Vancouver Sun

BoC’s Poloz expected to hold rate, remain outlier

- THEOPHILOS ARGITIS

OTTAWA Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz, one of the few central bankers to resist the global push toward easier monetary policy, will probably maintain his wait-and-see approach.

The central bank is widely expected to hold its benchmark overnight rate at 1.75 per cent in a decision at 10 a.m. Wednesday in Ottawa, keeping it unchanged for a ninthstrai­ght meeting and leaving Canada with the highest policy interest rate among advanced economies.

Poloz has two big reasons to solidify his outlier status. Underlying price pressures have been steady and on target for well over a year, suggesting the economy has been running near capacity. Canada is also home to some of the highest household debt levels in the world, constraini­ng the central bank’s ability to cut further for fear of encouragin­g even more borrowing.

“We think we’ve got monetary conditions about right given the situation,” Poloz said at his last public appearance on Nov. 21. The Canadian economy is “still in a good place overall.”

Pressure on the Bank of Canada to match rate cuts by the U.S. Federal Reserve is easing anyhow. Markets have begun paring back bets that global monetary loosening has much left to go.

Swaps trading shows about a four-per-cent chance of a cut in Ottawa on Wednesday, and only onein-four odds of a move at the next meeting in January. All 27 economists surveyed by Bloomberg see the Bank of Canada holding steady on Wednesday.

To be sure, the Bank of Canada has begun hedging its bets by talking about the possibilit­y of a cut if needed, a nod to the growing risks from the trade conflict between the U.S. and China. Poloz could lower rates if he sees the uncertaint­y spilling over into the nation’s economy, particular­ly if it begins to crimp consumer sentiment.

But it will be a delicate balancing act. With the economy near its capacity, policy-makers will want to see either a clear materializ­ation of downside risks to the global economy — for example, the collapse of talks between China and the U.S. — or some evidence domestical­ly that the anticipate­d slowdown is sharper than expected.

Third-quarter output data released Friday showed a benign picture, however. The economy did slow to an annualized pace of 1.3 per cent, but growth came in exactly as forecast by the Bank of Canada. Exporters, the most exposed to the global trade tensions, struggled as expected, but business investment surprised with a strong rebound. That, along with the pick up in consumptio­n and housing and upward revisions to growth, will give policy-makers plenty of positives to draw on as they deliberate policy this week.

While doubts remain about whether the jump in business investment is sustainabl­e, consumptio­n and housing seem to be on more solid footing — supported by a robust jobs market, cheaper mortgage loans thanks to lower global bond yields and accelerate­d wage gains.

After the slowdown in the second half of 2019, growth should accelerate over the next two years back to around its potential as business investment and exports recover, and consumptio­n growth holds steady, the Bank of Canada estimates.

 ??  ?? Stephen Poloz
Stephen Poloz

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