Thanks, Chair.
I'd like to move my motion on notice at this time.
Last week, the Competition Bureau of Canada reported that competition is on the decline as concentrated industries become more concentrated and fewer businesses are attempting to enter already uncompetitive industries.
One of those industries is Canada's financial sector. Considering the RBC-HSBC merger, I move that the Standing Committee on Finance report the following to the House:
Given that,
(a) after eight years of Justin Trudeau, the Competition Bureau of Canada finds Canada’s competitive intensity is in decline, a measure that was reflected in all indicators measured by the bureau;
(b) there already are very few financial institutions in the Canadian banking sector, representing a lack of competition;
(c) removing competition in the financial sector could raise banking fees for Canadians who already pay more for financial services due to an already uncompetitive financial sector;
that the committee calls on the Minister of Finance to reject the merger of RBC and HSBC.
Canadians are paying some of the highest banking fees in the entire world after eight years of Justin Trudeau. Only competition delivers better prices and products, not less competition. The RBC-HSBC merger proves yet again that this Liberal government cannot protect Canadians from oligopolies and rising prices. In Canada's banking sector, there are very old, very large oligopolies that are government-protected. The Competition Bureau report on this merger says that financial services markets are concentrated. There are high barriers to entry and expansion, and conditions facilitate coordinated behaviour among competitors.
The Big Five banks—RBC, TD, BMO, Scotiabank and CIBC—as well as HSBC and National Bank control 93% of all banking assets in Canada and 87% of mortgages. If the biggest bank in Canada can simply gobble up the seventh-largest bank, then there's no hope of ever having more competition in the Canadian banking sector.
HSBC has been offering rate advantages relative to RBC. The Competition Bureau even acknowledged HSBC's unique position as a player in Canada's banking system and mortgage market. Almost all of HSBC's mortgages are in Vancouver and the GTA. Vancouver is the world's third most overpriced housing market. Toronto is the world's largest housing bubble.
Currently, 50% of the best posted uninsured mortgage rates in Canada are HSBC products. If HSBC is eliminated from the market, their rare position as an affordable outlier in mortgages, especially in Canada's two most expensive cities, will be lost, and there is no one to fill that void. There are about 800,000 HSBC customers who will be forced into RBC without being offered anything for their business or given a choice.
Eight years of Justin Trudeau's borrowing and adding more debt than all governments before him combined led to 40-year highs in inflation, and now Canadians have the most rapid mortgage interest rate hikes ever. Now the IMF is putting Canada as most at risk in the G7 for a mortgage default crisis.
As an example, there are around 70,000 mortgage renewals every month over the next 12 months. HSBC today is offering a rate of 6.4%, whereas RBC is offering their rate at 7.15%, which is a clear difference in people's monthly mortgage payments. If someone took out a mortgage five years ago, they can look to, at a minimum, a doubling of their mortgage rate. For some people that could mean up to $1,000 or more a month just on mortgage payments.
The removal of the HSBC from the mortgage market results in a loss of downward pressure on lending rates and will force those Canadian customers to pay even more.
Some of these HSBC customers are newcomers to Canada; actually, many of them are. As Conservatives, we believe big whales should compete with each other, not just swallow up the small fishes.
This finance minister has the power to stop this merger. The ball is in her court. We want to know if she will side with her Bay Street buddies or do what is right for Canadians and reject the merger so that banking fees don't go up and Canadians can have more product options.
After eight years of this Prime Minister, he's not worth the cost. I urge all members of this committee to do what is right for Canadians and join us in calling for Minister Freeland to stop the RBC-HSBC merger.
Thank you, Chair.