After last week's news that Canada's headline CPI fell to 1.6 percent in September, market expectations for the next Bank of Canada rate move swiftly pivoted to a 50 basis point reduction, rather than the 25 basis point cuts seen up until now. The media characterized such a potential move as "outsized", "jumbo" and such, although those with longer memories (such as your blogger) know that such moves were commonplace in the past. There were even a few voices calling for a 75 basis point cut.
Today the Bank of Canada duly met the consensus expectation, delivering a 50 basis point cut that brings the overnight rate target to 3.75 percent. The longer-than-usual media release, accompanied by an updated Monetary Policy Report, is at times almost triumphalist in tone. It is clear that the Bank is now convinced that it has, along with its international peers, successfully brought the economy to the much-vaunted soft landing.
The international picture is favourable, notwithstanding the armed conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East (which don't even merit a mention): The Bank continues to expect the global economy to expand at a rate of about 3% over the next two years.... Inflation in advanced economies has declined in recent months, and is now around central bank targets. Global financial conditions have eased since July, in part because of market expectations of lower policy interest rates. Global oil prices are about $10 lower than assumed in the July Monetary Policy Report (MPR).
As for Canada, the Bank acknowledges that the economy remains in excess supply (as reflected in the higher unemployment rate), but expects faster growth to absorb that excess in the coming years: In Canada, the economy grew at around 2% in the first half of the year and we expect growth of 1¾% in the second half. Consumption has continued to grow but is declining on a per person basis..... GDP growth is forecast to strengthen gradually over the projection horizon, supported by lower interest rates. This forecast largely reflects the net effect of a gradual pick up in consumer spending per person and slower population growth..... Overall, the Bank forecasts GDP growth of 1.2% in 2024, 2.1% in 2025, and 2.3% in 2026. As the economy strengthens, excess supply is gradually absorbed.
The Bank's comments on the inflation outlook are worth quoting in full:
CPI inflation has declined significantly from 2.7% in June to 1.6% in September. Inflation in shelter costs remains elevated but has begun to ease. Excess supply elsewhere in the economy has reduced inflation in the prices of many goods and services. The drop in global oil prices has led to lower gasoline prices. These factors have all combined to bring inflation down. The Bank’s preferred measures of core inflation are now below 2½%. With inflationary pressures no longer broad-based, business and consumer inflation expectations have largely normalized.
The Bank expects inflation to remain close to the target over the projection horizon, with the upward and downward pressures on inflation roughly balancing out. The upward pressure from shelter and other services gradually diminishes, and the downward pressure on inflation recedes as excess supply in the economy is absorbed.
One small curiosity here. At the time of its last rate announcement, the Bank warned that a "base effect" could push CPI temporarily higher in the coming months, as low monthly increases from a year ago fell out of the calculation. No mention of that this time, even though the risk of a near-term uptick surely remains. September's decline in headline CPI below the 2 percent target, welcome as it may have been, was in the end largely down to a sharp fall in gasoline prices. Gas prices have rebounded strongly in October, so it would be no surprise to see an immediate uptick in headline CPI. Evidently the Bank is convinced that the easing in overall price pressures is now sufficiently broad-based that it need no longer fret unduly over this possibility.
As well as announcing the 50 basis point rate cut, the Bank ends its media release with something close to a promise: If the economy evolves broadly in line with our latest forecast, we expect to reduce the policy rate further. However, the timing and pace of further reductions in the policy rate will be guided by incoming information and our assessment of its implications for the inflation outlook. We will take decisions one meeting at a time.
This may or may not turn out to be the only "outsize jumbo" rate move in the current easing cycle. However, it is now clear that the overnight rate target will head towards 3 percent in the next few months. Further reductions beyond that point will only happen if the real economy underperforms the Bank's expectations.
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