| Today, the Bank of Canada once again held the policy rate at 2.25%. This is the bottom of the Bank’s estimate of the neutral overnight rate, where monetary policy is neither expansionary nor contractionary. With inflation hovering at 2.8% and core inflation falling to 2.0% (as of April data), the Governing Council sees the current overnight rate as appropriate, as the Bank continues to look through the inflationary impact of the war in Iran. The war is in its fourth month, and oil prices and interest rates have risen considerably as a result. The war is disrupting supply chains, weakening economic activity and pushing up inflation. At the same time, the US administration continues to propose new tariffs, and the future of CUSMA remains uncertain.
CUSMA negotiations are underway, but they are unlikely to go on beyond the July 1 mandatory date for the formal review of the pact required by the treaty. On that date, the U.S., Canada, and Mexico are each supposed to declare whether they want to renew the deal for another 16 years (out to 2036), renegotiate it, or decline to renew. The three countries are set to miss the July 1 renewal milestone, with negotiations expected to stretch on for months or potentially years. Missing the date does not kill the deal. If the three don’t agree to a full 16-year extension, the agreement stays in force and shifts into a mechanism of rolling annual reviews that can continue for up to a decade. The treaty doesn’t formally expire until July 1, 2036, unless a party withdraws entirely. US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said that on July 1, “I don’t think we’re going to renew it outright, but we’ll engage in the separate negotiations” — explicitly signalling the date is a starting point, not a hard conclusion. Dominic LeBlanc, the minister responsible for US trade, met with Greer in Washington and afterward suggested that July 1 “shouldn’t be seen as a crucial date.” Mexican and US officials say the scope and complexity of the issues — auto rules of origin, the 50% Section 232 steel/aluminum tariffs, and other disputes — make resolution by July 1 unlikely.
While first-quarter GDP growth in Canada showed a small contraction, economic growth has been solid in the US, boosted by consumption and AI-related investment. In the euro area, growth is subdued, with higher energy prices weighing on activity. China’s economic growth continues to be supported by strong exports, while oil imports have slowed substantially. Oil demand destruction is evident as China has chosen to limit energy use and draw down inventories.
Financial conditions in Canada have eased since the April Monetary Policy Report (MPR). Global equity markets have been buoyant, and bond yields, though volatile, have generally trended higher. The Canadian dollar has weakened against the US dollar and other currencies.
Canada’s economy contracted in the final quarter of last year. It weakened a bit further in Q1, but incoming data suggest that the first-quarter figure was weighed down by the 10% surge in imports, which has already reversed in the newly released April merchandise trade data. The flash estimate for April GDP is a more solid 0.4% quarter-over-quarter level (or 1.6% at an annual rate). The central bank expects growth to rebound in Q2, but even so, the economy is expected to remain in excess supply. |