Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Good morning everyone. Thank you for inviting me here to discuss the Bank of Canada's perspective on the stability of the Canadian financial system.
As we have consistently emphasized, stabilization of the global financial system is a precondition for economic recovery, both globally and in Canada. To that end, policy-makers around the globe have acted aggressively and creatively by initiating a series of unprecedented actions aimed at stabilizing the global financial system. Central banks throughout the world, including the Bank of Canada, have provided unprecedented liquidity to keep the financial system functioning.
Because the crisis we are facing is global in nature and began outside our borders, most solutions must be found at the international level. We are taking part in discussions with our international colleagues on ways to strengthen financial stability globally. I would note that there has been a great deal of interest worldwide in the resilience of Canada's financial institutions in the face of the global economic crisis. Unlike their counterparts in other major economies, Canadian banks have not been materially affected by the financial crisis. They have managed to raise capital during this troubled period to support continued lending and to make up for some of the decline in the demand for securitized products as well as the exit of non-bank lenders which had relied on securitization for financing their activities. In contrast, banks in most other major economies have suffered significant losses and have required significant capital injections from their governments.
Thus, Canada has maintained much healthier credit conditions since the onset of this global recession than have been seen in other major countries. Still, the Canadian financial sector has felt the effects of the global turmoil which has increased funding needs while at the same time raising the costs and the uncertainty of term funding. In response, the Bank of Canada has made significant efforts to support liquidity in financial markets.
Now, our actions aimed at stabilizing the Canadian financial system since the global crisis began 18 months ago have been unprecedented and significant. The Bank of Canada has moved aggressively by expanding the provision of term purchase and resale agreements to a total of $41 billion, at its peak in December, and $35 billion currently.
The term purchase and resale agreements, or PRAs, as we call them, provide liquidity to key market participants for terms of up to three months against a wide range of securities. The bank has widened the range of assets that it will accept in these operations, and it has extended the range of counterparties with whom it will transact. I should point out that these PRAs are as an auction, so there is kind of a market price to the yields on these term loans.
We've also introduced a new term-loan facility for those financial institutions that participate directly in the large value transfer system and the payment system, taking their non-mortgage loan portfolio as collateral. And that, in a sense, frees up other collateral for them.
Last week the bank announced a new term PRA facility for private sector instruments that extends on the private sector term PRA facility that we had set up last autumn for the money market instruments. The new facility is open to a broader range of participants against a broader range of eligible securities, which would include corporate bonds, and it is available for a longer term and at a lower minimum bid rate than is the facility that it replaces. The liquidity from this new facility should provide indirect support to credit growth in Canada by improving the secondary market liquidity and increasing the demand for corporate securities.
I would like to point out that these facilities have been financed not by expanding the supply of central bank money to the financial system, but rather through the sale of treasury bills, either from the bank's own portfolio or from new issues, the proceeds of which, in turn, are held on deposit at the Bank of Canada. I would note that, on a consolidated basis, the Government of Canada earns net income from these operations. That net income is represented by the spread between the yield on our own term PRAs that we offer and the yield that we could have gotten on treasury bills or that the government is paying on treasury bills. Furthermore, there is little risk to the taxpayer in these operations because we require participants to pledge collateral with a value greater than the amount of money that they borrow from us.
These liquidity operations have resulted in a significant reduction in the spreads at the short end of the market--for example the CDOR, the Canadian deposit offering rate, which is the Canadian equivalent of the LIBOR, the London interbank offering rate, which is the offered rate on bankers' acceptances, essentially. So the CDOR minus OIS, or overnight indexed swap, spreads—the OIS is the expectation of what a future Bank of Canada rate would be—have narrowed substantially since last fall, when conditions were extremely negative. The improvements are especially notable at shorter-term maturities, such as one month, and are largely attributable to the liquidity facilities that have been put in place. But there have also been improvements at the three-month spread, which peaked at about 125 basis points in Canada. This is now close to a more normal level, which is about 25 basis points. That's kind of the new normal. We don't expect to go back to the pre-August 2007 spreads that were abnormally narrow.
While the Bank of Canada's liquidity operations have focused on the short-term financing, I would like to note that the Government of Canada has introduced measures aimed at supporting the long-term financing for businesses and consumers, and I would like to highlight two among the numerous measures.
One measure is the insured mortgage purchase program, which allows financial institutions to fund new financing by selling pools of insured residential mortgages to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. Another is the Canadian secured credit facility, under which the Business Development Bank of Canada will buy term asset-backed securities, which are securities that are backed by loans and leases on vehicles and equipment. It will essentially target this segment of the market, for which financing is unavailable now.
All these measures together are certainly helping to meet the rising demand from businesses and individuals who have been finding it very difficult in this environment to raise adequate funds. We have all heard reports of ongoing tightening in both the availability and pricing of credit. We've heard anecdotes. Our own surveys of businesses and surveys of senior lending officers confirm that. Nevertheless, when you look at the data, our latest figures show continued strong growth in total household credit--9.6% in January--compared with the same period one year earlier. In part, we've seen limited deceleration in the growth of total business credit, although this was more pronounced in January. There is volatility in these numbers from month to month. Total business credit, overall, stood at 4.2% in January compared with the same period one year earlier. What we've seen is accelerating growth in bank lending that has helped offset, or at least partially offset, a contraction in market financing. We will continue to closely monitor credit growth and credit conditions in Canada. We just got the January numbers last week. We are monitoring that very closely.
In conclusion, as we are all well aware, the Canadian economy is feeling the effects of the global turmoil and recession. The authorities, of course, have put a lot of fiscal and monetary stimulus in place in Canada and globally to support the recovery. However, as I noted at the outset, stabilization of the global financial system remains a precondition of the global and Canadian economic recoveries.
Investor and public confidence has been badly shaken. It will recover with the timely implementation of the ambitious plans in some major countries to address their toxic assets and to recapitalize financial institutions. However, if these national and multilateral measures are not timely, bold, and well executed, Canada's economic recovery will be both attenuated and delayed.
I would now be pleased to answer your questions, Mr. Chairman.