For the first time in nine years,
the U.S. Federal Reserve hiked their key policy rate--the overnight
federal funds rate--by one-quarter percentage point (25 basis points) to
a range of 1/4 to 1/2 percent. The policy-making Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC) said that the stance of monetary policy remains
accommodative, thereby supporting further improvement in the labor
market and a return to 2 percent inflation.
The U.S. labor market
has improved considerably this year taking the unemployment rate down
to 5%, while inflation has been depressed by falling commodity prices
and the strength in the U.S. dollar.
Importantly, the Fed
suggests that they expect economic conditions to warrant only gradual
increases in the federal funds rate and that the funds rate will remain
below levels that are expected to prevail in the longer run for some
time. Having said this, the Committee's interest rate
forecasts signaled four quarter-point increases in 2016, a stance that
has been interpreted by the markets as relatively hawkish. This, of
course, will be data dependent, and many economists expect fewer than
four rate hikes next year.
The Canadian dollar,
which has weakened sharply in recent weeks on further declines in oil
prices, edged downward with the release of the Fed decision, but bounced
back shortly thereafter. U.S. Treasuries tumbled on the news pushing
market rates higher. U.S. stocks, on the other hand, extended today's
gains and the yield on two-year Treasury notes topped 1 percent for the
first time in five years after
the Fed ended seven years of near-zero interest rates and reaffirmed
gradual tightening over the next year. The yield on the ten-year
Treasury bond edged up slightly to 2.29 percent.
Bank of Canada Will Remain On the Sidelines
The
Canadian economy has been hard hit by the continuing decline in oil
prices and other commodity prices. Not only has West Texas Intermediate
crude oil, the price received in the U.S., fallen to roughly $36 a
barrel, but the price received in Canada for heavy oil is substantially
lower.
Economists expect that Governor Poloz will keep his
benchmark overnight rate at 0.5 percent unchanged until at least 2017.
Nevertheless, mortgage rates in Canada have likely bottomed as five-year
market rates, to which mortgage rates are linked, are edging higher and
lenders are pressured by very narrow interest rate spreads. |
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