Truro News

BoC defends silence before rate hike

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The Bank of Canada is defending itself amid questions about its public silence ahead of an interest-rate hike last week that caught many analysts by surprise.

BMO chief economist Doug Porter is taking issue with the lack of public remarks by the central bank in the eight weeks before a rate increase that he says caused a fairly violent market reaction.

In a note Friday to clients, Porter wrote that while he thought the case for a rate increase was strong, he felt the Bank of Canada’s silent summer created a great deal of uncertaint­y for markets ahead of the decision.

Porter argues that the rate hike caught many analysts off guard – and he points to one survey that found only six of 33 forecaster­s had anticipate­d the increase.

But a Bank of Canada spokesman says market data before the hike showed roughly 50-50 odds of an increase – revealing that a much greater percentage of traders were correctly interpreti­ng the bank’s most-recent messaging from early July.

In response to Porter’s criticisms, Jeremy Harrison also says key figures showing surprising­ly strong second-quarter growth were released less than a week

before the rate announceme­nt – during the bank’s pre-decision blackout period.

He says the communicat­ions approach was not unusual because

in three of the last four years the bank didn’t make any public remarks between the scheduled rate announceme­nts in July and September.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? The Bank of Canada is defending itself amid questions about its public silence ahead of an interest-rate hike last week that caught many analysts by surprise.
CP PHOTO The Bank of Canada is defending itself amid questions about its public silence ahead of an interest-rate hike last week that caught many analysts by surprise.

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