- Officials must see sustained easing of core inflation first
- Comments among his first outlining a rough timeline for cuts
Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem said he expects to start cutting interest rates next year but needs to see several months of sustained downward momentum in core inflation first.
“I think it is sometime in 2024,” Macklem told BNN Bloomberg Television, when asked when he sees the central bank lowering its benchmark overnight rate.
Policymakers need to see “not one or two months” but “a number of months” of deceleration in underlying inflation before considering cutting rates, Macklem said.
It’s the clearest statement the governor has made to date about the potential timeline for the Bank of Canada to start easing monetary policy, and it lines up with how most economists see events unfolding. It also highlights a shift in how officials are thinking — they’ve moved their focus from how high rates must go, to how long they must stay at current levels.
The Federal Reserve held borrowing costs steady last week, but forecasts showed broader consensus for rate cuts in 2024. In a news conference, Chair Jerome Powell indicated policymakers are also turning their focus to when to cut rates as inflation continues its descent toward their 2% goal, prompting a rally in bonds and stocks.
For the Bank of Canada, one of its preferred measures of core inflation, a three-month moving average of the so-called trim and median core rates, slowed to an annualized pace of 2.96% in October. That’s within the bank’s inflation control range of 1% to 3% for the first time since March 2021.
The trim and median core rates averaged a yearly 3.6% in October but are expected to ease in November inflation data, to be released Tuesday at 8:30 a.m. Ottawa time. The deceleration has raised questions about whether rate cuts might be around the corner, but Macklem indicated they’re still at least a few months away. Traders in overnight index swaps have priced in a first rate cut in April.
“We are certainly feeling more confident that monetary policy is working and increasingly the conditions are in place to get us back to 2% inflation,” Macklem said. “We’re not there yet. There are a few more things we need to see to be more confident that we’re headed back to 2% and we’re watching those closely.”
Core Inflation Proves Less Sticky in Canada
Closely watched measures of underlying price pressures ease
Source: Statistics Canada, Bloomberg calculations
Last week, Macklem told reporters that the bank’s six-person governing council increasingly agree rates are restrictive enough, though they’re still prepared to hike if necessary. On Wednesday, the central bank will release a detailed summary of deliberations for the December decision, when officials held interest rates at 5% for a third straight meeting.
In the interview, Macklem reiterated that he believes that borrowing costs won’t likely fall to their pre-pandemic lows.
“We had 10, 12 years of unusually low interest rates post-global financial crisis. I think there are good reasons to believe that we’re not going back to those very low rates.”
Macklem’s full interview runs on “Taking Stock with Amanda Lang” on Friday at 6 p.m. New York time on BNN Bloomberg Television.
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