Bank of Canada Announces Pause in Rate Increases Following 0.25-Point Hike

The Bank of Canada stated that it will take a pause from raising interest rates after its quarter-point (25 basis points) hike to 4.5 percent on Jan. 25.
Bank of Canada Announces Pause in Rate Increases Following 0.25-Point Hike
Tiff Macklem, Governor of the Bank of Canada, and Carolyn Rogers, Senior Deputy Governor, hold a press conference at the Bank of Canada in Ottawa on Jan. 25, 2023. (The Canadian Press/Sean Kilpatrick)
Rahul Vaidyanath
1/25/2023
Updated:
1/25/2023
0:00
News Analysis

OTTAWA—The Bank of Canada stated that it will take a pause from raising interest rates after its quarter-point (25 basis points) hike to 4.5 percent on Jan. 25. It was an unusual move that required considerable elaboration.

Governor Tiff Macklem was quick to pour cold water on the subsequent emerging talk of rate cuts. One consequence of this is higher mortgage costs—especially for variable-rate loans.

“We have raised rates rapidly, and now it’s time to pause and assess whether monetary policy is sufficiently restrictive to bring inflation back to the 2 percent target,” Macklem said in opening remarks at the bank’s press conference.

The BoC has now raised rates by 425 basis points in less than a year.

“To be clear, this is a conditional pause. … iI we need to do more to get inflation to the 2 percent target, we will.”

Jean-Paul Lam, an economics professor at the University of Waterloo and former Bank of Canada assistant chief economist, told The Epoch Times that this muddles the central bank’s message and ties their hands.

“They could have just said, ‘We are still monitoring how inflation is evolving over time,’ and they will take the appropriate actions if needed to return inflation to 2 percent as they’ve done in the previous statement.”

Lam says the bank has already lost a lot of credibility in the last few years, and now it says it may increase rates if any adverse economic developments surface. 

“They are throwing out this message that confused markets and provided guidance that they are not likely to follow anyways.”

TD Securities expects the conversation will shift toward the timing of the BoC’s next move—a rate cut.

“While the downward revisions to CPI [consumer price index] introduce some scope for easing in 2023Q4, we continue to look for the first cut in 2024Q1,” according to the Bay Street bank.

Macklem said talk of rate cuts is “premature.”

More Mortgage Pain

For mortgages, the prime rate, which is the basis for most variable-rate mortgages, is expected to reach a two-decade high of 6.70 percent, according to Robert McLister, editor of MortgageLogic.news. He calculates that payments for adjustable-rate mortgages will jump almost $14 a month for every $100,000 of mortgage balance.

Housing market activity has taken the biggest hit thus far from the 400 basis points of rate hikes in 2022. It is the largest detractor from domestic demand in the economy—estimated at -1 percent in 2022 and -0.7 percent in 2023. But by 2024, housing is expected to contribute positively to demand.

The BoC says that interest payments on household mortgages are estimated to climb to 4.5 percent of disposable income at the start of 2023, up from 3.2 percent a year earlier. 

This figure is expected to rise further as homeowners renew their mortgages at higher rates.

A Milder Housing Correction?

Globally, Canada has one of the hottest and most vulnerable housing markets.

Home prices from some of the most overheated housing markets like Australia, Sweden, New Zealand, and Canada have already come down between 10 and 15 percent, and when factoring in inflation, the drop is between 15 and 20 percent, according to a Jan. 18 report from Oxford Economics (OE).

In its Jan. 25 monetary policy report (MPR), the bank said it expected house prices to decline further, especially in the markets that heated up considerably during the pandemic. But the decline isn’t expected to last very long.

“The housing market has evolved broadly in line with our expectations,” said senior deputy governor Carolyn Rogers in response to a question from The Epoch Times.

“We do expect, as we outlined in the MPR, that that pullback will continue in the first couple of quarters of this year. … There are some fundamentals that we think will lead to a pickup again later in the year.”

But housing analysts point to the many red flags in Canada’s housing market.

Deutsche Bank noted that Canada has the fourth-highest household debt-to-income ratio after Norway, Australia, and Sweden.

OE pointed out that risky lending—high loan-to-value loans—in Canada was as high as 10 percent of mortgage originations recently.

In addition, as compared to the lead-up to the global financial crisis in late 2008, Canada had 40 percent more housing transactions in 2021 than in 2006, according to OE.

And OE said Canada’s housing prices rose the highest in early 2022 among six countries highlighted in a graph, above New Zealand, the United States, Australia, the United Kingdom, and Sweden.

But the tide may be turning in Canada.

The Canadian Real Estate Association noted that home sales edged up nationally in December 2022.

Robert Hogue, assistant chief economist at RBC, said in a Jan. 17 note that Canada’s housing market is inching closer to a cyclical bottom.

“Should see some fixed mortgage rates edge lower soon. A continuation of this downtrend through spring would add buoyancy to real estate values,” tweeted McLister on Jan. 18 in response to the five-year bond yield falling almost 60 basis points to start 2023.

Rahul Vaidyanath is a journalist with The Epoch Times in Ottawa. His areas of expertise include the economy, financial markets, China, and national defence and security. He has worked for the Bank of Canada, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., and investment banks in Toronto, New York, and Los Angeles.
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