Central bank expected to maintain rates as Canada’s economy unexpectedly contracts

Central bank expected to maintain rates as Canada’s economy unexpectedly contracts

OTTAWA, Sept‌ 1 (Reuters) – Canada’s economy unexpectedly contracted in the second‍ quarter at ‍an annualized rate of 0.2% and growth was most likely flat ‍in July, ​data showed on Friday, a result that ​will probably allow the central bank to ‌hold rates amid ‍a possible recession.The second-quarter⁤ reading was ‌far lower than the Bank of Canada’s (BoC’s) forecast for⁢ a 1.5% annualized GDP ​growth as well as the 1.2% gain expected by⁣ analysts. June gross domestic product declined⁤ 0.2%‌ from May, ⁤in line⁢ with forecasts.”The⁢ Canadian economy⁤ may ⁣already‌ have fallen into a modest ⁢recession,” said Stephen Brown, deputy chief North American economist for⁢ Capital Economics. The ⁢figures “leave little⁣ doubt that the Bank ​of Canada will keep interest rates unchanged ‌next week,” he said.The⁣ quarterly slowdown was largely due to declines in housing investment and smaller inventory accumulation as well as slower​ international⁤ exports and household spending, Statistics Canada said.In June, ⁣Canadian wildfires adversely impacted multiple industries, including ‍mining and​ quarrying and​ rail transportation.Friday’s GDP report is the last major piece of domestic ​data before ‍the BoC makes its next policy decision on ⁤Wednesday. Thirty-one of 34 economists polled
by​ Reuters⁢
between Aug.‍ 24-30 expect no change ‍to the central bank’s overnight⁢ rate at the ​meeting.”It becomes easy ​for the bank ⁣to say, ‘monetary policy is continuing to work and ⁢it justifies an on-hold ⁤stance at this month’s meeting,'” said Andrew Kelvin, chief Canada strategist at TD⁤ Securities.Money markets sharply trimmed bets for an interest rate increase⁤ next week, pricing ‌in a 7% chance after the GDP figures⁢ were released compared with⁢ a 23% chance ⁣before.The yield ⁢on Canada’s 2-year bond , which tends to be sensitive to the BoC rate⁣ outlook, eased 9.1 basis points to ⁣4.555%. The 10-year rate was unchanged at 3.565%.The Canadian dollar was trading 0.5%‍ lower at 1.3574 to the greenback, or ‍73.67 U.S. cents,​ while also losing ground against all the other G10 currencies.The central ⁣bank hiked its⁤ benchmark overnight rate to‌ a⁢ 22-year-high of 5.0%⁣ in July, the ​tenth increase since March of ⁤last year. Inflation last year hit ⁢a four-decade⁢ high of 8.1%, four⁣ times the central bank’s 2%​ target.Since then⁢ the bank ⁣has‌ said its future moves‍ would depend on its reading of the ‍data, which‍ have been mixed. ⁣Inflation surged more​ than expected in July to 3.3%, but the economy unexpectedly shed⁢ jobs‍ in‌ July and the jobless rate ticked up to 5.5%.Statscan⁢ on Friday also downwardly ​revised May GDP to an increase of 0.2% from an initial report of 0.3% growth. First-quarter annualized growth rate was also downwardly revised to ‍2.6%​ from ⁢3.1%.”It looks as if growth ​is going to struggle to stay‍ positive‌ in ‍the third quarter as well,” said ​Doug Porter, chief economist ‍at‍ BMO Capital ‌Markets.The high ⁢interest rate environment has coincided‌ with falling housing investment, ⁢which recorded ⁣its ​fifth consecutive quarterly…

Article⁤ from www.reuters.com

Exit mobile version