Bank of Canada expected to cut rates deeper, faster over the next year
Forecast to trim benchmark to 4.25% on Sept. 4
WHEN YOU LOOK AT WHAT THE (GROCERY CODE OF CONDUCT) CAN ACHIEVE IN THE MEDIUM- AND LONG-TERM, IT SHOULD LEAD TO LOWER PRICES, SHORTER SUPPLY CHAINS AND MORE CHOICE FOR CANADIANS.
— MICHAEL MEDLINE, CHIEF EXECUTIVE OF EMPIRE CO. LTD.
Economists see the Bank of Canada cutting interest rates for a third consecutive meeting next week, continuing what’s anticipated to be a steady downward trend in borrowing costs over the next year as inflation eases.
Policy-makers led by Gov. Tiff Macklem are expected to lower the benchmark rate to 4.25 per cent at their Sept. 4 meeting, according to the median estimate in a poll conducted by Bloomberg.
Economists are also forecasting faster and deeper cuts to borrowing costs over the next year, and see the central bank reducing the policy rate from the current 4.5 per cent to three per cent by next July. In 2026, the overnight rate is expected to average 2.75 per cent, the data show.
The survey results show analysts’ outlook aligning with market expectations for a gradual return to less restrictive monetary policy — traders in overnight swaps are also betting Macklem will deliver more than 150 basis points of easing by next summer.
That would bring the bank’s policy stance closer to the so-called neutral rate — where borrowing costs neither stimulate nor restrict economic growth.
Macklem’s coveted soft landing is also still the base case scenario, economists say, with Canada’s economy expected to grow 1.7 per cent in 2025 as interest rates start easing and export growth ramps up. That matches the U.S. for the fastest pace of growth in Group of Seven countries.
Inflation is forecast to reach the bank’s two per cent target by the end of 2025, from the current 2.5 per cent yearly pace.
The shift in outlook comes amid changing bets for the path for the U.S. Federal Reserve, where chair Jerome Powell is seen joining the global trend in loosening monetary conditions in September.
Earlier this month, markets had started to price faster and deeper cuts in Canada after U.S. data showed the labour market weakening more quickly than anticipated.
The two countries’ economies are deeply intertwined, and a slowdown in the U.S. is likely to trickle through to Canada. With the Fed set to cut, Macklem can keep normalizing borrowing costs without worrying about moving too far ahead of the Fed and risking consequences for the loonie — a re-convergence of the two countries’ policy stances.
The shifting global outlook for rates also carries some positive news for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government and the country’s fiscal policy-makers, who are struggling in the polls and facing elevated debt service costs.
Yields on 10-year Canadian government bonds — an important component of the federal government’s interest costs — are expected to average about three per cent over the next year, compared with over 3.25 per cent in the July survey.
The survey of 26 economists was conducted Aug. 16-21.