Written by 1:08 PM General Views: 0

Lending Spreads

Lending spreads are the difference between a lender’s cost of funds and what that lender sells a mortgage for. 

For example, a lender may be able to raise capital in the mortgage backed securities market at 4.00% and sell a mortgage to the borrower at 5.50%.  That 1.50% difference is the “spread.”

When investors perceive added risk (or less return) in the mortgage market, spreads tighten.  As a result, profit for lenders decreases and mortgage rates often go up to compensate.

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Last modified: September 19, 2008

Robert McLister is one of Canada’s best-known mortgage experts. A mortgage columnist for The Globe and Mail, interest rate analyst and editor of MortgageLogic.news, Rob has been covering Canada's mortgage market since 2007.

Close