The
Bank of Canada cut its economic growth forecast for this year and next in its
interest rate decision Tuesday. Above, Bank Governor Mark Carney addresses the
International Economic Forum of the Americas.
The
Bank of Canada turned slightly more dovish Tuesday as it trimmed its growth
outlook for Canada and warned that the global economic situation had weakened.
In
an expected move, Governer Mark Carney and his team left the bank’s overnight
lending rate unchanged at 1%. It has remained at the near-historic low since
September 2010.
But
the bank continued to retreat from some of the more hawkish language it hinted
at in previous statements in April and June.
“This
is a substantially more dovish statement,” said Derek Holt, economist with
Scotia Capital.
Below,
we outline the top five takeaways from the bank’s July 17 statement.
Global
growth prospects have weakened
In
its April outlook, the Bank of Canada said that it was seeing signs of
improvement in the global economy. That is no longer the case. “Global
growth prospects have weakened since the Bank’s April Monetary Policy Report,”
the bank said.
It
said that developments in Europe point to a renewed contraction, while emerging
market countries such as China have seen their growth slow “greater than
anticipated.”
The
bank also warned that global financial conditions have deteriorated since its
April report.
Despite
the gloomy outlook, however, the bank said it still assumes the eurozone crisis
will be contained.
Canada’s
economic outlook cut this year and next
Canada
won’t be spared from a slowing global economy. The Bank of Canada trimmed its
forecast for economic growth in 2012 to 2.1% from its earlier 2.4% target. It
also sees slightly weaker growth in 2013, lowering its outlook to 2.3% from
2.4%.
“While
global headwinds are restraining Canadian economic activity, domestic factors
are expected to support moderate growth in Canada,” the bank said.
There
are risks, however. The bank expects consumption and business investment to be
the main growth drivers, but record household debt and slowing housing activity
could negatively impact that growth.
On
the upside, the bank does view a rebound in growth occuring in 2014, saying the
economy will grow by 2.5% for that year.
Housing
to cool
This
marks the first interest rate announcement since Finance Minister Jim Flaherty
announced new mortgage rules in Canada that, among other things, lower the
maximum amortization period to 25 years.
“Housing
activity is expected to slow from record levels,” the bank said.
June
data already reveals some cooling in home sales following the introduction of
the new mortgage rules. Existing home sales dropped 1.3% in June from the month
before and were down 4.4% from the year before.
“The
Bank of Canada will likely want to see the impact these new rules have on
domestic spending before lifting rates,” said Diana Petramala, economist with
TD Economics.
Output
gap to close in latter half of 2013
In
another sign that the bank sees global headwinds slowing Canada’s economy, it
said that it now expects the country’s output gap to remain until 2013. The
output gap is the spare economic capacity of a country (e.g. the difference
between the actual capacity and what it could achieve at its most efficient,
productive level).
The
bank had previously expected the output gap to close in the first half of 2013.
“This
is consistent with guidance we’ve been consistently providing on how the BoC
has been underestimating spare capacity in the Canadian economy partly via
over-estimating 2012 growth prospects,” Mr. Holt of Scotia Capital said.
Bank
eyeing lower commodity prices
Concerns
over lower commodity prices have crept into the bank’s latest statement.
In
April, the bank warned about the effects of high commodity prices on economic
momentum. Now the bank expects the recent pullback in prices to keep inflation
below its 2% target until mid-2013.
“Given
the recent drop in gasoline prices and with futures prices suggesting
persistently lower oil prices, the Bank expects total CPI inflation to remain
noticeably below the 2 per cent target over the coming year,” the bank said.
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