The Bank of Canada held its benchmark interest rate steady on Wednesday amid signs that inflation is easing.
The central bank’s policy rate, which informs lending rates on key products like Canadian mortgages, remains at 5.0 per cent for the sixth straight decision.
The hold was widely expected by economists amid signs price pressures are easing, growth in the economy has stalled and the once-tight labour market is softening.
Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem said in prepared remarks accompanying the rate decision that recent data has given the central bank more confidence that “inflation will continue to come down gradually even as economic activity strengthens.”
“Our key indicators of inflation have all moved in the right direction,” he said.
Easing core inflation encouraging Bank of Canada
The Bank of Canada’s rate tightening cycle began more than two years ago in an effort to rein in decades-high levels of inflation.
Annual inflation has cooled significantly since then, last coming in at 2.8 per cent in February.
The central bank signalled inflation might be cooling faster than previously expected in an updated monetary policy report released on Wednesday. While that forecast still sees inflation to return to its two per cent target in 2025, it now calls for inflation to cool to 2.2 per cent by the end of 2024, down from previous expectations for 2.4 per cent.
The Bank of Canada’s preferred metrics of core inflation have also begun to ease lately, hovering above three per cent in February.
The central bank acknowledged this progress in its statement accompanying the rate decision on Wednesday, but said it was still looking for evidence that “downward momentum is sustained.”
CIBC senior economist Andrew Grantham said in a note to clients Wednesday that this marks a shift in tone from the Bank of Canada, with monetary policymakers no longer flagging the “persistence” of core inflation in their remarks.
Shelter price inflation also remains “very elevated,” the Bank noted, thanks to rising rents and mortgage costs. Food price inflation is expected to continue to cool thanks to global price declines in the agricultural sector, according to the MPR.
Monetary policymakers will continue to watch the evolution of inflation expectations, corporate pricing behaviour and wage growth as it decides where to take its benchmark interest rate next.
The central bank noted that recent easing in the labour market suggests wage pressures are “moderating.” The Bank’s MPR said it expected further progress in inflation expectations and normalized pricing in the months ahead.
But rising home prices tied to strong demand in the housing market and outstanding geopolitical risks still threaten to push inflation higher in the months ahead, the report warned.
When could interest rates come down?
Macklem addressed Canadians’ questions about when interest rate cuts can begin in his remarks Wednesday. He said while the Bank of Canada is encouraged by its progress to date, policymakers need to be certain the recent easing in core inflation is not a “temporary dip.”
“What do we need to see to be convinced it’s time to cut? The short answer is we are seeing what we need to see, but we need to see it for longer to be confident that progress toward price stability will be sustained,” he said.
Grantham said the Bank of Canada’s statement Wednesday showed little rush towards eventual interest rate cuts. If core inflation continues to ease in Statistics Canada’s next two consumer price index reports, interest rate cuts could start at the central bank’s next decision on June 5, he said.
“Overall, the statement is in line with a central bank moving slowly towards lowering interest rates,” Grantham said.
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2024-04-10 11:38:04Z
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