when federal legislation was enacted to promote private financing and make it easier to invest in mortgages.


MICs are one of the lesser known asset classes, despite yielding solid long-term returns and despite being RRSP, TFSA, RRIF and RESP eligible in most cases.


CMT: To what extent would you say MICs are an undiscovered or underrated asset class in Canada?


Wayne: The MIC was established by federal legislation in 1973 but it didn’t take hold until the mid ‘90s when it really started to take off, principally because it was the most accommodating investment structure to replace mortgage syndication. Mortgage syndication had been damaged by a number of debacles at the time, most notable of which was ‘Eron.’ Eron had lost millions worth of investor money.


Thanks to the MIC, instead of owning a syndicated (often unregistered) interest in a mortgage, investors could now be shareholders in a non-taxed flow-through entity. MICs, with their strict audit and reporting regulations, are a more streamlined, transparent and effective way of investing in mortgages and real estate.


Early MIC managers didn’t give much thought to the MIC structure beyond its facility to raise investment money. Their focus was predominately raising capital not only through cash investment but also through various registered retirement and savings trusts such as the RRSP, RRIF, DPSP, LIF, LRIF, LIRA, IPP and RESP. Today we also have the TFSA and RDSP.


The MIC flourished after 1995. Today there are hundreds of MICs in Canada. Some have as little as $1 million capital, and are essentially “convenience MICs” of maybe twenty or so shareholders. You might find those MICs in real estate offices, for example, where their main function is to facilitate sales for the office’s marketing staff.


On the other end of the spectrum are the larger MICs which are basically mortgage banks with hundreds of millions of dollars and thousands of shareholders.


The MIC is now fairly well established, but underrated as an investment asset class. Not being particularly well suited to public trading, MICs have not been recognized by financial advisors and stock and mutual fund traders who prefer investments that are publicly traded and generate fees and commissions.


This lack of attention has nothing to do with the quality, security and dividend production of the MIC.


CMT: What are the biggest differences between MICs today and MICs 15 years ago?


Wayne: Today there are many more MICs struggling for a share of a market that is not growing in lock-step with the increasing amount of mortgage money available through MICs as well as institutional lenders.


Fifteen years ago it was easier for a MIC to place money in secure mortgages than it is today. Competition for good mortgages is fierce, and growing.


MICs are practicing the same type of lending they were fifteen years ago. Despite the intense competition for quality mortgages and the recent global recession, most MICs have done well for investors. Yet, they have not received the recognition they deserve, despite outperforming many investments in terms of capital preservation and dividends. The MIC is still a niche investment, not well known or understood.


Securities regulation NI 31-103 was introduced in 2008 and made law in September 2010. It is too early to say, but I believe the new regulation will change the MIC industry. It could be that small MICs may not be able to meet the onerous requirements of the new regulation, including increased capital, bonding, disclosure, compliance and so forth, and simply close shop, or merge in order to survive.


The reasons for NI (National Instrument) 31-103 are still being hotly debated and rationalized based on whose ox is being gored, the small MIC struggling to raise a bit of capital or a giant bank’s brokerage house that is not particularly fond of anyone else playing in what the bank sees as its very own sandbox (the world’s investment money). At any rate it appears that the capital-raising field has been levelled by NI 31-103 and MICs as well as their managers and investment referral agents must now meet strict regulatory standards in order to raise capital through public markets. The positive outcome is that qualifying MICs will now become “institutionalized” in the eyes of the public, and will benefit from the legitimacy that comes with achieving new levels of licensing and registration. Short term pain, long term gain.


CMT: From a general risk and return standpoint how would you say investing in a MIC compares to investing in (for example) a rental property, assuming the same dollar investment?


Wayne: A rental property may appreciate in value and may experience the tax advantages of depreciation and other expense allowances. A MIC is a “flow through” investment and, in fact, the MIC must distribute 100% of its net profit to its investors every year. It is not designed to accumulate profit and is not likely to increase in value as a rental property might.


While a rental property is likely to be an active investment involving hands-on management, the MIC is more a passive investment. It simply flows dividends through to its investors, in whose hands the dividends are treated as interest income for tax purposes. The MIC sometimes, but rarely, flows capital gains or losses through to its investors.


A MIC is likely to be purchased at a nominal $1 per share, for example, and end at a $1 redemption or wind-up value. It will provide dividend income throughout the investment period. In exceptional circumstances the MIC might experience a capital gain if, for example, the MIC buys a property or forecloses on a property, takes it into inventory, and sells it at a profit. The MIC may flow capital gains – and capital losses – to its investors, but these are relatively rare occurrences.


As stated, dividends paid to MIC investors are treated as interest income for tax purposes. Income from a rental property is taxed differently depending, for instance, on whether it is held personally or in a corporation. Investors should consult tax experts when choosing between a MIC and a real estate investment, such as rental property.


CMT: Are there any major 3rd party distribution channels for the MIC? For example, do any big banks or investment brokers sell them to clients? If not, why not?


Wayne: To date most MICs have raised capital themselves with negligible support from financial planners, advisors and brokers. Most MICs do not trade on the public market, and therefore do not attract the attention of brokers who make a living through fees based on trading volume.


Also, most MICs raise capital by way of Offering Memorandum as opposed to Prospectus. This precludes certain investment firms from investing in them as a matter of policy.


CMT: Will returns suffer going forward as more investors throw money at MICs, and as more MICs and private money join the fray?


“If there is a crisis of money in Canada, it is not that we don’t have enough, but that there are too few simple, understandable and reliable places in which to invest it.”


Wayne: MIC returns are normalizing. The high private interest rates that have fuelled double-digit MIC returns for nearly two decades are not sustainable in the borrowing world at the present time, particularly with the slowdown in construction and development which is traditionally an active lending market for several MICs.


Not only will MIC returns normalize due – at least temporarily – to a shrinking market for mortgage money, but also because more money is choosing the MIC investment resulting in what might turn out to be an over-supply in some cases.


The MIC’s advantage is that the average investor understands what real estate is and what a mortgage is. Investors appreciate that a MIC investment is uniquely Canadian and secured by real property located only in Canada. These are simple important facts that make the MIC such a comfortable, easy-to-understand “investment” compared to the thousands of impossibly complex financial products being pedaled daily on the public market. Simplicity is one of the MIC’s most popular attributes.


The law of supply and demand will prevail, and borrowing rates (hence MIC returns) will be influenced not only by bond yields but also by the sheer volume of money now seeking the relative safety of mortgages secured by Canadian real estate property. If there is a crisis of money in Canada, it is not that we don’t have enough, but that there are too few simple, understandable and reliable places in which to invest it.


Real estate – the mortgage security – is one of the last bastions of conservative long-term investing, and there is no indication of this changing any time soon. We may look for the MIC to become very popular as a mainstream investment and special purpose lender.


CMT: Do you foresee more distribution channels evolving for MICs in the future?


Wayne: Yes. The world of Exempt Market Products – which includes qualifying MICs – is poised for growth. NI 31-103 will have the effect of institutionalizing MICs and MIC managers that meet the new requirements. As a result a broader spectrum of the investment community will invest in MICs, regardless of whether they are publicly traded or not. The so-called ‘liquidity’ touted by stock and mutual fund brokers is not what it’s cracked up to be, and more and more investors now realize that it’s much too expensive. Good old-fashioned fixed term investments are trumping liquidity in many cases.


Exempt Market Products are about to experience wide acceptance and popularity amongst mainstream investment dealers. EMPs are no longer the poor cousins of publicly traded stocks and mutual funds. The popularity of the MIC as an Exempt Market Product is growing and attracting the attention of institutional investors. The credibility of the MIC is greater than it has ever been.


CMT: What would you consider a high default (impaired loan) rate on a typical Canadian MIC? (e.g. 2%?)


Wayne: MIC lending is private as opposed to conventional lending, so risk and reward must be viewed from that perspective.


The number of impaired mortgages as a percentage of the total number of mortgages in a MIC at any given time is one consideration.


The dollar volume of impaired mortgages as a percentage of the total dollar volume of the portfolio is another.


The level of impairment is also a consideration. For example, an NSF cheque is one level, non-payment of property taxes, insurance or strata fees is another, and non-payment of the mortgage on maturity yet another.


Ten percent of the number of mortgages in a portfolio (e.g. 40 out of 400 mortgages) is probably an acceptable ratio on the impairment scale, erring on the high side.


Five percent of the dollar volume (e.g. $25 million out of $500 million) is also on the high side. Impairment doesn’t mean a loss of interest or capital. At any time a MIC may have 10% of its loans in an impaired state, but that does not mean it will lose 10% of its capital. It may not lose any capital.


Impairment level takes into account the composition and relative risk of a MIC’s mortgages, and risks vary from one MIC to another. Some MICs underwrite conventional 1st mortgages (including insured mortgages), some MICs underwrite more risky 2nd mortgages, and some MICs underwrite the full spectrum of mortgages: 1sts, 2nds, land development, construction, mezzanine financing, and so forth. It is difficult to assign impairment ratios without carefully considering the portfolio mix. It’s the degree of impairment that one must consider.

CMT: Wayne, let’s start off with why the MIC was created.

STRANDLUND: The purpose of the MIC, and the Residential Mortgage Financing Act, is explained by the Honourable Ron Basford, Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, in this 1973 excerpt:

By amendments to the Loan Companies Act and the Income Tax Act, the bill also provides for a new form of Canadian Financial Institution, the Mortgage Investment Company, which is intended to make investment in residential mortgages and real estate more accessible to the small investor. It is extremely difficult at the present time for smaller investors to make this kind of investment. Unlike investment in securities through mutual funds, mortgages and real estate investments are legally and administratively cumbersome to split in such a way that investors can become owners of separate, divided interests.

Backed by expert management service and the security of a diversified portfolio, mortgage investment companies will be able to provide opportunities for the smaller investor to participate in mortgage and real estate investments on much the same lines as mutual funds, and in this way attract new savings into residential mortgages and real estate investments.

Click here to read Statute 130.1 of the Income Tax Act in its entirety.

CMT: So essentially, MICs let the average investor participate in mortgage lending?

STRANDLUND: Yes; and enhance their earnings by leveraging their investment in residential mortgages and enjoying the spread between the interest paid on borrowed funds and the interest charged on mortgages. Since 100% of a MIC’s income can flow through to registered plans (RRSPs, RRIFs, TFSAs, RESPs, RDSPs, etc.) without intermediary tax, and be reinvested, the investor can grow the entire return on a tax-exempt basis until the funds are withdrawn. Essentially, the MIC allows the little guy to share in the benefits of the lucrative and relatively secure mortgage business.

CMT: Is it a requirement that all MICs distribute 100% of net income annually to investors?

STRANDLUND: Yes. The Section 130.1 Mortgage Investment Corporation (MIC) is a flow-through investment and 100% of its net income must be distributed to investors. The MIC may deduct ordinary expenses as well as reasonable reserves for doubtful accounts. In addition to operation expenses and reserves, MIC dividends are deemed to be expenses for tax purposes and deducted as such. After these deductions, all remaining net profit must be distributed to the MIC’s shareholders at least once a year.

CMT: If an investor asks for the current market value of the investment, do MICs typically quote a NAV on a per share basis, like a mutual fund?

STRANDLUND: I can’t speak for my MIC colleagues, but I’ve never been asked for the MIC’s Net Asset Value. I suspect that NAV is stock-speak. MIC Investors ask about mortgage portfolio mix, mortgage priority (1st or 2nd positions) loan-to-value ratios, types of mortgages (residential or commercial), geographical concentration and so forth, but they don’t ask about NAV as they might when referring to a stock or mutual fund or some other financial construct. Unless a capital loss has occurred – or is imminent – a MIC’s share value should equal its original subscription price. Its shares should be worth the market value of the mortgage portfolio divided by the number of shares issued and outstanding. Pretty simple.

CMT: Is there any way around the requirement that MICs invest 50% of their capital in residential mortgages or CDIC-insured deposits? I ask this because some MICs purport to invest only in commercial real estate. Are those commercial MICs just letting half their money earn money market returns?

STRANDLUND: No. A MIC must comply with Section 130.1 of the Income Tax Act to preserve its tax-exempt status, so it must hold at least 50% of the cost of its assets in residential mortgages or CDIC-insured bank deposits or credit union deposits or a combination of the above.

I suspect that when MIC reps say they only invest in commercial mortgages they may be using the term commercial referring to mortgage investments in larger multi-family residential complexes such as condominium, town-home, multi-lot residential subdivisions and so forth, as opposed to the typical residential home. In lender jargon these larger projects are often referred to as commercial, but they are classified as residential for MIC regulation purposes. The definition of residential is found in Canada’s National Housing Act (NHA). The definition is broad and includes, for example, mobile home parks, nursing homes and school dormitories.

Click here for the National Housing Act.

CMT: What percentage of capital should a well-run MIC hold in reserve to cover defaults and draws from borrowers? Does this money just sit earning money market rates?

STRANDLUND: There is no legislated reserve requirement for MICs as there is for banks and credit unions, for instance. However, a responsible MIC manager should at least have a reserve regime in place that provides for mortgage-specific reserves to cover losses anticipated in specific mortgages as well as a general reserve to cover losses that apply to the entire mortgage portfolio. Although there is no legislated formula for the amount of such reserves, a prudent manager is wise to set aside amounts sufficient to cover anticipated losses. Reserve provision is not a perfect science, but professional managers have a good idea of what loan loss provisions should be, and they provide for such amounts.

A well-run MIC exhibits excellent cash management. From day to day a MIC deals with money flowing in and out of the fund, new mortgages being funded, progressive development and construction draws being funded, dividends distributed, shares redeemed, new share capital coming in, mortgage payments being received, mortgages being paid out. Cash management is critical, and adequate cash-on-hand balances and reserves vary depending on the type of mortgages in the MIC’s portfolio. A MIC that finances development and construction, for instance, must account for unfunded draw commitments, whereas a MIC that carries only fully-funded mortgages does not.

It sounds odd, but ideally a MIC is flat broke all the time, with 100% of its capital working in the market. In my MIC world we strive to be in a situation where we have to raise capital all the time to fund mortgage investments. We want mortgage investments chasing money, not the other way around. Sustaining this balance is a tough job for any MIC, always feast or famine so it seems. Famine is good; too much money in the MIC is a curse – a poverty of riches. “Lina”, a respondent to Part I of our MIC interview on February 10/11, commented most astutely when she suggested it was possible there could be an oversupply of MIC capital resulting in some MICs taking greater risk than they would if they were scrambling for capital. Absolutely. Fortunately, prudent MIC managers know when to turn off the tap. It’s not something they like to do, obviously, but they have to do it; idle money is too expensive. Take a $40 million MIC earning 8% for instance; $5 million of idle money represents a cost of 1%. That’s a lot when you’re trying to deliver a dividend of even 5%.

Given cash flow dynamics and variation in mortgage mix there is no tidy formula for establishing prudent capital reserves. Basically a well-run MIC must have enough capital on hand – or readily available through a line of credit – to meet its funding obligations. The LOC should also be sufficient to allow the MIC to forward-commit to mortgages it wishes to fund in the future but for which it does not have funds immediately on hand. A reliable LOC is important for the efficient operation of a MIC.

CMT: Should a MIC be concerned about using leverage if a bank can call in its line of credit (LOC) at any time?

STRANDLUND: Yes. Leverage is a powerful tool – and a dangerous tool. The concept of leverage was a major consideration in the legislation that gave rise to Section 130.1 of the Income Tax Act in the first place. Ottawa viewed leverage as a good opportunity for the average person to take advantage of the lucrative investment opportunities in the real estate and mortgage market. Ottawa expected MICs to optimize leverage as a revenue generator, and facilitated the process by allowing the MIC to borrow five times the cost of its assets (provided at least 2/3rds of the MIC’s assets amounted to the aggregate of residential mortgages and CDIC-insured deposits and credit union deposits) or three times the cost of its assets (if the aggregate of its residential mortgages and CDIC-insured deposits and credit union deposits was less than 2/3rds of the cost of its assets). Leverage was a big deal in drafting Section 130.1.

It’s exciting to dream of borrowing five times your assets at 5% and investing that money at 10%. However, banks, credit unions and other institutions who offer lines of credit take a rather more pragmatic view. A MIC that can negotiate a LOC of 25% of its assets, let alone 500% of its assets, is lucky.

Some MICs use leverage as a key revenue generator, but I think most MICs simply use a LOC as a short-term forward-commitment facility. Leverage is good business and, used prudently and effectively, it can really beef up a MIC’s bottom line, but it takes good knowledge, experience, great vision and uncanny timing to make it work well. Leverage can make or break a MIC; it is a double-edged sword.

CMT: Do MICs ever pay finders’ fees or commissions to people who refer investors?

STRANDLUND: In the past some MICs have paid finders’ fees to raise capital, but that has changed as a result of recent securities legislation. Regulation NI 31-103 prohibits paying finders’ fees to non-qualified people or companies. Finders must now register under NI 31-103 and since the qualifications for registration now include onerous audit, bonding, education and working capital requirements, the industry may expect fewer finders’ fees to be paid, except to qualified agents.

CMT: How do you feel about MICs who lend at 90% LTV? In other words, do the high rates and fees offset the risk?

STRANDLUND: MICs are not legislated as to LTV ratios. They can lend at whatever LTV they want, and they vary substantially in terms of risk – high risk to one manager may be low risk to another; it’s a matter of opinion. A LTV of 90% is pretty high risk, at least in my opinion, as we know from experience that real estate values can, and have, swung dramatically (in excess of 20%) in uncomfortably short periods of time.

In my opinion charging high rates and fees to compensate for excessive risk is not worth the trouble. But that’s a business decision and judgment call for MIC managers.

We've published a guide for investors who may be shopping for MICs to invest in. Pic-a-Mic covers a number of issues discussed in this interview.

CMT: What is the “average” management fee in a MIC? For every $100 the MIC earns, how much can investors typically expect back, after management is paid its fee, and after the cost of running the fund?

There are as many management fee arrangements as there are MICs, so it is impossible to answer your question with any degree of accuracy. I don’t think there is such a thing as an average management fee. From my reading of several MIC offerings I see that some MIC managers charge a fee based on the amount of capital under management. Others charge a fee based on a percentage of profit. Some charge a percentage of profit over and above a base dividend rate. A number of managers who are licensed mortgage brokers also take all or part of the lender fee and/or brokerage fee paid by the borrower. The manager may also take various fees associated with the mortgages in the portfolio, such as discharge fees, progressive draw fees, extension fees, inspection fees, even mortgage prepayment penalties and so forth. And, of course, some management fees are an amalgam of some or all of the above. And then there’s the usual assortment of additional costs a MIC must take into account, such as audit fees, legal fees, security filing fees, mortgage licensing fees, securities (NI 31-103) registration fees, advertising, banking, postage, communication and so forth.

With hesitation, and much deference to my MIC colleagues, I would hazard a guess that a prudent MIC investor might consider taking into account 3% as an average cost, including management. Simply put, this means that a MIC that purports to pay 8% net to its investors must be earning 11% by way of mortgage interest and other fees associated with the mortgage portfolio. With some MICs it might be lower (say 2%) and with some it may be higher, I don’t know for sure. After forty-three years of lending and investing experience I can assure you that sustaining a secure mortgage portfolio income of 11% is really hard to do. I reiterate, a secure mortgage portfolio. More than a few mortgage investment professionals agree with me that in a fund of significant size it is simply not possible without undue risk. In only exceptional circumstances can borrowers sustain that level of carrying cost.

CMT: What is your opinion on whether MIC managers’ compensation should be linked to profit and/or default rates?

STRANDLUND: No matter how you slice it, management compensation will always be tied to dividend performance, which is related to the quality of the mortgage portfolio, which in turn is related to the quality of management. When I say dividend performance I don’t mean only the rate of return, but just as importantly the consistency and reliability of return. MICs are essentially income vehicles, so it is important that a MIC not only distributes reasonable returns that reflect current market conditions, but also distributes returns that are predictable. In the offering documents I’ve read, typically the Offering Memorandum and the Prospectus, I see a variety of compensation arrangements, each with its own merits, and it’s hard to say which compensation arrangement is best. I am not prepared to judge which is better.

My personal opinion is that the manager should be paid a percentage of MIC capital. This type of compensation not only reflects the amount of work and responsibility the manager assumes, but it is also a simple compensation formula that recognizes that capital will walk if it is not satisfied with the manager’s performance in terms of security as well as returns. For every dollar that walks from the fund the manager loses income. To retain capital the manager must prove to investors that they are wise to keep the investment rather than redeem it at maturity. Therefore it benefits the manager to maintain a quality mortgage portfolio that produces reasonable returns without undue risk. This is a compensation formula that investors easily understand. Simplicity is the key to its success.

CMT: MICs have to deal with a lot of regulation it seems. If a MIC has fewer than 50 investors, can it avoid much of this regulation?

STRANDLUND: I will give you my layman’s understanding, not legal advice. The 50-person requirement is not significant. If the MIC has fewer than 50 shareholders, and issues shares only to family, friends and business associates, it doesn’t have to file private placement reports with the provincial securities commissions. The MIC will probably still be required to register as a mortgage broker and be subject to regulatory scrutiny from the mortgage authority of the particular province. From a “securities” point of view, in most provinces except BC at present, in order to sell MIC shares to the public you must be registered as an Exempt Market Dealer under securities legislation.

I was pleased to read solicitor Jeremy Farr’s recent article (CMT April 6/11) dealing with regulations regarding investment in MICs in various provincial and territorial jurisdictions in Canada, including the Accredited Investor Exemption. Excellent article, and beyond any advice I could offer on the subject. Securities legislation is very complex.

CMT: What, if any, are the difficulties and shortfalls of the MIC; and are there any ways the MIC can be improved?

STRANDLUND: The MIC’s greatest attribute is its simplicity. The MIC has a clear business purpose and is easy to incorporate and manage if one takes the time to learn the rules and follow them. It has fair tax rationale, and has clearly weathered the test of time as evidenced by the fact that so few changes have been made to the regulation over the years. This is because the MIC was well thought out in the first place.

Not surprisingly, as years of practice have revealed, modest revenue-neutral enhancements should now be considered for MIC regulations. Here are three modifications that might be worth considering:



  1. The MIC, in addition to mortgage lending, is permitted to hold up to 25% of its assets in Canadian real estate property. The MIC’s property investments can be acquired either on the open market or can be acquired as the result of taking title to property through foreclosure.

    The designers of the MIC in 1973 conceived the structure as a combination of mortgage lender and real estate investor, with 25% of the MIC’s assets being the limit of its real property holdings – almost a REIT-like position. The real estate provision was innovative, but has been used sparingly; underutilized in my opinion. The reason may be that, at the same time as the MIC is permitted to hold 25% of its assets in real estate (typically income-producing property), it is specifically precluded from managing or developing property. This places the MIC in a dilemma; it can own real estate, but it is not permitted to manage it. The MIC can take title to a construction project through foreclosure, for example, but it is not permitted to complete the project to protect its investment, nor to manage it until it is sold. This is an unreasonably awkward situation.

    MIC regulations should be modified to allow the MIC to do what it must do to protect a foreclosed property, managing it until it is sold, and finishing the construction or development if necessary. The many complications associated with foreclosures don’t appear to have been anticipated in the drafting of MIC regulations. The change I propose would simply permit the MIC to develop and manage, but only under special limited circumstances, i.e. foreclosure circumstances. The MIC would not become a manager or developer per se.

    I also suggest that the MIC’s manager be permitted to manage the fund’s qualified real estate holdings like any outside property manager without the MIC being deemed to be a manager or developer.

  2. Since a MIC is permitted to hold 25% of its assets in real estate, it is predictable that the MIC, on selling the property, will experience a capital gain or a capital loss, and this profit or loss cannot be treated as interest income. Understandably, a fair amount of the text of Section 130.1 is devoted to the treatment of capital gains and capital losses, particularly how these gains and losses flow through to MIC investors.

    As written, the section dealing with the treatment of capital gains and losses is difficult to understand. I am not suggesting that the treatment of capital gains and capital losses be changed, but simply that it be rewritten in plain English, making it more accessible to the average reader.


  3. A person who has invested in a MIC through a registered plan (RRSP, RRIF, TFSA, etc) may not borrow from the MIC without jeopardizing the tax-deferred status of his or her plan. CRA sanctions include penalties as well as setting aside tax-deferred interest. The MIC creators were mindful of potential abuses and recognized that investors ought not to use their registered funds for personal purposes. The prohibition makes sense, keeping borrowers at arm’s length from their registered savings and registered pension funds.

    I wish to advance an idea that would modify this regulation somewhat while maintaining the integrity of the registered plan of the MIC shareholder who is at one and the same time a borrower of MIC funds for mortgage purposes. A reasonable modification would be to restrict a person with registered funds invested in the MIC from borrowing mortgage money from the same MIC except under special limited circumstances, the objective being to ensure an arm’s length relationship between the borrower (the borrower’s registered plan) and the MIC.

I offer a possible modification. Throughout the period the mortgage is outstanding:



  • the borrower must not be a director or officer of the MIC nor have any control of the MIC;

  • the borrower must not hold more than 5% of the MIC’s issued shares;

  • the fully-advanced mortgage must not exceed 5% of the MIC’s capital; and

  • the borrower’s MIC shares must be escrowed – including voting rights – to the directors of the MIC.

Perhaps the above requirements would also have to be met by all parties that are not at arm’s length to the borrower (spouse, partner, children, parents, siblings, borrower-controlled corporations, for example).

I advance these ideas as food for thought. Perhaps modest modifications would allow MIC investors to borrow from the MIC while remaining at arm’s length to the MIC. The spirit and intent of the MIC would be maintained.

CMT: Those seem like reasonable suggestions. Let’s move now to the firm you started, Fisgard. What is the most common type of borrower that comes to Fisgard looking for financing?

STRANDLUND: Fisgard is a full-spectrum non-bank lender; we consider ourselves primarily special situation lenders. We are not strictly equity lenders. In addition to the value of the property in relation to the loan amount, we consider the borrower’s credit worthiness and ability to repay. We are more traditional and mainstream than most people think. We perform as much diligence as a bank does in terms of qualifying our mortgage loans. To enhance portfolio balance we also carry some low-interest insured loans in our portfolio. We have a title insurance contract and we are a qualified insured lender. We provide large and small residential and commercial 1st and 2nd mortgage financing for the full range of mortgage situations. Fisgard has been referred to as a “B” lender, an “alternative lender”, a “private lender”. All of these shoes fit.

Although we can finance conventional and insured mortgages, this is not our main strength. Most borrowers come to Fisgard for special situation financing: new construction, renovation, development, mezzanine, inventory and equity takeout financing. We don’t receive many applications for ordinary long-term mortgages, but we do underwrite them as well. From time to time we have bought portfolios of mortgages from other lenders and we have co-ventured mortgage loans with other conventional as well as private lenders. Our typical borrower is a short-term special situation borrower. This is Fisgard’s well-established market niche.

If it weren’t for the Fisgards of the world – MICs that specialize in mezzanine and start-up financing – development and construction in Canada would have been much less vibrant than it has been over the past ten years. Canada’s many excellent well-managed MICs have been instrumental in financing numerous projects that would not have gotten off the ground had they relied on conventional mortgaging. The start-up money pumped into the economy by MICs has been huge – and fortunately continues to be so – and MICs are significantly responsible for the robust economic activity related to construction and development.

At present 86% of Fisgard’s mortgages have been originated by mortgage brokers. We value our excellent relationship with brokers; it is a Fisgard hallmark and an integral part of our business plan. I’m pleased to say that day by day we are developing more partnerships with mortgage brokers. Ideally one day mortgage brokers will be the source of all our mortgage business. With our hands-on experience in mortgage lending, real estate sales and valuation, property management, construction, development, trust management and project management we feel we can offer brokers a leg up. We’re a family company that has been in business forty-three years. We have lots of experiences, and there are very few mortgage situations we haven’t dealt with.

CMT: How big is Fisgard compared to other Canadian MICs?

STRANDLUND: At about $250 million spread over 350 mortgages I think that Fisgard is probably medium-to-large compared to other MICs in Canada. I don’t know for sure.

CMT: May we ask, what is Fisgard’s average LTV?

STRANDLUND: Between 70% and 75% across the portfolio. Our 3,800+ investors are comfortable with that risk profile. Like most MICs we do not work in a box, so the LTV differs from mortgage to mortgage, but we try to keep our overall LTV under 75% to be on the safe side.

CMT: Does Fisgard have any expansion plans nationwide?

STRANDLUND: Fisgard is an established investment fund and lender in Western Canada, where our roots are. We grow at a sustainable manageable pace. Expansion is part of our business blueprint; but we are in no hurry. Expansion comes at a cost, and must be managed carefully. We are good partners, and we expand by building partnerships with established lenders in areas where we do not have a physical presence but our partners do – areas that are economically stable and demonstrate short as well as long-term growth prospects. Quality partnerships are necessary to Fisgard expansion. They help us safely test the water so to speak. We are satisfied with our progress.

CMT: Wayne this is fantastic information for those interested in MICs. Thank you for the time you’ve taken to share it with our readers.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Full Spectrum Financing

Full Spectrum Financing is a concept that is gaining ground in the mortgage business. It is particularly suited to non-institutional lenders that have greater latitude in terms of the type of lending they can participate in, particularly non-bank out-of-the-box lending. The few lenders that have the depth of experience to handle full spectrum lending are becoming more popular amongst borrowers and mortgage brokers.

A full spectrum lender typically provides a wide array of mortgage financing:

- 2nd as well as 1st mortgages

- large as well as small mortgages ($10,000 to $10 million+)

- short-term (3 months) as well as long-term (5-year) mortgages

- commercial, industrial and residential mortgages

- new construction mortgages for commercial and residential projects

- land development mortgages for commercial and residential projects

- renovation mortgages for home or commercial property

- bridge financing for the borrower who has bought a property but has not yet sold his or her property

- mezzanine financing for builders and developers who need short-term start-up financing to get a construction or development project to the point where they can obtain conventional financing

- inventory financing for builders and developers who want to use their existing stock of real estate products to secure mortgage capital

- equity takeout financing for property owners who want to free up equity they have in property to do something else; in the case of a homeowner this might be to renovate the home, buy a second home, revenue property or resort property, take a vacation, help the kids with college education, help the kids buy a home, or ???

The full spectrum mortgage lender is able to consider a wide range of mortgage situations, and is therefore a valuable resource for borrowers of all types - the one-stop shop for the wise borrower.

Historically a construction/developer borrower who wants to buy a piece of land, develop it into a subdivision, build homes on the finished lots and sell the finished homes would have to deal with many lenders:

1) First, the borrower would have to find a lender to finance the purchase of the land (a mezzanine mortgage).

2) Then the borrower would have to find a lender to finance the development (plans, permits, subdivision, servicing, bonding, etc).

3) Next, the borrower would have to find another lender to finance the construction of the new homes in the subdivision.

4) Next, to facilitate home sales, the borrower would likely want to identify another more conventional lender to finance the purchase of the finished homes for the prospective buyers of the new homes.

There could be multiple lenders in a simple purchase-develop-construct-sell residential development. At each stage of the process the borrower could face a new set of broker fees, lender fees, appraisal fees, legal fees, mortgage discharge fees; in short, a maze of costly and time-consuming red tape and paperwork.

The full spectrum lender such as Fisgard is capable of handling all these mortgage situations. This is important to the borrower, as the saving can be substantial not only in fees but in the time it takes to deal with several lenders instead of one lender. When the borrower can deal with one lender for all stages of the project (purchase, development, construction, sales) the saving in time and money is significant enough to make or break a project.

At Fisgard we can handle this type of multi-phase mortgage financing not only because we lend our own money and do not rely on leverage borrowing or securitizing our mortgages, but also because we have experienced mortgage underwriters to handle this type of lending. It’s not only about money; it’s about experience. Fisgard’s background experience in real estate marketing, property management, valuation, land development, new construction, renovation, project management and administration dates back to 1968. It is this experience that allows Fisgard to offer brokers and borrowers the benefit of multi-phase mortgage lending.

Most of Canada’s lenders focus on residential property, often insisting that these mortgages are insured by one of three of Canada’s mortgage insurance companies, the largest being Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC). Many of these lenders rely on securitizing their mortgage portfolios, selling their portfolios to institutional investors, and picking up a fee. They don’t lend their own money; they basically arrange mortgages, and then sell them. They are essentially brokers, not lenders.

Fisgard lends its own money, and does not securitize its mortgages or leverage its mortgage portfolio. We meet the growing demand of thousands of qualified borrowers who neither need nor want an insured mortgage (which can carry an insurance fee of anywhere from 2% to 5%) and are undertaking quality projects that require the expertise of professional underwriters who have been lending to Canadian homeowners, new construction builders, renovators and developers since 1968.

To speak to a Fisgard mortgage underwriter call 250-382-9255 in Victoria or toll free 1-866-382-9255. It may be the only call you have to make.

If you are dealing with a professional mortgage broker, please have your broker call us.

Fisgard Underwriters:

Rafer Strandlund

Hali Strandlund

Jason Strandlund

Corrie White

Jen Scharien

Dawn Paniz

Wayne Strandlund

Monday, June 7, 2010

Canadian Residential Mortgage Borrowing Trends

NOTE: When reading these stats please be aware that they apply to 2008 and 2009. When a reference is made to the past (or last) year, the year is 2008. The current year for the referenced stats is 2009.
 
Broker/Lender Market Share
  • 30% of new mortgages were arranged by mortgage brokers (up 1% from Spring-09)
  • 50% of new mortgages were arranged directly through banks
  • 20% of new mortgages were arranged through credit unions, trust companies, insurance companies and other non-bank lenders
Mortgage Activity
  • 24% of homeowners took out new mortgages in 2009 
  • 7% of new mortgages were for home purchases 
  • 17% of new mortgages were for renewals, refinances or transfers 
  • 11% of mortgage borrowers took equity out of their homes in 2009 
Mortgage Rate Type
  • 65% of borrowers chose fixed rates in 2009 
  • 29% chose variable rates 
  • 45% of borrowers over age 55 took variable rates 
Mortgage Terms (Maturities)
  • 1-year 6% 
  • 2-year 7% 
  • 3-year 12% 
  • 4-year 9% 
  • 5-year 44% 
Over 10 years 22% (surprising since there is little evidence that terms of this length are economical over the long term)

Mortgage Amortization
  • 17% of mortgage borrowers have amortizations over the standard 25 years (same as 2008) 
  • 36% of mortgages originated in 2009 have amortizations over 25 years (versus 46% in 2008) 
Mortgage Interest Rates
  • borrowers got an average discount of 1.46% off posted 5-year fixed rates in 2008 
  • the average Canadian mortgage rate is now 4.09% (down from 4.83% one year ago) 
  • the rate on mortgages originated in the past 6 months is 3.63% 
  • just 1.3% of mortgage borrowers have rates of 8% or more 
Payment Arrears
  • 93% of Canadian mortgage borrowers have never missed a payment 
  • 4% missed a payment in 2008 (no link, however, to new home buyers or to 30-40 year amortizations) 
  • 6.8% of mortgage borrowers indicate that they presently have difficulties making their payments 
  • 8.6% of mortgage borrowers expect that future potential rate increases may exceed their mortgage payment tolerance. Many of these borrowers may have breathing room, as many have large amounts of home equity to work with. 
  • .45% of Canadian mortgage borrowers are 90+ days overdue on their mortgage payments (as of February-10)

Friday, June 4, 2010

Interesting Canadian Mortgage Factoids (as of June 2010)

The population of Canada (estimated as of 1-Jan-10) is 33,930,800. Therefore 1 of every 3.65 Canadians owns a home, but only 1 of every 6.11 Canadians has a mortgage.

  • there are 9.3 million Canadian homeowners
  • there are 5.55 million mortgage borrowers
  • the total value of outstanding Canadian mortgages is $1.04 trillion (2010 year-end estimate)
  • there is $770 billion in mortgages owed on owner-occupied property
  • there is $220 billion in mortgages owed on 2nd home and/or rental property
  • $220 billion in new mortgages was created in 2009 (purchases, refinances, renewals and transfers)
In terms of homeowner EQUITY:

  • the average Canadian mortgage balance is $138,000
  • the average home equity for mortgage borrowers is $159,000
  • the average loan-to-value ratio is 46%
  • only 2% of mortgage borrowers have home equity less than 2%
  • only 1% of mortgage borrowers owe more than their home is worth
Mortgage Prepayments

  • 16% of mortgage borrowers increased their regular payments during 2009
  • 13% of mortgage borrowers made lump-sum payments against their mortgages
  • 5% of mortgage borrowers made both forms of prepayment (25% made one or both forms in 2009)
  • total lump-sum prepayments average about 1% of the typical borrowers mortgage balance
Mortgage Tidbits

  • 325,000 mortgage borrowers have rental suites in the primary residence generating rental income
  • 125,000 mortgage borrowers needed rental income in order to quality for their mortgage
  • in 2009 400,000 borrowers (12% of borrowers) locked into a fixed rate from a variable rate

Monday, December 7, 2009

VALUABLE CANADIAN MORTGAGE STATS

The Canadian Association of Accredited Mortgage Professionals (CAAMP) regularly publishes comprehensive unbiased residential mortgage market statistics. Anyone trying to get a bead on the residential mortgage market – ergo the housing market – in Canada is advised to scope out CAAMP’s reports which are chock-full of useful up-to-date information. The CAAMP reports combined with the regularly-published Canada Mortgage & Housing Corporation (CMHC) reports are the best one-two punch available to people interested in the Canadian housing and mortgage market.

Most recently CAAMP published its 37-page November 2009 State of the Residential Mortgage Market along with its 1-page summary Significant Statistics. You can find both reports at FisgardMortgageNews . While you are on the site you may also wish to visit CMHC under the Fisgard Memberships & Affiliations tab.

Among a host of topics the CAAMP report addresses consumers’ expectations about housing markets, consumer choices and satisfaction levels, an outlook for residential mortgage lending, lender selection, fixed versus variable rate mortgages, the volume of mortgage business in Canada, forecasts of mortgage lending activity, and much more valuable information for home buyers, sellers and mortgage borrowers. More and more borrowers now use the services of professional mortgage planners, particularly CAAMP members who have earned Accredited Mortgage Professional (AMP) status, as opposed to dealing directly with banks, trust companies, credit unions, etc. Borrowers often get better deals by going to a professional mortgage planner who can source a variety of competing rates and terms. Use of the mortgage broker channel by the borrowing public is growing steadily.

The CAAMP report is clear: Canadians are optimistic, with 61% feeling that now is a good time to buy a home. Last year at this time, 38% felt that way.

The average residential mortgage rate is 4.55%. Last year at this time it was 5.41%.

There is anxiety over job loss; however, 80%of Canadian homeowners have more than 20% equity in their homes, which could provide support during a period of unemployment.


The average amount of equity Canadians holding a mortgage have in their homes is $142,000 which represents 52% of the value of the average home. Approximately 1/3rd of homeowners do not hold a mortgage (they own their homes clear title) and have an average of $322,000 equity in their homes. Overall, Canadian homeowners have 74% equity in their homes, considerably more than the equity stake U.S. homeowners have.

Fixed rate mortgages are preferred, with 68% of mortgage borrowers having fixed as opposed to variable and adjustable rate mortgages. Fixed rate mortgages are the most popular among borrowers between the ages of 18 and 34, while borrowers 55 years of age and older are more likely to prefer variable rate mortgages.

Canadian mortgage borrowers financed the equity in their homes for two primary reasons: renovations (30%) and debt consolidation (70%). Debt consolidation makes sense with mortgage rates being low compared to most non-mortgage consumer and credit card debt.

All in all the Canadian real estate and mortgage market appears to be relatively stable, with a reasonable balance between sellers and buyers, thus creating well-needed competition.