Canada's six largest banks all foresee a half-point increase to
1.0% from 0.5% when the central bank releases its rate decision
at 10 a.m. ET (1400 GMT), rather than the quarter-point
increment the bank usually favors. Money markets see about a 85%
chance of the larger increase.
"Inflation is running well above the BoC's target, the economy
has fully recovered pandemic losses, and the jobless rate is the
lowest since at least the mid-1970s, leaving absolutely no
rationale for monetary policy to still be stimulative," said
Benjamin Reitzes, Canadian rates & macro strategist at BMO
Economics, in a note.
"It's time for the BoC to play catch-up."
The Bank of Canada last hiked by 50 basis points (bps) in May
2000.
The Bank has signaled it will act "forcefully" to tackle red-hot
inflation and Governor Tiff Macklem, last month, left the door
open for a 50-bps hike.
Inflation hit 5.7% in February, its 11th consecutive month above
the Bank of Canada's 1-3% range. The Bank last month hiked rates
for the first time in three years, increasing them to 0.5% from
a record low 0.25%.
The policy rate will be the main lever for the central bank's
drive to rein in inflation, with Canada's big bank economists
all anticipating a second half-point hike in June.
The Bank is also widely expected to start quantitative
tightening on Wednesday, allowing the large stake of government
bonds it amassed during the pandemic to roll off as they mature.
Reducing its share of the bond market could transmit monetary
policy more effectively to the economy, as borrowing costs tend
to be determined by longer-term rates rather than the very
short-term rate set by the BoC.
Still, the relative late start to tightening, coupled with the
risk of inflation expectations becoming unhinged as prices
continue to rise sharply, will force the Bank of Canada to move
more aggressively than it has in the past, said economists.
"Whereas in the past they would start to tighten sooner and go
slowly, this time they are tightening later, but they're
probably going to go a lot quicker," said Stephen Brown, senior
Canada economist at Capital Economics.
"What the topic is fast becoming now is where will rates end
up," he added. Money markets see rates peaking at about 3% next
year.
(Reporting by Julie Gordon in Ottawa, additional reporting by
Fergal Smith in Toronto; Editing by David Gregorio)
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