Inflation surges to highest in seven years, giving Bank of Canada room to hold rates

  6/20/2019 |   SHARE
Posted in Canadian Economy and Interest Rates by Russell Pearsall | Back to Main Blog Page

Finance Market Growth

Canadian inflation quickened in May on increases across all eight major components, giving the Bank of Canada plenty of scope to hold interest rates steady.

The consumer price index jumped 2.4 per cent from a year earlier, compared with 2 per cent in April and versus a median economist forecast of 2.1 per cent, Statistics Canada said Wednesday from Ottawa. It was the highest annual rate since October, boosted by increases in food and durable goods prices.

Core inflation, closely watched by policy makers, surged, with the average of the three key measures rising to 2.07 per cent, the highest since February 2012.

Inflation

Canada’s currency began climbing immediately, rising 0.65 per cent to close at 0.75 cents to the U.S. dollar.

Key Insights

Wednesday’s report bolsters the Bank of Canada’s view that the economy is emerging from a slowdown. It lends credence to Governor Stephen Poloz’s argument that interest rates will eventually need to move higher, even as his counterparts in the U.S. and Europe lean more towards rate cuts.

The latest figures bring inflation above the central bank’s latest quarterly forecast. The central bank revised its 2019 outlook for CPI higher in April to 1.9 per cent, from 1.7 per cent previously.

Source: Blomberg News via Financial Post



Bank of Canada, Bank of Canada Benchmark Rate, Economic Growth, Interest Rates



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