More good news today for people who have variable rate mortgages or lines of credit tied to the Bank of Canada rate. The rate will stay firm once again.
Here’s the statement from the Bank of Canada rate decision on Wednesday, July 13:
Here’s the statement from the Bank of Canada rate decision on Wednesday, July 13:
The Bank
of Canada kept its key interest rate today at 0.5 per cent.
Inflation
in Canada is on track to return to 2 per cent in 2017 as the complex adjustment
underway in Canada’s economy proceeds. The fundamentals remain in place for a
pickup in growth over the projection horizon, albeit in a climate of heightened
uncertainty.
In this
context, the forecast for the global economy has been marked down slightly from
the Bank’s April Monetary Policy Report (MPR). Global GDP growth is projected
to be 2.9 per cent in 2016, 3.3 per cent in 2017, and 3.5 per cent in 2018. In
particular, after a weak start to 2016 the US economy is showing signs of a
rebound, with a healthy labour market and solid consumption growth. In the wake
of Brexit, global markets have materially re-priced a number of asset classes.
Financial conditions, already accommodative, have become even more so.
In
Canada, the quarterly pattern of growth has been uneven. Real GDP grew by 2.4
per cent in the first quarter but is estimated to have contracted by 1 per cent
in the second quarter, pulled down by volatile trade flows, uneven consumer
spending, and the Alberta wildfires. A pick-up to 3 1/2 per cent is expected in
the third quarter as oil production resumes and rebuilding begins in Fort
McMurray. Consumer spending will also get a boost from the Canada Child
Benefit.
While the
fundamental elements of the Bank’s projection are similar to those presented in
April, the forecast has been revised down in light of a weaker outlook for
business investment and a lower profile for exports, reflecting a downward
adjustment to US investment spending. Real GDP is expected to grow by 1.3 per
cent in 2016, 2.2 per cent in 2017, and 2.1 per cent in 2018. The Bank projects
above-potential growth from the second half of 2016, lifted by rising US demand
and supported by accommodative monetary and financial conditions. Federal
infrastructure spending and other fiscal measures announced in the March budget
will also contribute to growth. Despite recent volatility, the Bank
expects the underlying trend of export growth to continue, leading to a pick-up
in business investment. Higher global oil prices are helping to stabilize
Canada’s energy sector and household spending is expected to increase
moderately.
The Bank
forecasts that the output gap will close somewhat later than estimated in
April, towards the end of 2017. Underlying this judgement is the downward
revision to business investment, which lowers the profile for both real GDP
and, to a lesser extent, potential output.
While
inflation has recently been a little higher than anticipated, largely due to
higher consumer energy prices, it is still in the lower half of the Bank’s
inflation-control range. Most measures of core inflation remain close to 2 per
cent but would be lower without the impact of past exchange rate depreciation.
The temporary effects of exchange-rate pass-through and past declines in
consumer energy prices are expected to dissipate in late 2016, and the Bank
projects that inflation will average close to 2 per cent throughout 2017 as the
output gap narrows.
Overall,
the risks to the profile for inflation are roughly balanced, although the
implications of the Brexit vote are highly uncertain and difficult to forecast.
At the same time, financial vulnerabilities are elevated and rising, particularly
in the greater Vancouver and Toronto areas. The Bank’s Governing Council judges
that the overall balance of risks remains within the zone for which the current
stance of monetary policy is appropriate, and the target for the overnight rate
remains at 1/2 per cent.
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