Business

Bank of Canada holds interest rate steady at 5%

The Bank of Canada opted to hold its benchmark interest rate steady at five per cent as the economy is showing more and more signs of cooling.

Bank won't rule out further hikes despite mounting signs that economy is slowing

Tiff Macklem is shown going into bank building.
Governor of the Bank of Canada Tiff Macklem walks outside the Bank of Canada building in Ottawa on June 22. (Blair Gable/Reuters)

The Bank of Canada opted to hold its benchmark interest rate steady at five per cent as the economy is showing more and more signs of cooling.

The move was widely expected by economists and other financial observers, as the central bank's unprecedentedly swift campaign of rate hikes since early 2022 have made major headway on bringing down runaway inflation.

The impact of rate moves can often take up to 18 months to be fully felt, so after taking its lending rate from functionally zero to five per cent in barely a year-and-a-half, there is a danger of overshooting and slowing the economy by too much.

A slew of financial indicators in recent weeks suggest that may be on the table.

Jobs data for July released at the start of August showed Canada's job market lost about 6,000 workers during the month, and the unemployment rate ticked up slightly to 5.5 per cent. 

Later in the month, Statistics Canada released GDP data that showed Canada's economy contracted in the second quarter of 2023. That's the first shrinkage since the onset of the pandemic and a sign the economy may be tipping into at least a mild recession.

No reason for further hikes, strategist says

Jim Thorne, a strategist at Toronto based investment firm Wellington-Altus, says not only is there no good reason to hike any more, but it's actually hard to retroactively justify some of the hikes that have already happened.

"I'm in the camp that says they should have stopped at 2.5 per cent and then let things settle out," he told CBC News in an interview.

"The Bank of Canada's mistake is that they're trying to find use monetary policy as a fine tuning instrument [but] it's a blunt instrument — and they're going to go too far."

Instead of a mild recession or so-called "soft landing" that economists hope for, he's forecasting a hard landing for Canada's economy next year as the system deals with too much expensive debt and consumers tapping out.

"The numbers just don't add up, so I don't know why Tiff Macklem is raising rates," he said, referring to the head of the central bank. "No other central banker has ever raised rates when real gross domestic income is as negative as it is right now."

"People up here are whistling by the graveyard, thinking that this is not going to be very, very painful."

WATCH | Economist questions rate hike rationale: 

Economist questions rate hike rationale

1 year ago
Duration 2:35
Armine Yalnizyan, the Atkinson Fellow on the Future of Workers, says the central bank's decision to raise interest rates again won't help fix the inflation problem, and could actually make things worse.

While people like Thorne are concerned the bank has overshot on rate hikes, the bank itself makes it clear that it stands ready to raise them by even more should the situation require it.

In a statement accompanying its decision, the bank said it "remains concerned about the persistence of underlying inflationary pressures, and is prepared to increase the policy interest rate further if needed."

Royce Mendes, an economist with Desjardins, says it is noteworthy that policymakers at the central bank "aren't completely shutting the door to further rate increases."

"It's no surprise that policymakers are hesitant to declare an end to the era of rate hikes, [because] a premature signal that rates have reached their peak would cause an unwanted easing in financial conditions," Mendes said.

Most economic indicators are tracking weaker than the bank was forecasting in its most recent outlook, Mendes added, so ultimately he thinks the bank is quite likely to be done with hikes — whether they're willing to admit that or not. 

"The recent string of weak data reinforces our call that the Bank of Canada will not be raising rates any further this cycle," Mendes said.

 Shahan Ahmed
Brampton homeowner Shahan Ahmed says the bank's campaign of rate hikes have pushed his family to the financial edge. (Craig Chivers/CBC)

Home owner surprised by large hikes

If they are in fact done, it's not a moment too soon for homeowners like Shahan Ahmed — and it may in fact be too late.

Ahmed owned and occupied a home in Brampton when he decided, in 2021, to buy a second one to use as an investment property. He said he knew the rate on his variable rate mortgage would go up, but not as quickly as it did.

"We thought it's going to go up by 25 basis points every time," he told CBC News in an interview, meaning that even with a half a dozen hikes from the Bank of Canada, or more, his rate might have gone up by maybe two percentage points.

Instead, the bank hiked 10 times since early 2022, often in increments of 0.5, 0.75 and even a full percentage point at a time. That caused Ahmed's variable rate mortgage payment to almost double from $3,300 a month to $5,500.

He's now living in the investment property and renting out his original home, but his rental income doesn't cover his costs so he's taken a second job and now works 15-hour days.

He says he's reluctant to sell one or both properties because that would simply lock in a paper loss of up to $300,000.

"Hopefully there is no rate hike because it is our breaking point," he said. "We cannot take it anymore."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Pete Evans

Senior Business Writer

Pete Evans is the senior business writer for CBCNews.ca. Prior to coming to the CBC, his work has appeared in the Globe & Mail, the Financial Post, the Toronto Star, and Canadian Business Magazine. Twitter: @p_evans Email: pete.evans@cbc.ca

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