Bank of Canada Takes a More Dovish Step
Bank of Canada Takes a More Dovish Step
Going into the meeting STIR markets and economists were united in seeing no change from the meeting in terms of rates. The BoC had also stated in its previous meeting that it was moving to an ‘on hold’ stance. This was the case with rates staying at 4.50%. However, the meeting was always going to be first and foremost about the forward guidance and that was where the dovish hint came from. Remember, often in central bank language the omission or addition of a single word can signal a dovish or hawkish tilt.
A dovish signal
This is the language change that the BoC made by dropping the statement that the economy remained in excess demand. In January the BoC said ‘With persistent excess demand putting continued upward pressure on many prices, Governing Council decided to increase the policy interest rate’. On March 8 the BoC dropped that expression about ‘persistent excess demand’ putting pressure on prices. This takes the pressure off the BoC.
What to look for going forward
Canadian jobs data will be important as the BoC noted that the labour market remains very tight. In the central bank’s policy-setting high employment means inflation pressure. Inflation, of course, will be important. The headline inflation continues to move lower step by step from last summer’s peak.
The core was also lower for January at 5% down from 5.4% in December.
As long as this trend continues, the BoC will be able to maintain its ‘wait and see’ stance.
The key tradable opportunities, therefore, will come from any out-of-consensus prints in either employment data or inflation data in the coming days before the next BoC meeting. The CAD at an index level remains within a 3-month range. Read the full BoC statement here.
About: HYCM is the global brand name of HYCM Capital Markets (UK) Limited, HYCM (Europe) Ltd, HYCM Capital Markets (DIFC) Ltd and HYCM Limited, all individual entities under HYCM Capital Markets Group, a global corporation operating in Asia, Europe, and the Middle East.
High-Risk Investment Warning: Contracts for Difference (‘CFDs’) are complex financial products that are traded on margin. Trading CFDs carries a high degree of risk. It is possible to lose all your capital. These products may not be suitable for everyone and you should ensure that you understand the risks involved. Seek independent expert advice if necessary and speculate only with funds that you can afford to lose. Please think carefully whether such trading suits you, taking into consideration all the relevant circumstances as well as your personal resources. We do not recommend clients posting their entire account balance to meet margin requirements. Clients can minimise their level of exposure by requesting a change in leverage limit. For more information please refer to HYCM’s Risk Disclosure.
20230310