Bank of Canada seen holding on rates amid cooling inflation, financial
turmoil
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[April 12, 2023] By
Steve Scherer
OTTAWA (Reuters) - The Bank of Canada on Wednesday is expected to keep
rates on hold as inflation cools and because of stress in the global
banking system, despite the fact that growth accelerated in the first
quarter, analysts said.
Last month the Bank of Canada became the world's first major central
bank to pause its tightening campaign, leaving its benchmark rate at
4.50%. Governor Tiff Macklem said he wanted to let the eight previous
rate hikes sink in and would hold of on further increases as long as
inflation came down as forecast.
Inflation has been edging down, reaching 5.2% in February after peaking
at 8.1%, but growth at the start of the year has vastly outpaced the
bank's expectations. However, bank failures in the United States and
Europe have put central bankers on guard against a widespread credit
crunch.
"Having led the way to the sidelines, the widespread view is that the
global banking sector strains will have locked (the Bank of Canada)
there," said Doug Porter, chief economist at BMO Capital Markets, in a
note.
All 33 economists polled by Reuters agree that the Bank of Canada (BoC)
will hold its key overnight rate steady. Money markets are betting that
the central bank's next move will be a cut.
The BoC will also release its monetary policy report with new forecasts
on Wednesday. In January, the bank forecast 0.5% annualized growth in
the first quarter, but most analysts now expect it to be about 2.5%
after flatlining in the fourth quarter of last year.
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Governor of the Bank of Canada Tiff
Macklem walks outside the Bank of Canada building in Ottawa,
Ontario, Canada June 22, 2020. REUTERS/Blair Gable
"Were it not for banking sector turmoil, central bankers might have
seen enough evidence to raise rates again," said Royce Mendes, head
of macro strategy at Desjardins Group, in a note. The BoC will
continue to warn that more hikes are possible, he said.
Last month, Deputy Governor Toni Gravelle said the BoC was "ready to
act in the event of severe market-wide stress" in the financial
system while adding that currently Canada is nowhere near that
point.
That said, hedge fund bets against Canada's TD Bank Group last week
hit $4.2 billion, making it the most-shorted banking stock globally,
according to data provider ORTEX's calculations, with some analysts
concerned about the bank's exposure to U.S. regional lenders.
"Hiking in this environment would put markets on high alert," said
Jay Zhao-Murray, FX Market Analyst at Monex Canada, in a note.
Still, Canada's rapid population growth could lead to the BoC
raising its estimate of the neutral interest rate from its current
setting of a range between 2% and 3%, say analysts.
The neutral rate is the level at which monetary policy is neither
stimulating nor slowing the economy, so increasing the estimate
could indicate that the central bank expects rates to eventually
settle at a higher level than previously thought.
(Reporting by Steve Scherer, Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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