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Bank of Canada interest rate cut in April ‘can’t be entirely ruled out’: Economists on inflation

Consumer price index slows more than expected, raising odds of Bank of Canada interest rate cut in June

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Canada’s inflation numbers for February flummoxed analysts again, slowing to 2.8 per cent year over year instead of rebounding to 3.1 per cent as most analysts predicted.

In January, the headline number for the consumer price index (CPI) came in at 2.9 per cent, also lower than analysts expected.

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Here’s what economists think February’s surprise slowdown could mean for the Bank of Canada and interest rate cuts.

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Cuts ‘sooner than later’: Central 1 Credit Union

The Bank of Canada has enough evidence that the threat of inflation is receding to start cutting rates “sooner rather than later,” Bryan Yu, chief economist at Central 1 Credit Union, said in a note.

Prices in February slowed in a variety of categories including food, cellphone plans, furniture and appliances.

Shelter costs, though, are still a “counterweight,” as rents rose 8.2 per cent year over year, while mortgage interest costs were up 26.6 per cent.

“Shelter remains a challenge, but lower interest rates will further ease inflation and population driven demand (alongside supply constraints) are outside the bank’s control, meaning it will need to look through this driver,” Yu said.

He expects inflation to continue slowing as a growing workforce continues to rein in wage increases.

“A June cut remains most likely in our view, but an April move is now back on the table,” Yu said.

‘Modest’: Bank of Montreal

“It’s difficult to poke any holes in this report,” Douglas Porter, chief economist and managing director of economics at Bank of Montreal, said in a note.

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Headline CPI is now on track to come in at 2.8 per cent for the first quarter, he said, much lower than the Bank of Canada’s forecast for inflation of 3.2 per cent.

“That’s a big and welcome difference, but is it sustained enough for rate cuts?” he said.

April strikes the economist as too early for a first trim, though “it can’t be entirely ruled out,” he said, especially if the upcoming Business Outlook Survey on April 1 — nine days before the central bank’s next interest rate announcement — shows inflation expectations cooling.

“At a minimum for April, look for the bank to open the door to rate cuts,” Porter said. “BMO continues to call for a June start to rate cuts, and this report certainly reinforces our conviction.”

April cut unlikely: Capital Economics

The Bank of Canada’s preferred measures of inflation fell below the three per cent target for the first time since April 2021, Stephen Brown, deputy chief North America economist for Capital Economics Ltd., said in a note.

CPI-trim and CPI-median slowed to 2.9 per cent on a three-month annualized basis, falling within the central bank’s inflation target range of one per cent to three per cent.

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“While the data support our view that inflation will fall to two per cent sooner than the bank anticipates,” he said, “governor Tiff Macklem has told us that the bank needs to see at least ‘a few’ encouraging data points before it cuts interest rates.”

The Bank of Canada announces its next decision on April 10, but Brown thinks a cut at that meeting is unlikely.

“Our forecast for a cut in June is arguably now looking more likely than the 70 per cent probability currently priced into markets,” he said.

‘Sigh of relief’: Desjardins Group

“Monetary policymakers will be able to breathe a sigh of relief after seeing these numbers,” Royce Mendes, managing director and head of macro strategy at Desjardins Financial, said in a note.

Inflation is weaker than the Bank of Canada previously estimated and February’s CPI report provides proof of that, he said, pointing out that core inflation, excluding food and energy, slowed to 2.8 per cent from 3.1 per cent in January.

Prices have cooled across a broad swath of components in the CPI basket, with the share of items rising more than three per cent — “a metric closely watched by governor (Tiff) Macklem” — shrinking to 40 per cent from 45 per cent.

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“We expect central bankers will sound more dovish in April, thereby setting up a rate-cutting cycle beginning in June,” Mendes said.

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‘Ample evidence’: Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce

“There was unambiguously good news on the inflation front in Canada in February,” Katherine Judge, an economist at CIBC Capital Markets, said in a note.

It was the second consecutive time inflation came in cooler than expected, and provides “ample evidence that higher interest rates are working to tame inflation,” she said.

Judge said the Bank of Canada will bypass “volatile” items such as gasoline and grocery prices in its analysis of the data to get a “better signal” from the core numbers.

“On that score, virtually every core measure looked more encouraging,” Judge said, highlighting that services, excluding shelter, slowed to 1.6 per cent year over year.

That shows weak consumer demand is taking its toll and likely translates to slowing wage growth, something the Bank of Canada said it needed to see before it would start cutting interest rates.

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“This report is clearly encouraging from the Bank of Canada’s perspective … even though they will likely want to wait to see more evidence of the labour market loosening before pulling the trigger on interest rate cuts in June,” Judge said.

‘Room for improvement’: RBC Economics

February’s inflation report built off January’s “showing broad-based easing in price pressures in Canada,” from grocery prices to the cost of clothing and shoes, Claire Fan, an economist at Royal Bank of Canada, said in a note.

While the breadth of inflation also narrowed, “there’s still room for improvement” since the index that tracks the scope of price pressures remains above “pre-pandemic ‘norms,’” she said.

Still, the anemic economy should keep sapping inflation, with RBC expecting the central bank to start cutting interest rates mid-year.

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