Yes, let me address that.
Rising rates have never traditionally been very highly correlated with defaults or delinquencies, simply because generally in a rising rate environment the economy is doing quite well.
Second, there are a lot of options that borrowers have when they renew. Therefore, even if they were in a five-year term and they're now renewing and the new five-year rate is too much and they think they would be under pressure, sometimes lenders can offer a three-year or even a shorter term, which temporarily gives borrowers some reprieve. It's a lower rate generally, and perhaps they're just going through some disruption in their employment, and that gets them through.
In addition to that, as mortgage default insurers, we do offer and have a lot of what we call “loss mitigation programs”, which allow us to intervene in a situation where a borrower is impacted perhaps by a higher rate that would otherwise cause them to go delinquent. We're able to buy them some time or look at measures to adjust their loan, together with the lender, to allow them to continue on.
Those measures can sometimes be renewing an extension on their amortization, which essentially brings down the interest rate, perhaps even allowing them to capitalize on any arrears that they are in to allow them to continue on.
In a nutshell, there are tools available that really do mitigate the impact of a higher rate on a renewal. We see it as basically unnecessary to cause a default just become someone's interest rate is going to be a little higher.
The impact on our businesses is relatively muted. The impact, more broadly speaking of course is going to be seen more at the origination side, people who are looking to buy a home who now have reduced buying power in an environment where what's available to them is just so limited because they can't reach the new required price level to get into the housing market. They're looking at a very limited stock of perhaps condos, semi-detacheds or townhouses, and that's the current situation. Most of the first time buyers we see, if they're looking to buy anything under $700,000, the supply, particularly in the greater Toronto area, greater Vancouver area, is extremely limited of what you can get for that kind of money.