The Welland Tribune

Bank of Canada defends itself for staying silent before interest rate hike

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

OTTAWA — The Bank of Canada is defending itself amid questions about its public silence ahead of an interestra­te increase last week that caught many analysts by surprise.

The response came after BMO chief economist Doug Porter took issue with the central bank’s lack of public remarks in the eight weeks before the rate increase.

In a note to clients, Porter said he had no problem with the rate increase itself because the stronger economy had made a solid case for it.

But he blamed the informatio­n vacuum for causing a “great deal of uncertaint­y” and a “fairly violent market reaction.”

Canadians hadn’t heard a peep from the central bank since it raised the rate July 12 for the first time in nearly seven years, Porter wrote in Friday’s note.

Ahead of the July increase, senior officials including governor Stephen Poloz sent clear signals the bank had shifted to a rate-hiking path.

However, for nearly two months before last week’s announceme­nt, the bank went dark.

“There was no communicat­ion since the last meeting. Zilch. Zip. Nada. Nothing,” wrote Porter, who had been predicting the bank would wait until October to raise the rate.

“What we had here was a failure to communicat­e — an epic fail.”

Poloz’s communicat­ions style has come under fire in the past from those who felt he hadn’t adequately prepared markets for a rate move. Economists point to his January 2015 rate cut, which caught markets off guard.

Last week’s hike also came as a surprise, Porter argued, pointing to one survey that found only six of 33 forecaster­s had anticipate­d the increase.

In response to Porter’s criticisms, the Bank of Canada released a detailed defence of its communicat­ions approach.

Bank of Canada spokesman Jeremy Harrison said in a statement that market data before the hike showed the odds of a hike were about 50-50.

That, he said, indicated that a much larger percentage of traders had correctly made sense of the bank’s most recent messaging in July, which said future decisions would be guided by economic data.

Harrison also noted that surprising­ly robust numbers for secondquar­ter growth were released less than a week before this month’s rate announceme­nt — during the bank’s pre-decision blackout period. The bank has a policy of avoiding any external communicat­ions about the economic outlook and monetary policy in the week before rate decisions are announced.

Even without public remarks, markets made the link, Harrison argued.

“The significan­ce of (the secondquar­ter) annualized growth rate of 4.5 per cent, much stronger than the bank’s July projected estimate of three per cent, appeared clear to financial markets, with expectatio­ns for a September rate rise increasing in the days after its publicatio­n,” he said.

The bank’s summertime communicat­ions approach was not unusual, he added, because in three of the last four years it didn’t make any public remarks between the scheduled rate announceme­nts in July and September.

Krishen Rangasamy, a senior economist at National Bank, said despite the impressive growth numbers his shop was among those predicting the central bank would hold off until October in order to telegraph the move for markets.

“We thought in light of the amount of criticism the Bank of Canada has had in the past, they would probably have learned from this and basically prepared markets for a rate hike,” said Rangasamy, who noted the dollar surged after last week’s unexpected announceme­nt.

Rangasamy agreed that the economic data supported the bank’s rate-hiking decision, but he thinks the bank’s communicat­ions strategy could use some work.

“I don’t think anybody will forget about the rate cut that was delivered ... January (2015) — that came out of the blue,” he said. “And since then the Bank of Canada had been under criticism for the way they communicat­e.”

A few weeks before the July rate hike, Poloz made public comments that two 2015 cuts he introduced as insurance following the collapse in oil prices had done their job. He was widely expected to raise the rate again to essentiall­y reverse the bank’s other 2015 reduction.

Ian Lee, an economics professor at Carleton University, said the fact market expectatio­n sofa rate hike last week were about 50-50 suggests the bank could have offered more informatio­n to help keep traders from going down the wrong road.

“You would think that it should be higher than a flip of the coin in terms of the anticipati­on of where the bank is going,” Lee said.

Porter, meanwhile, said he believes there have been profound implicatio­ns from the bank’s progressiv­e shift in tone. He suggested the steep climb in the value of the Canadian dollar since the spring has been related to the bank’s tone swing from that of an institutio­n on the verge of another rate cut as recently as early 2017 to that of “the most aggressive hiker in the world.”

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Stephen Poloz

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