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TORONTO — Canada's big banks are passing on more rate cuts to consumers and companies after credit markets freed up Friday in the wake of federal government help for the mortgage industry.
: s" {: C* `: CTD Canada Trust (TSX:TD) said it will lower its prime lending rate by 15-hundredths of a percentage point to 4.35 per cent, effective next Tuesday.
% R: }* B! o' b% TThe Bank of Nova Scotia (TSX:BNS) announced shortly afterward that it is cutting its prime rate by a quarter-point to 4.25 per cent.; z7 k" T) K+ y0 B# A, I; `4 f, u/ O
Chris Hodgson, Scotiabank's head of domestic personal banking, stated that: "At a challenging time in world financial markets, this reduction in interest rates reflects actions initiated by the Bank of Canada and the federal government." b- o8 C$ F8 T" l# g
Shortly afterward, CIBC (TSX:CM) chimed in, matching the smaller TD trim in the prime rate - the benchmark for a wide range of lending to individuals and corporations.
1 z- S' c- n! y: v% c+ |" z. }( rThe banks had come under fire earlier this week after they passed on only half of the 0.50-point cut in the Bank of Canada's overnight rate, which was part of a co-ordinated effort by major central banks to ease credit markets.
5 i+ q& A0 X* `) }Friday's additional trim was credited to the morning's move by Finance Minister Jim Flaherty to allow the banks to offload as much as $25 billion of mortgages from their balance sheets to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.2 c5 l+ O; _6 e) A& k( b
TD said this should reduce the banks' cost of financing, in turn allowing them to trim the price of loans.
+ O v7 n5 P1 J$ X) }- p"Financial markets are very turbulent, and funding costs are still high," commented Tim Hockey president of TD Canada Trust, the retail arm of TD Bank.
, R$ z2 @/ u0 {"However, we anticipate that our cost of funds will decrease with the implementation of this program, and therefore wanted to take action that will benefit our customers directly."' A$ B( {, }# f' i/ A# g
Flaherty said the federal government will buy up to $25 billion in residential mortgages from the banks and shift them to CMHC.* A2 u% |. P) z% _9 n1 ?" b7 g: T9 p
"This is going to make loans and mortgages more available and more affordable for ordinary Canadians and businesses," said the finance minister.
" a) B+ L3 D) `/ MSonia Baxendale, CIBC's chief of retail markets, called the government's action "positive." |
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