Bank of Canada raises rates, first major bank to signal pause
After raising rates to highest level in 15 years, the central bank said it will hold off further increases for now.
The Bank of Canada on Wednesday raised its key interest rate to 4.5 percent, the highest level in 15 years, and became the first major central bank fighting global inflation to say it would likely hold off on further increases for now.
The 25-basis-point increase was in line with analysts’ expectations. The bank has raised rates at a record pace of 425 basis points in 10 months to tame inflation, which peaked at 8.1 percent and slowed to 6.3 percent in December, still more than three times the bank’s 2 percent target.
The members of the Governing Council “clearly have enough confidence that the tightening currently in place is already slowing the economy that they are comfortable they won’t need to lift rates further in most scenarios,” said Andrew Kelvin, chief Canada strategist at TD Securities.
Growth this year will be stronger than had been projected in October but is expected to stall through the first half, the bank said in its quarterly Monetary Policy Report (MPR), which includes new forecasts. Inflation will fall to about 3 percent around the middle of this year, and reach target next year.
“We are turning the corner on inflation,” Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem told reporters. “We are still a long way from our target, but recent developments have reinforced our confidence that inflation is coming down.”
If the economy evolves as forecasted, the bank “expects to hold the policy rate at its current level while it assesses the impact of the cumulative interest rate increases,” the statement announcing the rate rise said.
“Governing Council is prepared to increase the policy rate further if needed to return inflation to the 2 percent target,” the statement said.
The central bank had said in December that future rate decisions would be data-dependent, and a blowout December employment report, released earlier this month, highlighted the upside risk to wage and price growth.
“The Bank of Canada is back to using forward guidance,” said Royce Mendes, director and head of macro strategy at Desjardins. “That likely ensures a pause in the rate-hiking cycle for at least the next few months.”
While food and shelter cost increases are still weighing on households and headline inflation is still high, the bank said in its MPR that “three-month CPI inflation has fallen to about 3.5 percent, suggesting a significant slowdown in inflation in coming months.”