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Bullboard - Stock Discussion Forum Reitmans Ord Shs V.RET

Alternate Symbol(s):  RTMNF | RTMAF | V.RET.A

Reitmans (Canada) Limited is a Canada-based specialty apparel retailer for women and men, with retail outlets throughout the country. The principal business activity of the Company is the sale of women’s wear. The Company operates three different brands: Reitmans, Penningtons and RW&CO. The Reitmans banner is a specialty fashion destination. The Reitmans has an online presence and store... see more

TSXV:RET - Post Discussion

Reitmans Ord Shs > Canadian dollar to take a hit
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Post by Torontojay on Mar 20, 2024 9:08pm

Canadian dollar to take a hit

There were several items that came out of the fourth-quarter national balance sheet data in Canada that leave us with a view that any positive “wealth effect” on spending is subsiding, that households are hunkering down and sharply reducing their appetite for debt, and that the Bank of Canada is going to end up having to cut rates sooner and harder than the United States Federal Reserve, with negative repercussions for the listless loonie.

While the stock market rally did manage to take the level of household net worth up 1.8 per cent quarter over quarter in the fourth quarter to $16.4 trillion, that merely retraced the third-quarter decline and leaves the level 2.3 per cent below the peak in the first quarter of 2022. The net-worth-to-disposable income ratio has also come down 135 percentage points from the late-2021 high and has dialled back close to where it was in the fourth quarter of 2020.

Equity ownership on the consumer balance sheet jumped 6.1 per cent to a record-high of $4.45 trillion, but eating into that was a surprising 1.8 per cent pullback in once-hot residential real estate, which has now deflated roughly eight per cent from the peak in the first quarter of 2022. Owners’ equity relative to the value of outstanding residential real estate has declined from 76.3 per cent in the second quarter of last year to 75.6 per cent in the third quarter and now to a three-year low of 75 per cent as of the fourth quarter.
 

On the liability side, the ratio of household debt to net worth dipped to 18 per cent from 18.2 per cent in the third quarter and is now below the pre-COVID-19 norm of 20 per cent. Total credit market debt relative to disposable income has declined in each of the past three quarters (from 182.3 per cent in Q1 2023 to 181.5 per cent in Q2 to 179.2 per cent in Q3 to 178.7 per cent in Q4 — back to where it was in the second quarter of 2021).

The year-over-year trend in household debt has collapsed to a little more than three per cent from nearly seven per cent a year ago. We have not finished a year with credit demand running this soft since 1990.

The disinflationary move toward shoring up debt-laden personal-balance sheets was reinforced by the increase in the household savings rate to 6.2 per cent, which is nearly triple the pre-COVID-19 normalized level of closer to 2.2 per cent.

Surely, the Bank of Canada can see that the pressures on inflation are fading away and so are the excuses around keeping the policy rate unsustainably high. We say that as the share of household-sector debt-servicing costs being absorbed out of after-tax income remains at punitive levels of 15 per cent — up from 14.5 per cent a year ago and 13.8 per cent two years ago, even with the efforts to curb borrowing.

There has never been a time when a debt-service ratio this high failed to precipitate a recession, and because the debt burden is so onerous, the ratio is higher today than it was in the summer of 1990 (it was 12.7 per cent back then) when the policy rate was sitting at 13.5 per cent.

This is what a decade-long runaway debt bomb creates: an environment where a five per cent policy rate feels more like 13.5 per cent.

https://ca.yahoo.com/finance/news/david-rosenberg-bank-canada-going-144951126.html

Comment by flamingogold on Mar 21, 2024 10:03am
"There has never been a time when a debt-service ratio this high failed to precipitate a recession" This is true except we are in uncharted waters this time. When was the last time we had a pandemic? We cannot compare the data coming out of a once-in-century pandemic compared to 1990 which was just an average market cycle. Case in point... mortgage rates have exploded higher from ...more  
Comment by Torontojay on Mar 21, 2024 5:13pm
What are you talking about Flamingogold?  The housing market in the gta is easily down over 20% from the peak in early 2022. This is on par with the steep correction that plagued Canadian homeowners in the early 90's.  Let's not even talk about commercial real estate which makes the residential correction look like child's play. Did you see the vacancy rate for office ...more  
Comment by savyinvestor333 on Mar 21, 2024 6:11pm
Meanwhile back at the Ranch TSX posts first record high close since 2022 as investors eye soft economic landing PUBLISHED 12 HOURS AGO UPDATED 56 MINUTES AGO FOR SUBSCRIBERS COMMENTS SHARE BOOKMARK GIVE THIS ARTICLE LISTEN TO THIS ...more  
Comment by nedstar71 on Mar 21, 2024 8:22pm
My house is currently still worth 3x what I paid for it 8 years ago.  But yeah, probably down 20% from 2022.  Steep correction?  Sure.  The GTA doesn't accurately represent what happened in the average Candian city.  Housing prices would need to be cut in more than half to bring them back in line with where they should be.
Comment by flamingogold on Mar 22, 2024 10:05am
Thank you. I do not need to repeat.