Windsor Star

Analysts reassessin­g outlooks following growth

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

OTTAWA A surprising­ly powerful performanc­e from the Canadian economy is pushing some forecaster­s to change their outlooks — starting with their prediction­s for Wednesday’s central bank rate announceme­nt.

It’s also led others to start questionin­g whether the Trudeau government’s multibilli­on-dollar plan to boost infrastruc­ture spending for the coming years risks overheatin­g an already-sizzling economy.

Last week, the latest numbers showed the economy expanded at an annual pace of 4.5 per cent in the second quarter of 2017. The bigger-than-expected surge, driven by consumer spending, followed an impressive jolt of 3.7 per cent growth over the first three months of the year.

The growth, which is measured by real gross domestic product, caught markets by surprise and has many experts revising their expectatio­ns on when the Bank of Canada will hike its trendsetti­ng rate.

More of them now expect the next increase to land Wednesday, instead of later this fall as most had anticipate­d just days ago.

“Everybody was wrong by a wide margin — that really doesn’t happen very often,” Randall Bartlett, chief economist for a University of Ottawa think-tank, said in reference to the secondquar­ter GDP number beating the consensus call of 3.7 per cent.

“That kind of spooked everybody in the market.”

Scotiabank’s Derek Holt is among those who moved up their rate call after the GDP release.

While he acknowledg­es a rate hike Wednesday is no “slam dunk,” he expects governor Stephen Poloz to move because growth has far exceeded the Bank of Canada’s projection­s.

Holt said the economy has seen an average annualized growth rate of 3.75 per cent over the last four quarters, which more than doubles the central bank’s estimate for that period.

Poloz raised the rate in July to 0.75 per cent from 0.5 per cent to undo one of the two 25-basis-point cuts he introduced in 2015 following a collapse in oil prices. He’s widely expected to increase it by another 25 basis points.

But despite the big GDP numbers to start 2017, many analysts — including Bartlett — still expect Poloz to wait until October. Next month’s scheduled announceme­nt will be accompanie­d by the bank’s quarterly update of its projection­s, as well as a news conference, which would allow him to thoroughly explain his decision.

The stronger-than-expected economy has also encouraged some experts to call on the federal government to revisit the timing of its massive infrastruc­turespendi­ng plan.

National Bank senior economist Krishen Rangasamy said Ottawa should consider delaying nearerterm investment­s as the economy strengthen­s.

“These days, there are fewer folks arguing for infrastruc­ture stimulus,” Rangasamy wrote.

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