Bank of Canada Leaves the Door Open to a June Cut

 | Apr 11, 2024 07:45

Interest rate cut expectations have receded everywhere following the US inflation data, but there are subtle dovish incremental shifts within the BoC’s commentary that suggest should inflation and unemployment continue with their current momentum then the BoC are open to a June rate cut. The Canadian dollar is facing more downside risksh2 Cautious Optimism on Inflation/h2

The Bank of Canada has left the target for the overnight rate at 5%, in line with market expectations, and is continuing with its policy of quantitative tightening. Nonetheless, there are subtle dovish shifts.

The statement acknowledges that “a broad range of indicators suggest that labour market conditions continue to ease” and with the workforce growing more quickly than those employed, we are seeing a rise in the unemployment rate, which is helping to moderate wage pressures. The BoC do expect growth to “pick up in 2024” after having stalled in the second half of 2023, so while there is “excess supply” in the economy this will be gradually absorbed through 2025 and 2026.

This excess supply has meant an easing of price pressures in the economy and the BoC now expect CPI to move below 2.5% year-on-year in the second half of 2024 “and reach the 2% inflation target in 2025”. The BoC state that inflation “is still too high” but they appear to have adopted a slightly more dovish position, dropping the sentence “the Council is still concerned about the risks to the outlook for inflation, particularly the persistence in underlying inflation”. This has been replaced with “the Council will be looking for evidence that this downward momentum [in inflation] is sustained”.

In the press conference, Governor Tiff Macklem said a June rate cut is “within the realm of possibilities”.

h2 Inflation and Unemployment Moving in the "Right" Direction/h2