I’m pulling the July 2020 Bank of Canada decision plus CREA/TRREB month data so this stays tightly month-specific.
July 2020 -- Canadian Mortgage & Housing Market Snapshot
1) Bank of Canada rate decisions
- Date: July 15, 2020
- Decision: No change
- Overnight rate: 0.25%
- Rationale:
The Bank said the economy had begun to rebound as lockdowns eased, but output and employment were still far below pre-pandemic levels. It repeated that 0.25% was the effective lower bound and said rates would stay there for a long time while recovery remained incomplete.
- Important context:
By July 2020, the BoC was firmly in hold + QE/support mode, not emergency-cut mode.
2) Mortgage rate snapshot -- July 2020
The broad July 2020 mortgage-rate picture was:
- Prime rate: about 2.45%
- Variable rates:
- generally still in the low-2% range
- priced off prime, with discounts depending on lender/channel
- 5-year fixed:
- generally around the low-2% to mid-2% range
- the market was becoming more competitive as bond yields stayed low and lenders pushed pricing lower
- Practical takeaway:
- by July 2020, mortgage rates were deeply stimulative
- fixed rates were becoming especially attractive
- variable rates were still low, but the gap vs fixed had narrowed
Caveat: I did not find a single authoritative national source giving an exact Canada-wide “average 5-year fixed” and “average variable” for July 2020 only, so these remain approximate market ranges.
3) Housing market data -- July 2020
Canada (national)
From CREA’s July 2020 release:
- Home sales: 62,355
- the highest monthly sales level on record
- Year-over-year sales change: +30.5%
- Month-over-month sales change: +26% from June
- National average sale price: $571,500
- up 14.3% year-over-year
- Sales-to-new-listings ratio: 73.9%
- Interpretation:
- July 2020 was a record-breaking rebound month
- demand had returned faster than new supply
GTA / Ontario proxy
For TRREB / GTA July 2020:
- Sales: 11,081
- Year-over-year sales change: +29.5%
- Month-over-month sales change (seasonally adjusted vs June): +49.5%
- Average selling price: $943,710
- up 16.9% year-over-year
- New listings: 17,956
- Interpretation:
- July was a record month for GTA July sales
- prices surged as low rates and pent-up demand collided with limited inventory
Ontario-wide
I did not find a clean primary Ontario-wide July 2020 dataset in this run that I’m comfortable quoting directly.
The strongest Ontario-specific market signal here remains TRREB / GTA.
4) Regulatory / policy news -- July 2020
This is the clearest policy item for the month:
July 1, 2020 -- CMHC tightens insured mortgage rules
CMHC implemented stricter underwriting for insured mortgages, including:
- higher minimum credit score requirements
- lower allowable debt-service ratios
- restrictions around down payments from non-traditional borrowed sources
### Why it mattered
- This was one of the most important mortgage-policy changes of mid-2020
- It tightened access to insured mortgages
- Industry reaction at the time suggested it could push some borrowers toward:
- Genworth/Canada Guaranty-insured alternatives
- uninsured channels
- or non-bank/private lenders
OSFI / FSRA
- I did not verify a major new OSFI or FSRA mortgage rule announcement that was as defining in July 2020 as the CMHC change
- So the main July policy headline was the CMHC rule tightening
5) Private / alternative lending -- July 2020
July 2020 clearly showed stress and divergence in the alternative lending space.
Strong month-specific signal
- Canadian Mortgage Trends reporting in July 2020 said:
- the economic slowdown was hitting alternative lenders hard
- private lenders had seen a 26% decline in Ontario mortgage registrations
- That is one of the clearest Ontario-relevant month-specific alternative-lending data points I found
Practical takeaway
- Alternative/private lending remained important
- But in July 2020, the sector was still coping with:
- reduced originations
- elevated risk aversion
- pandemic-related funding and underwriting pressure
6) Notable events -- July 2020
Major headlines
- July 15: BoC holds at 0.25%
- July housing market records
- Canada: highest monthly sales ever recorded
- GTA: record sales for the month of July
- Prices accelerated sharply
- national average price up 14.3% YoY
- GTA average price up 16.9% YoY
- CMHC tightens insured mortgage rules effective July 1
- one of the biggest mortgage-policy headlines of the summer
Notable market theme
- July 2020 was the month the housing recovery stopped looking tentative and started looking aggressive
- Market conditions shifted toward:
- strong buyer competition
- low-rate-fuelled demand
- insufficient supply
Fraud / court / lender events
- I did not find a single clearly dominant mortgage fraud case or court ruling that I could verify confidently enough as a defining July 2020 headline in this run
---
Bottom line for July 2020
- BoC: held at 0.25% on July 15
- Mortgage rates: remained very low, with fixeds generally in the low/mid-2% range and variables in the low-2% range
- Housing market: extremely strong rebound
- Canada: 62,355 sales, highest monthly total on record
- GTA: 11,081 sales, average price $943,710
- Policy: biggest headline was CMHC tightening insured mortgage rules effective July 1
- Alternative lending: still under pressure; Ontario private registrations reportedly down 26%
Sources
- Bank of Canada -- July 15, 2020 decision
- CREA July 2020 release
- TRREB market-watch references / July 2020 figures surfaced in search results
- Secondary summaries citing TRREB:
-
-
- Rate references
-
-
-
- CMHC rule-change context
-
-
- Alternative/private lending
-
Caveats
- You asked for July 2020 only, so I kept the answer month-specific.
- I could verify the BoC July 15 hold strongly and got strong search-result evidence for CREA/TRREB numbers.
- I did not directly extract a primary Ontario-wide July 2020 dataset in this run.
- I also did not find a single authoritative national “average 5-year fixed / average variable” series for July 2020 only, so the mortgage-rate section is an approximate market snapshot rather than a precise official average.