Interesting article about the Canadian Banking system and how this financial 
crisis seems to have bypassed Canada, mostly because of the stricter 
regulations in Canada. 
http://tinyurl.com/6cwslz

Worldwide Financial Crisis Largely Bypasses Canada
Tight Regulations, Strict Lending Practices Encourage Optimism

By Keith B. Richburg
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, October 16, 2008; A11

TORONTO, Oct. 15 -- While the United States reels from the global financial 
crisis, with credit markets still frozen and stock prices careening from highs 
to lows, Canada has remained relatively insulated.

Canadian banks have not gone shaky like their American counterparts, economists 
and other experts said. There is no subprime mortgage or home foreclosure mess. 
And while the United States fears a prolonged recession, Canadians have 
remained relatively sanguine, convinced that they are in a good position to 
weather the economic tsunami from the south.

"We will be pulled down," said Michael Gregory, chief economist at BMO Nesbitt 
Burns, an investment firm. "Not as deep, not as long."

The main reason for optimism here is the banking system. Experts here note that 
Canadian banks are more tightly regulated, more liquid and less highly 
leveraged. Instead of being highflying investment banks, they tend to operate 
in a more traditional manner, with large numbers of loyal depositors and a more 
solid base of capital.

"I think the regulatory framework in Canada is a little more stringent," 
Gregory said, "and Canadian banks are a little more conservative in terms of 
lending." The World Economic Forum this month rated Canada's banks as the 
world's soundest, ahead of banks in Sweden and Luxembourg.

According to the Canadian Banking Association, one reason for the system's 
solidity is that banks are national in scope. Each of the largest five 
institutions has branches in all 10 Canadian provinces, meaning they are less 
susceptible to regional downturns and they can move capital from region to 
region, as needed. "As far as I am aware, no American bank has branches in all 
50 states," banking association spokesman Andrew Addison wrote in an e-mail.

Strict rules also govern mortgage lending. By Canadian law, any mortgage that 
will finance more than 80 percent of the price of a home must be insured. 
Two-thirds of all Canadian mortgages are insured by the quasi-governmental 
Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corp. As a result of the tough standards for 
insurance, "people tend not to get mortgages they cannot afford," Gregory said.

Defaulting on a loan is also more difficult in Canada than the United States, 
Gregory said. "You can't just drop off the keys and walk away."

For Canada's seven biggest banks, the percentage of mortgages at least three 
months in arrears was 0.27 percent in July, close to historic lows, according 
to the banking association. Also, few Canadian banks got caught holding large 
numbers of toxic American mortgages.

Another difference is that in Canada, mortgage interest is not tax-deductible, 
making it harder to buy a house. As a result, Canada did not have as strong a 
construction surge as the United States did during the boom years, and thus 
does not now have a big oversupply.

People do not take out mortgages just for the tax break. In Canada, "a mortgage 
is seen as something you want to get rid of as fast as possible," said Peter 
Dungan, an economist with the Rotman School of Management at the University of 
Toronto.

Amid this relative health, there have been reports that American companies, 
needing cash and credit, have been turning to their Canadian subsidiaries for 
short-term loans.

But Canada's economy has not been entirely trouble-free. The Toronto Stock 
Exchange is down. The appreciation of the Canadian dollar has harmed exports. 
The slowdown in the United States -- which takes 80 percent of Canada's exports 
-- has a direct impact here. In particular, the American housing troubles have 
hurt because much of the wood in new U.S. houses comes from Canada.

"What Americans are not buying is directly what we export," Dungan said.

Fears about the global crisis helped Prime Minister Stephen Harper increase his 
Conservative Party's presence in Parliament in Tuesday's elections, many 
analysts here believe, though the party still fell short of an absolute 
majority.

Harper called the election in September, just before the crisis hit. After some 
initial verbal stumbles -- he at first seemed to play down the fall of the 
Toronto exchange -- he campaigned as the steady hand to see Canada through hard 
economic times ahead.

Polls showed that the economy was the main issue in the election. 

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