The Bank of Canada delivered a second consecutive interest rate cut of half a percentage point on Wednesday, but signalled the pace of easing may slow as uncertainty builds in the Canadian economy.
The central bank’s policy rate now stands at 3.25 per cent after the fifth rate cut in a row.
The move was widely expected by markets and economists amid signs of a slowdown in Canada’s economy.
Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem said Wednesday that with the central bank now having “substantially” cut its policy rate since June, Canadians should not expect as rapid a pace of cuts.
“We anticipate a more gradual approach to monetary policy if the economy evolves broadly as expected,” he said.
Macklem confirmed that the Bank of Canada is considering “further reductions in the policy rate.”
But he did not provide much more specifics when asked by reporters about whether that means monetary policymakers will revert to more typical 25-basis-point steps at future meetings or whether a pause in the rate-cut cycle was in the cards.
“What does a more gradual approach mean? Well, we’ve just cut by 50 basis points at the last two meetings. So more gradual is more gradual than that,” he said.
The central bank’s policy rate broadly sets the cost of borrowing in Canada and is a key input for interest rates Canadians pay on their mortgages and other loans. Monetary policymakers raise the rate to slow spending in the economy and tamp down inflation, and reduce it when it’s time to stimulate growth again.
The latest half-point cut brings the Bank of Canada’s policy rate to the top end of its “neutral” range, where the cost of borrowing is viewed as neither overly restricting or stimulating the economy.
Macklem said that with inflation back at two per cent, it’s clear the Bank of Canada’s benchmark rate no longer needs to be in “restrictive” territory, and said past interest rate cuts are starting to provide a lift to household spending.
RBC economist Claire Fan said in a note to clients on Wednesday that she expects the Bank of Canada will continue to lower its policy rate all the way down to two per cent before ending the current easing cycle in a bid to reignite the sluggish Canadian economy.
CIBC chief economist Avery Shenfeld said in a note that he also sees the Bank of Canada continuing to lower its policy rate — albeit at a more modest pace of quarter-point cuts — until reaching a low of 2.25 per cent in 2025.
Currency markets are pricing in a 70-per cent chance of a 25-basis-point rate cut in January, according to Reuters.
The Canadian dollar, which had been floundering heading into the interest rate decision, rose a few tenths of a cent compared to the American greenback Wednesday morning amid hints of a slowdown in the easing cycle.
Economic outlook is 'clouded'
While inflation has returned to the Bank of Canada’s target of two per cent, the Canadian unemployment rate rose more than expected in November and real gross domestic product undershot the central bank’s most recent forecasts in the third quarter.
Macklem on Wednesday signalled that the Bank of Canada is also expecting growth to come in weaker than expected in the final quarter of 2024.
He also pointed to significant new sources of uncertainty in the Canadian economy and emerging dynamics that will have impacts on the inflation outlook. These include the federal government’s two-month GST holiday and the threat of tariffs imposed by United States president-elect Donald Trump when he takes office in January.
He added that the economic outlook is “clouded” by whether the tariffs on Canadian exports are actually applied and to what degree, and whether Canada responds with retaliatory tariffs in kind.
Shenfeld said in his note that the possible tariffs, if implemented, could push the policy rate lower than currently forecast in 2025.
On Ottawa’s plan to waive the GST and HST on certain grocery items and other household goods for a two-month span, Macklem said he expected that relief would lower inflation to around 1.5 per cent in January, but he noted that effect would be “unwound” after the tax “holiday” ends in mid-February.
Macklem said that the central bank would “look through effects that are temporary and focus on underlying trends to guide its policy decisions.” He said that inflation is likely to remain around two per cent, on average, “over the next couple of years.”
Meanwhile, there are signs that some Canadian housing markets saw an uptick in sales activity in November following the Bank of Canada’s first half-point cut of the cycle.
Senior deputy governor Carolyn Rogers told reporters on Wednesday that the central bank expects “some more pickup” in 2025 amid the sharp drops in the policy rate and mortgage changes coming from the federal government aimed at making it easier for some buyers to break into the housing market.
She noted that uptick in sales has come without a surge in home values.
On the opposite end of the spectrum, Rogers said that Ottawa’s plans to curb the pace of immigration in future years could have a “counterbalance” effect on housing demand.
“We’ll have to keep an eye on it,” she said. “But so far, an increase in activity without an increase in prices is a good thing for the Canadian economy right now.”
Macklem also said on Wednesday that the slower pace of population growth is expected to take more steam out of the economy in the coming years, limiting a rebound in GDP. He maintained, however, that the Bank of Canada is still not expecting the Canadian economy to fall into a recession.
The Bank of Canada will be out with new forecasts taking into account these myriad of factors when it makes its next interest rate decision on Jan. 29.
— with files from Reuters