The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Bank of Canada boss sends signals

Macklem charts path out of pandemic stimulus

- KEVIN CARMICHAEL

“It is reasonable to expect that when we do eventually need to reduce monetary stimulus, our first move will be to raise the target for the overnight rate, our policy interest rate.” Tiff Macklem Bank of Canada governor

Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem has begun the delicate work of extricatin­g the central bank from the bond market.

Macklem used a speech Thursday to chart an end to the Bank of Canada’s first use of quantitati­ve easing, a relatively aggressive approach to keeping interest rates low that involves central banks using their unique ability to create money to purchase financial assets.

The Bank of Canada deployed QE to fight the COVID-19 recession, and has so far acquired more than $330 billion of Government of Canada debt since the end of March 2020. Central bankers dislike becoming active players in private markets, but without their interventi­on, the cost of borrowing money to invest probably would drift higher, slowing the recovery.

“As the recovery progresses, we are moving closer to a time when continuing to add stimulus through QE will no longer be necessary,” Macklem said in remarks prepared for an event hosted by Fédération des chambres de commerce du Québec.

“We are not there yet. That timing is a monetary policy decision that will depend on economic developmen­ts.”

The recession that the pandemic triggered is over, but the recovery remains well short of Macklem’s goals. For example, the labour underutili­zation rate — an indicator that combines the jobless rate with the number of potential workers who aren’t looking for jobs and employed people who worked less than half their usual number of hours — was 14.4 per cent in July, down from 34.8 per cent in May 2020, but still higher than 11.4 per cent in February 2020.

Also, gross domestic product contracted at an annual rate of about one per cent in the second quarter, a decline that Macklem described as “more pronounced that we anticipate­d.” Indeed; forecaster­s, including the Bank of Canada, had predicted an increase.

The Bank of Canada expects “strong” growth over the second half of the year, but policy makers nonetheles­s opted to leave the benchmark lending rate pinned near zero at the end of their latest round of policy deliberati­ons.

They also said they would continue to purchase federal debt at a pace of about $2 billion per week. Bay Street economists and the bond traders they advise are trying to figure out when policy makers will taper that amount to zero.

Macklem offered no clues about when that will happen, but he did provide a path that should allow market participan­ts plenty of time to figure it out.

The end of QE won’t mean the end of the Bank of Canada’s active participat­ion at bond auctions. Macklem said the central bank will pivot to a “reinvestme­nt phase” that will use the proceeds of maturing securities to maintain the Bank of Canada’s portfolio at current levels. The governor said those purchases likely will average about $1 billion per week.

“When we arrive at the reinvestme­nt phase, we will communicat­e this monetary policy decision clearly,” he said.

“When we get to the reinvestme­nt phase and how long we are in it are monetary policy decisions that will depend on the strength of the recovery and the evolution of inflation.”

Prices represent the biggest wildcard. The consumer price index increased 3.7 per cent in July from a year earlier, matching the biggest gain in a decade. Macklem reiterated that he thinks most of the upward pressure on inflation is the result of temporary factors related to the pandemic, but he conceded that he can’t be sure of that.

The central bank’s target for inflation is two per cent, so it can’t tolerate price increases at current levels forever, which is why some Bay Street analysts think policymake­rs could taper QE as early as next month.

Macklem didn’t close the door on that possibilit­y, emphasizin­g the reinvestme­nt phase should also be seen as stimulus because it will keep an elevated amount of money in the financial system.

He reiterated that he intends to leave the benchmark interest rate unchanged until the second half of next year but made clear that there was no link between the decision about when to raise the interest rate and when to reduce the size of the Bank of Canada’s crisis-era bond holdings.

“Eventually, the reinvestme­nt phase will end, and we will stop purchasing bonds to replace the ones that are maturing,” Macklem said.

“It is reasonable to expect that when we do eventually need to reduce monetary stimulus, our first move will be to raise the target for the overnight rate, our policy interest rate.”

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK • REUTERS ?? Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem says the Canadian economy is moving closer to the point where the bank will no longer need to continue adding stimulus to the economy through its quantitati­ve easing program, but it is not there yet.
SEAN KILPATRICK • REUTERS Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem says the Canadian economy is moving closer to the point where the bank will no longer need to continue adding stimulus to the economy through its quantitati­ve easing program, but it is not there yet.

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