Nest egg no more: Inflation eats Canadian consumer cash pile, risking
growth
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[June 02, 2022] By
Julie Gordon and Fergal Smith
OTTAWA (Reuters) - An extra C$8,300
($6,600) in your pocket.
That is roughly how much the average Canadian saved during the pandemic,
with the central bank betting on C$40 billion in added spending through
the end of next year as consumers draw down those stockpiles.
But soaring inflation has already offset two-thirds of the buying power
of that excess cash, according to one estimate, with some Canadians
dipping in to pandemic savings to pay for everyday essentials instead of
a new paddleboard or a weekend getaway.
"When I adjust for inflation, the extra purchasing power from excess
savings has been eroded pretty significantly by higher prices," said
Royce Mendes, head of macro strategy at Desjardins Group.
"Paddleboards haven't gone up two-thirds," he added. "But the price of
everything you consume has gone up 7%. And that is eating in to this
buffer that you had to buy the extra goods or go out for dinner that
extra time."
Rising food and shelter costs drove Canada's inflation rate to a
three-decade high of 6.8% in April. The Bank of Canada responded with a
50-basis-point interest hike on Wednesday, taking the benchmark rate to
1.5%, and hinted at a more aggressive pace to come.
It said stronger exports and robust consumer spending will fuel "solid"
second-quarter growth.
But spend-happy consumers could vanish more quickly than the Bank
expects as their purchasing power dwindles, raising questions about rosy
growth projections just as higher interest rates slow the housing
market.
"In some ways you are already starting to see some cracks emerge in the
foundation of consumer confidence," Mendes said.
EXCESS CASH
Canadians saved an extra C$300 billion during the pandemic, economists
estimate. Of that, some went into stocks, housing and other investments,
but roughly C$100 billion remains sitting in bank accounts just waiting
to be spent.
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A child points as his family walks inside Sherway Gardens mall
during the stage two reopening from coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
restrictions in Toronto, Ontario, Canada June 30, 2021. REUTERS/Alex
So far, spending is holding up against higher prices. Credit card outlays are
running about 30% above 2019 levels, according to the RBC Consumer Spending
Tracker.
But BMO's Real Financial Progress Index found more than 80% of Canadians are
adjusting their lifestyle to offset higher costs, with nearly a third
reconsidering vacations. And just 14.8% of consumers think now is a good time to
buy big-ticket items, the Conference Board of Canada said.
The pessimism is fueled by a combination of hot inflation, rising interest rates
and the uncertainty caused by Russia's invasion of Ukraine, said Sohaib Shahid,
director of economic innovation at the Conference Board.
"Consumers don't like uncertainty and these tensions have brought about a lot of
uncertainty," he said.
On the flip side, higher-income households saved more than others during the
pandemic and are far less sensitive to rising prices, said economists.
Still, tumbling housing prices and stock market declines are eroding the wealth
effect, while surging gasoline prices and rising interest rates are squeezing
budgets.
"For now, consumers are hanging in," said Sal Guatieri, senior economist at BMO
Economics.
($1 = 1.2648 Canadian dollars)
(Reporting by Julie Gordon in Ottawa and Fergal Smith in Toronto; Editing by
Denny Thomas and Matthew Lewis)
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