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Apr 20, 2010 - Mark Carney signals interest rates to rise
‘With recent improvements in the economic
outlook, the need for such extraordinary policy is now passing,’ Bank of Canada
says.
Jeremy Torobin
Ottawa
— Globe and Mail Update Published on Tuesday, Apr. 20, 2010 9:10AM EDT
The Bank of Canada
kept its benchmark lending rate at an historic low Tuesday, but removed a
so-called conditional commitment to stay on hold through the middle of the year,
signalling that it could raise interest rates as early as its next policy
decision June 1.
In the statement accompanying Tuesday’s decision, Governor
Mark Carney and his rate-setting panel said they expect the economy to return to
full capacity in the second quarter of next year, rather than the third as
previously forecast.
That shows the central bank believes that slack created by
the country’s first recession since the early 1990s, and the sharpest global
downturn since the Great Depression, is being absorbed more quickly than policy
makers had predicted.
At the height of the global crisis in April, 2009, the
central bank cut the benchmark overnight rate to the lowest it could go, 0.25
per cent, and pledged to keep it there until at least the middle of this year,
depending on inflation. The removal of that pledge increased investor bets that
the first rate hike will be on June 1, rather than July 20 or later, and sent
the currency shooting through parity with the U.S. dollar because it now seems
certain the Bank of Canada will act long before the U.S. Federal Reserve.
``A June rate hike is now likely,’’ said Doug Porter, deputy
chief economist at the Bank of Montreal
.
``This statement marks a dramatic change in tone by the Bank, and doesn’t rule
out possible 50-basis-point moves.’’
Tuesday, Mr. Carney said that his “extraordinary guidance”
has achieved its purpose, as the reliably low cost of money has spurred more
borrowing and spending than expected since late last year.
“This unconventional policy provided considerable additional
stimulus during the period of very weak economic conditions,” the central bank
said. “With recent improvements in the economic outlook, the need for such
extraordinary policy is now passing, and it is appropriate to begin to lessen
the degree of monetary stimulus.”
The statement said that core inflation, the bank’s preferred
gauge that has been ``somewhat firmer than projected in January,’’ will ``ease
slightly’’ in the current three-month period while staying close to the bank’s
2-per-cent target until the end of 2012. The total inflation rate will be
``slightly higher’’ than 2 per cent over the next year and return to the target
level in the second half of 2011, the bank said.
Central bankers also tweaked their growth projections for the
economy, reflecting a wave of stronger-than-expected data in recent months both
in Canada and abroad and a white-hot housing market that point to a ``more
front-loaded’’ expansion.
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