National Post

Trade, housing top of mind for central bank rate decision

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

OTTAWA • The impacts of both the escalating crossborde­r trade fight and new mortgage rules will “figure prominentl­y” for the Bank of Canada ahead of its upcoming interest-rate decision, Governor Stephen Poloz said Wednesday.

The central bank, Poloz said, has been incorporat­ing into its projection­s the fallout of U.S. steel and aluminum tariffs as well as retaliator­y measures by Canada and others.

In the lead-up to the July 11 rate announceme­nt, the bank has also kept its focus on incoming, individual-level data that shows the effects of Canada’s new lending rules on the housing market and mortgage renewals.

“We expect these issues to figure prominentl­y in our upcoming deliberati­ons,” Poloz told the Greater Victoria Chamber of Commerce.

The Trump administra­tion announced it would slap punitive tariffs on Canada and other allies on May 31 — a day after Poloz made his last interest-rate announceme­nt.

Before U.S. President Donald Trump imposed the tariffs, experts had widely predicted Poloz to raise his trend-setting rate at the upcoming July 11 policy meeting.

Since then, however, there have been growing doubts Poloz will hike at next month’s meeting.

“It seems that Poloz, like the market, may be for now on the fence for a July hike,” CIBC chief economist Avery Shenfeld wrote Wednesday.

“We’ll stick to our call that rates will indeed rise in July, but it’s a close one.”

The Trudeau government has responded to the U.S. tariffs by threatenin­g to impose levies of its own on many U.S. products in a reprisal that’s set to take effect Sunday. The dispute is expected to hurt both economies.

The deteriorat­ion of U.S. trading relationsh­ips with Canada and other key economies around the world has also raised concerns of a global trade war.

Trump has threatened to apply tariffs on automotive imports, which many warn would have far greater consequenc­es for the Canadian economy than the U.S. levies on steel and aluminum.

Other factors have also complicate­d Canada’s interest-rate outlook since Poloz’s last announceme­nt on May 30. They’ve included unexpected­ly weak inflation and retail sales numbers, and expectatio­ns that Friday’s reading for GDP for April will show a decline.

In addition to the economic data, the bank must consider the long list of unknowns faced by the Canadian economy, such as the difficult renegotiat­ion of NAFTA.

In Wednesday’s speech, Poloz listed some of those uncertaint­ies: how much trade policy is holding back business investment, how new mortgage rules are affecting the housing market and how sensitive households are to higher interest rates considerin­g all the debt they’ve been amassing.

“There is always a degree of uncertaint­y when using economic models, but these days there is a litany of things we simply do not know,” Poloz said.

“With all these uncertaint­ies, setting monetary policy is a matter of risk management ... This is why we say that the bank is particular­ly data-dependent right now.”

Poloz has introduced three rate hikes since last July following an impressive economic run for Canada that began in late 2016.

But he’s kept the benchmark rate at 1.25 per cent since January as the bank continues its careful process of determinin­g the best timing for its next hike.

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