National Post

Arc-seven Generation­s merger may spark more oilpatch tie-ups, Analysts say.

- SHELLY HAGAN

Canadians appear to be in no rush to draw down about $150 billion in extra savings accumulate­d during the pandemic, a potential drag for the nation’s already lagging economic performanc­e.

Almost seven in 10 Canadians say they expect to maintain or increase current savings levels over the next year, according to a survey by Nanos research Group for bloomberg. Only 27 per cent anticipate they will have less savings.

The poll adds to a growing list of indicators casting doubt on whether the nation’s households will ever spend government checks, among the most generous in the developed world, they received at the height of the pandemic.

While other countries have seen a similar pick- up in savings, the trend has been more pronounced in Canada, and some economists worry elevated household debt levels may be one reason. Treated to larger handouts, people saved it all to shore up their balance sheets.

“Canadians will look over their shoulders at the mountain of debt and say, ‘Maybe I should use that extra money to pay down the debt burden rather than spend more,’” david Tulk, a Toronto-based portfolio manager at Fidelity Investment­s, said by phone. “It takes a bit away from the cyclical recovery.”

A separate poll by Nanos last month found that three out of four Canadians see their top financial priority as paying down debt or retaining an elevated level of savings. The bank of Canada, citing its own household survey, has chosen to assume Canadians won’t spend their accumulate­d savings.

What happens to the cash stockpile will be critical for the pace of Canada’s post-virus recovery, since consumptio­n makes up more than half of the country’s output.

The bank of Canada’s weaker-than-consensus outlook on consumer spending is one reason it anticipate­s only a 4 per cent rebound in 2021, slower than most economists are predicting. It sees the u.s. growing by 5 per cent.

Officials concede there are upside risks to their assumption, and the issue remains a point of contention among investors and economists.

ed devlin, founder at devlin Capital Inc., believes the bank of Canada may be underestim­ating the amount of consumptio­n that will take place once the lockdowns are over and the economy reopens.

“We could be in for a very sharp uptick,” devlin said in a telephone interview. A drawdown of savings and more fiscal stimulus “could mean a really much more aggressive growth profile,” he said.

Pierre Ouimet, Chief Strategist at ubs bank Canada, also believes consumers will choose to spend their savings rather than hold onto them, one reason he’s turning more bullish on Canadian equities, including consumer discretion­ary stocks.

“When confidence comes back, people will tend to spend money and borrow more,” Ouimet said by phone.

“When they’re not confident and worried about the future, they save more.”

It’s an issue that preoccupie­s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government. Like Ouimet, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland believes the checks will be spent once confidence levels return. To emphasize the point, she rebranded the government’s efforts last year as “preloaded stimulus.”

Transfers to households increased by about $100 billion in the first nine months of 2020 from a year earlier. That compares with a decline of just $7 billion in household income. In other words, Canadians received $14 in transfers for every $1 lost.

 ?? Peter J THOMPSON / NATIONAL POST ?? Results of a Nanos poll indicating seven of 10 Canadians intend to save rather than spend extra cash balances from
federal pandemic relief programs put a “cyclical recovery” in doubt, says an analyst at Fidelity Investment­s.
Peter J THOMPSON / NATIONAL POST Results of a Nanos poll indicating seven of 10 Canadians intend to save rather than spend extra cash balances from federal pandemic relief programs put a “cyclical recovery” in doubt, says an analyst at Fidelity Investment­s.

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