Inflation numbers for September were released on Wednesday by Statistics Canada. And while headline inflation continued to trend downwards, the 0.1% drop from August was smaller than what was expected. With core inflation ticking upwards ever so slightly, the disappointment in these numbers is only compounded.
This leads us to next week where the Bank of Canada (BoC) will meet on Wednesday, October 26th. At their September meeting, The BoC was explicit in their messaging: rates are going to have to increase further as they battle both inflation and expectations around it. Nothing that has happened since that last meeting will have them soften their stance. Come next Wednesday, the market is planning for a further 0.5% - 0.75% increase to the overnight rate.
Note: BoC rate increase will have an immediate impact on Prime and variable rates, not specifically current fixed rates.
It could be argued that the BoC is now walking a fine line of overshooting their policy rate and throwing us into a worse-than-needed recession. Interest rate increases take time to bear out their full effect – around 12-18 months. We are 7 months out from the beginning of the rate hike cycle and only 3 to 4 months since the overnight rate really started accelerating upwards. Inflation looks to have peaked and it’s fair to expect that as these rate increases are given more time, they will only exert more downward pressure on inflation.
If it feels like we’re in the worst of it, it’s because we’re not far off. Rates have increased rather dramatically and inflation, though trending downward, is still well above the BoC’s target rate of 2 - 3%. Expect the messaging to stay the same until inflation figures reflect the BoC desired rate. For most of us, that can’t happen soon enough and although we’re not quite there yet, we’re getting closer.
If you have any questions about how this affects you, contact one of our experienced Mortgage Specialists today. The Nest Mortgage team is here to help you have a Simply Better Mortgage.
Written by Ray Macklem, Nest Mortgage