Emboldened Bank of Canada to step up pace of rate rises
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[October 31, 2018]
By Ross Finley
LONDON (Reuters) - The Bank of Canada will
raise interest rates three times next year, although a firm majority of
economists in a snap Reuters poll said it would hold fire at its
December meeting.
Now that Canada's trading arrangements with the United States and Mexico
have been signed into a deal and a great uncertainty lifted, the BoC
made clear at its October meeting the economy does not need more
stimulus.
Not only did the central bank drop the word "gradual" from its policy
guidance on rates but also said it needs to get the overnight rate, now
at a decade high of 1.75 percent, to neutral sooner rather than later.
The latest Reuters poll of 26 economists taken Oct 26-31 concludes that
the overnight rate will reach the bottom end of what the BoC deems the
neutral range of 2.50-3.50 percent by the end of next year. The previous
Reuters poll had rates at 2.25 percent by end-2019 and no clear
consensus for further rises.
Five of 26 economists forecast a rate rise to 2.0 percent at the
December meeting. Financial markets are currently pricing in a roughly
one-in-three chance of that happening.
"The BoC seems to have redefined their 'gradual approach' to mean that
tightening every second meeting might be insufficient to prevent
inflation from accelerating. BoC officials thus appear more worried than
this summer about falling behind the curve, a profound shift in the
market's mindset in our view," noted Sebastien Lavoie, chief economist
at Laurentian Bank.
"This means that, if the current positive economic momentum holds and
geopolitical and trade tensions do not generate excessive market
jitters, another hike at the December 5th meeting cannot be ruled out
and might in fact be expected."
Indeed, policymakers have made clear each meeting is now "live" and if
economic data justify higher rates by the first week of December, nobody
will have the right to claim a rate rise came as a surprise.
The new rate path predicted by the Reuters poll brings the BoC more in
line with expectations for the U.S. Federal Reserve, which is also
likely to raise the federal funds rate three times next year.
The Canadian dollar, which rallied half a cent on Oct 24 after the BoC's
decision to raise rates and provide new guidance, is trading more firmly
as a result.
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A cyclist rides past the Bank of Canada building, Ontario, Canada,
July 11, 2018. REUTERS/Chris Wattie
A majority of economists who answered additional questions in the poll
broadly agreed with the central bank's latest views on growth and
inflation.
In the most recent Reuters survey on the Canadian economic outlook,
taken a few weeks ago, inflation was forecast to remain above the BoC's
2 percent target throughout the forecast horizon.
But economists were almost split down the middle in the latest survey on
whether the central bank was right to suggest rates may rise faster than
they did earlier in the cycle.
The sticking point is over how much debt Canadian households are
carrying, most of it attached to mortgages taken out to purchase
property during boom times for the housing market.
Canada's household debt to income ratio was last reported at just under
170 percent, one of the highest in the world, and much higher than in
the United States.
"Given the effect on debt service costs, the Bank risks a serious policy
mistake if it proceeds at a faster pace from here," warned Stephen
Brown, senior economist at Capital Economics.
Unlike in the U.S., where the last global financial crisis was triggered
by falling house prices and resulted in a major correction as well as in
household balance sheets, Canada's housing market, along with debt, has
moved up in nearly a straight line.
"We still think highly indebted households' sensitivity to rising rates
warrants a gradual approach to lifting borrowing costs," noted Josh Nye,
senior economist at RBC.
"But with the economy at full capacity and inflation on target, it's
also hard to argue monetary policy shouldn't be at a more neutral
setting."
(Writing by Ross Finley; Polling and additional reporting by Mumal
Rathore in BENGALURU; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)\
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