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How Bond Yields Affect Mortgage Rates in Canada (Explained Simply)

Updated

If you want to understand where fixed mortgage rates are heading, don’t watch the Bank of Canada — watch the bond market. Fixed mortgage rates in Canada are directly tied to Government of Canada bond yields, and understanding this relationship gives you a major edge when timing your mortgage decision.

The core relationship

Rate TypeWhat Drives ItKey Benchmark
Fixed mortgage ratesGovernment of Canada bond yields5-year GoC bond yield
Variable mortgage ratesBank of Canada overnight rate → prime rateBoC policy rate

These are two separate mechanisms. Fixed rates and variable rates can move in opposite directions at the same time.

How fixed rates are set

Lenders fund fixed-rate mortgages by borrowing in the bond market. Their cost of funds is the Government of Canada bond yield. They add a spread (their profit margin plus risk buffer) on top.

Fixed mortgage rate = Government of Canada bond yield + lender spread

Example (April 2026)

ComponentValue
5-year GoC bond yield~2.80%
Lender spread~1.50%
5-year fixed mortgage rate~4.30%

When bond yields rise by 0.25%, fixed mortgage rates typically rise by a similar amount within 1–2 weeks. When bond yields fall, rates fall.

What moves bond yields

Bond yields reflect what investors expect for the future. The main drivers:

FactorEffect on Bond YieldsEffect on Fixed Rates
Higher inflation expectationsYields rise ↑Rates rise ↑
Stronger economic growthYields rise ↑Rates rise ↑
US Treasury yields risingYields rise ↑ (correlation)Rates rise ↑
Bank of Canada expected to hikeYields rise ↑Rates rise ↑
Recession fearsYields fall ↓Rates fall ↓
Global uncertainty (flight to safety)Yields fall ↓Rates fall ↓
Bank of Canada expected to cutYields fall ↓Rates fall ↓
Rising government debt supplyYields rise ↑Rates rise ↑

The spread: lender profit margin

The spread between bond yields and mortgage rates is not fixed — it varies based on economic conditions and competition.

PeriodTypical SpreadWhy
Normal economic conditions1.50%–1.80%Standard risk and profit margin
Highly competitive market1.20%–1.50%Lenders compete aggressively for business
Economic uncertainty/crisis2.00%–2.50%+Lenders increase risk premium
Post-pandemic (2020–2022)1.80%–2.30%Elevated risk pricing
Recent (2024–2026)1.40%–1.80%Normalizing as economy stabilizes

A wider spread means lenders are charging more above their cost of funds — often a signal of perceived risk in the economy or housing market.

How variable rates work (different mechanism)

For contrast — variable rates follow a completely different path:

StepWhat Happens
1. Bank of Canada sets overnight rateCurrently 2.75% (March 2026)
2. Banks set prime rateOvernight rate + 2.20% = 4.95%
3. Lender sets variable mortgage ratePrime rate − discount (e.g., 4.95% − 0.80% = 4.15%)

Variable rates change immediately when the Bank of Canada adjusts the overnight rate. Fixed rates don’t — they respond to bond market movements, which may anticipate or diverge from BoC actions.

Why fixed and variable rates can diverge

ScenarioWhat Happens
BoC cutting rates, economy improvingVariable rates fall; but bond yields may rise on growth expectations → fixed rates rise
BoC holding rates, global uncertaintyVariable rates stable; bond yields fall on flight to safety → fixed rates fall
BoC hiking rates, inflation persistentVariable rates rise; bond yields already priced this in → fixed rates may be stable
BoC cutting rates, recessionVariable rates fall; bond yields fall → both fall

This is why “waiting for rates to drop” is complicated. Variable rates follow the BoC path. Fixed rates follow the bond market — which moves on expectations, not just current policy.

Historical context: Bond yields and fixed rates

Year5-Year GoC Bond YieldBest 5-Year Fixed RateSpread
20191.50%2.69%1.19%
2020 (pandemic low)0.36%1.89%1.53%
20210.95%2.14%1.19%
2022 (rate hike cycle)3.30%5.34%2.04%
20233.80%5.59%1.79%
20243.10%4.89%1.79%
20252.70%4.34%1.64%
2026 (current)~2.80%~4.30%~1.50%

Practical implications

If you’re choosing between fixed and variable

ScenarioConsideration
Bond yields trending downFixed rates may continue to fall — consider a shorter term or variable
Bond yields risingLock in a fixed rate before they go higher
Wide spread (>2.0%)Fixed rates are expensive relative to risk — variable may be better value
Narrow spread (<1.5%)Fixed rates are competitively priced — good time to lock in

If you’re timing a fixed-rate mortgage

ActionWhat to Watch
About to buy a homeCheck the 5-year GoC bond yield trend. If rising, lock in your rate hold quickly
Renewing in 3–6 monthsWatch bond yields. If they’re falling, waiting may get you a lower rate
Deciding when to break/refinanceA sustained bond yield decline signals fixed rates may drop further

Where to check bond yields

SourceHow to Access
Bank of Canada websiteBank of Canada bond yield data (free)
Financial mediaGlobe & Mail, BNN Bloomberg report on bond yields
Your mortgage brokerAsk what bond yields are doing — they track this daily