Toronto Star

Expected hike six months in making for Bank of Canada

First increase in borrowing costs since January expected from Poloz Wednesday

- THEOPHILOS ARGITIS

OTTAWA— Stephen Poloz can’t hold off raising interest rates any longer.

Economists are predicting the Bank of Canada governor will resume tightening policy this Wednesday in what would be the first increase in borrowing costs since January. More hikes are set to follow as businesses warn of wage pressures and inflation remains above the central bank’s target.

Poloz, however, is still unlikely to be in a hurry.

There remains a long list of reasons for prudence, starting with the real possibil- ity Canada gets into a trade war with its biggest trading partner.

And if the recent past is any indication, the Bank of Canada’s tendency will be to default to caution and wait for data to force its hand — a framework most analysts expect will produce a rate hike every half year or so.

“The message is that the Bank of Canada sees the need for higher rates but has also made clear it needs to get sufficient economic data to confirm the economy can live with it,” Avery Shenfeld, chief economist at CIBC World Markets Inc., said in a phone interview. “There is no preset calendar to higher rates and how fast they come will depend on how well the economy does.”

The hyper data-dependency reflects in large part the emphasis Poloz places on uncertaint­y in policy making. That means, in Poloz’s parlance, not following models mechanical­ly, using a “risk management” approach to decision making and placing a high value on incoming economic data.

“There is no preset calendar to higher rates and how fast they come will depend on how well the economy does.”

AVERY SHENFELD CIBC WORLD MARKETS

And right now, the accumulate­d data since the last hike in January is too compelling to ignore.

Inflation has slowly marched above the central bank’s 2 per cent target and is heading higher.

The unemployme­nt rate is near the lowest in four decades, and executives are more likely to complain about labour shortages than lack of business. Wages have been accelerati­ng. Exports and investment — the big disappoint­ments over the past decade — are finally looking healthy, which lessens the economy’s reliance on consumers and makes the expansion more resilient.

Of 18 economists surveyed by Bloomberg,14 are expecting the Bank of Canada to raise its benchmark rate by a quarter point this week to 1.5 per cent. Market pricing is in line, with investors placing odds of more than 80 per cent on a hike at Wednesday’s decision, which includes a fresh economic forecast and press conference.

After that, it’s expected to be a bit of crawl. Odds of another hike by the end of this year are only 50-50 and no more than three hikes in total — including the one this week — are priced in over the next 12 months, which would bring rates to 2 per cent.

Chances of hikes beyond that are deemed slim.

If the market is right, that would sill leave rates well below what is considered normal — the Bank of Canada estimates its neutral rate at no less than 2.5 per cent. In other words, gradualism will persist.

Policy normalizat­ion is a delicate task. Interest rates are still very low and the Canadian dollar has weakened, providing extremely accommodat­ive financial conditions.

In real terms — adjusted for inflation — the official benchmark rate is among the lowest in the world, according to estimates from Derek Holt, head of capital markets economics at Scotiabank.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada