NEST NEWS AT A GLANCE
BANK OF CANADA SUMMARY
This week the Bank of Canada made its sixth interest rate decision of 2021.
Given we are in the midst of campaigning for the federal election, it comes as no surprise there were no significant policy changes. However, the Bank did offer some key insights on the state of the economic recovery:
Overall, as the economy strives to bounce back, much like our global economic recovery, it is noted that there is still a long way to go. “The Governing Council judges that the Canadian economy still has considerable excess capacity, and that the recovery continues to require extraordinary monetary policy support.”
In order to sustain recovery, the BoC will continue to hold its policy interest rate at the lower bound until a 2% inflation target is met, and economic slack is absorbed [once again, no change].
Global Economy
The economic recovery continued through the second quarter, led by strong US growth. While the global economy “had solid momentum heading into the third quarter,” supply chain disruptions are restraining activity in some sectors. Rising cases of COVID-19 in many regions pose a risk to the strength and speed of the global recovery.
Inflation
With CPI inflation rising to 3% as a result of supply bottlenecks due to the pandemic and rising gasoline prices, the Bank will continue to monitor for its anticipated transitionary impact. Factors pushing up inflation are expected to be transitory, “but their persistence and magnitude are uncertain and will be monitored closely”. Core measures of inflation have risen, but by less than the Consumer Price Index.
Canadian Housing & Economic Performance
As anticipated, the housing market retreated from higher levels witnessed in earlier months. However, there continues to be strong domestic demand that increased 3%, promoting steady market growth. With a rebound in employment during June and July due to some lifted restrictions, it allowed for balance back in the labour market. The economy is expected to strengthen in the second half of 2021, although the fourth wave of COVID-19 infections and ongoing supply bottlenecks could weigh on the recovery.
Looking Forward
With the benchmark rate unchanged, and employment rebounding, conditions remain favourable for all types of property financings.
All eyes now focus on the federal election and political parties selling themselves to people who want to own homes.
Affordability, tweaks to the stress test, restrictions on foreign buyers, increased housing supply, longer CMHC amortizations are just some of the many promises being made. We will keep you apprised of electoral developments as they relate to mortgages closer to the election later this month.
Please feel free to reach out to our team at Nest for all things mortgage – we would love to hear from you!