The Bank of Canada surprised most analysts today by cutting Canada's 2013 growth estimate (to 2.0%) and calling the timing of the next rate hike ¡°less imminent than previously anticipated.¡±
The BoC has used the ¡°less imminent" wording before, but not in any recent rate decision statements. It attributed its position, in part, to ¡°more muted inflation¡± and cooling household debt levels.
The decision leaves Canada¡¯s prime rate stuck at 3.00% for the 27th straight month¡ªto the delight of most variable-rate mortgage holders.
These were some highlights from today¡¯s announcement:
¡°Core inflation has softened by more than the Bank had expected¡¡±
¡°¡global tail risks have diminished.¡±
¡°Caution about high debt levels has begun to restrain household spending.¡±
¡°¡exports should remain below their pre-recession peak until the second half of 2014¡¡±
¡°¡Some modest withdrawal of monetary policy stimulus will likely be required over time¡¡±
The benchmark 5-year bond, which is closely correlated with fixed mortgage rates, fell 5 bps to 1.41% on the Bank¡¯s decision.
Economists will now likely revise their rate hike calls (which have proven hopelessly non-predictive) to late 2013 or early 2014.
The next Bank of Canada Rate meeting is six weeks away on March 6.
One interesting side note: The Bank added that household debt growth has eased to just 3%. That¡¯s the weakest annualized rate since 1999 and it reflects ¡°a slowdown in the growth of both residential mortgage
and consumer credit.¡±
Canadians are both voluntarily heeding government debt warnings and being forced to heed them through stricter lending rules.
One interesting side note: The Bank added that household debt growth has eased to just 3%. That¡¯s the weakest annualized rate since 1999 and it reflects ¡°a slowdown in the growth of both residential mortgage
and consumer credit.¡±
Canadians are both voluntarily heeding government debt warnings and being forced to heed them through stricter lending rules.
One interesting side note: The Bank added that household debt growth has eased to just 3%. That¡¯s the weakest annualized rate since 1999 and it reflects ¡°a slowdown in the growth of both residential mortgage
and consumer credit.¡±
Canadians are both voluntarily heeding government debt warnings and being forced to heed them through stricter lending rules.