Inflation in Canada

General Jon Muir 17 Aug

Inflation in Canada

Inflation in Canada

Inflation in Canada. Inflation in Canada has come down a little, but it remains far too high. After rising rapidly to reach 8.1 per cent in June, inflation as measured by the consumer price index (CPI) was 7.6 per cent in July.

The good news is that it looks like inflation may have peaked. The price of gasoline, which has contributed about one-fifth of overall inflation in recent months, declined from an average of $2.07 a litre in June to $1.88 a litre in July. And we know gas prices at the pump have fallen further so far in August. Prices of some key agricultural commodities, like wheat, have also eased, and global shipping costs have fallen from exceptionally high levels. If these trends persist, inflation will continue to ease.
The bad news is that inflation will likely remain too high for some time. Many of the global factors that have pushed up inflation won’t go away quickly enough — supply chain disruptions continue, geopolitical tensions are high, and commodity prices remain volatile. And here at home, our economy has been running too hot. As Canadians finally enjoy a fully reopened economy, they want to buy more goods and services than our economy can produce. Businesses are having trouble keeping up with demand, and that’s leading to delays and higher prices. The result is broad-based inflation. Even if inflation came down a little in July, prices for more than half of the goods and services that make up the CPI basket are rising faster than five per cent.
As the central bank, it’s our job to control inflation and that means we need to cool things down. That’s why we have been raising interest rates since March. In July, we took the unusual step of raising the policy interest rate by a full percentage point, to 2.5 per cent. Increasing our policy rate raises borrowing costs across the economy — for things like personal loans, car loans, and mortgages. And when we increase the cost of borrowing, consumers tend to borrow and spend less and save more. We need to slow down spending to allow supply time to catch up with demand and take the steam out of inflation.

Inflation in Canada

One area of the economy where it is easy to see how this works is the housing market. With higher mortgage costs, housing activity has slowed quickly after unsustainable growth during the pandemic, and housing prices are moderating. As housing slows, peoples’ spending on housing-related goods and services, such as renovations and appliances and furniture, should also slow.
To tame inflation, we need to bring overall demand in the economy into better balance with supply. Our goal is to cool the economy enough to get inflation back to the two per cent target. We don’t want to choke off demand — we want to slow its growth. That’s what we call a soft landing. By acting forcefully in raising interest rates now, we are trying to avoid the need for even higher interest rates and a sharper slowing down the road.

I know some Canadians are asking, “Why are you raising the cost of borrowing when the cost of everything is already too high?”

We recognize that for many Canadians higher interest rates will add to the difficulties they are already facing with high inflation. But it’s by raising borrowing costs in the short term that we will bring inflation down for the long term. This will ultimately be better for everyone because high inflation hurts us all. It eats away at our purchasing power and makes it difficult to plan our spending and saving decisions. It feels unfair and that erodes confidence in our economy.

Inflation in Canada

The best way to protect people from high inflation is to eliminate it. That’s our job, and we are determined to do it. Tuesday’s inflation number offers a bit of relief, but unfortunately, it will take some time before inflation is back to normal. We know our job is not done yet — it won’t be done until inflation gets back to the two per cent target.
Tiff Macklem is governor of the Bank of Canada

Bottom Line

I published Macklem’s statement in its entirety to do it justice. You can decide whether you think the overnight rate will go up by 50 vs 75 bps on September 7th, but undoubtedly it will go up. It is also clear that the Bank will not cut the policy rate until inflation is at the 2% target. So don’t assume that variable mortgage rates will decline quickly in response to a slowdown in the economy. The Bank’s emphasis on the housing slowdown being an essential precursor to the reduction in overall economic activity portends an extended period of credit stringency.

This is a sea change in the economy. This is the end of a forty-year bull market in bonds triggered by the disinflationary forces of globalization, cheap emerging market labour and rapid technological advance. It is also the end of very cheap credit. Household balance sheets will feel the pinch. Recent home borrowers who benefited from the record-low mortgage rates for the two years beginning in March 2020 will increasingly feel the constraint of higher borrowing costs on their discretionary spending. Ultimately, this will return inflation to its 2% target, but it will take a while.

Inflation in Canada

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Inflation in Canada

Gasoline Prices Dipped

General Jon Muir 16 Aug

Gasoline Prices Dipped

Gasoline Prices Dipped. While we are all grateful that gasoline prices declined from record highs in July, today’s release of the July inflation data shows that the underlying inflation momentum remains too strong for comfort. Governor Macklem will likely continue to hike the policy rate aggressively when they next announce their decision on September 7th. Judging from the swaps market, traders are betting evenly on a 50 bps vs. 75 bps increase next month.

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 7.6% in July from a year earlier, compared to 8.1% in June. The dip reflected the largest drop in gasoline prices since the pandemic’s beginning.

On a monthly basis, however, inflation increased 0.1% from the June reading, the seventh consecutive rise. Excluding gasoline, prices rose 6.6% y/y last month, following a 6.5% increase in June, as upward pressure on prices remained broadly based.

Consumers paid 9.2% less for gasoline in July compared with the previous month, the largest monthly decline since April 2020. Ongoing concerns related to a slowing global economy, as well as increased COVID-19 pandemic public health restrictions in China and slowing demand for gasoline in the United States, led to lower worldwide demand for crude oil, putting downward pressure on prices at the pump.

On a monthly basis, gasoline prices fell the most in Ontario (-12.2%), where the provincial government temporarily lowered the gasoline tax.

Gasoline Prices Dipped

Prices for food purchased from stores increased more on a year-over-year basis in July (+9.9%) than in June (+9.4%). Prices for bakery products (+13.6%) continued to rise faster as wheat prices remained elevated. Higher input costs and global supply uncertainty related to the Russian invasion of Ukraine continued to put upward pressure on global wheat prices amid an already constrained supply.

Other food items also exhibited faster price growth, including non-alcoholic beverages (+9.5%), sugar and confectionery (+9.7%), preserved fruit and fruit preparations (+10.4%), eggs (+15.8%), fresh fruit (+11.7%), and coffee and tea (+13.8%).

On a year-over-year basis, the mortgage interest cost index (+1.7%) increased for the first time since September 2020 amid elevated bond yields and a higher interest rate environment.
Year over year, growth in other owned accommodation expenses (+9.7%) and homeowners’ replacement cost (+9.1%) slowed, reflecting current trends in many regional housing markets across Canada.
In the context of higher mortgage rates, which could lead to additional rental demand, rent increased 4.9% in July compared with the same month in 2021, following a 4.3% increase in June. Faster price growth in the rent index was largely driven by an acceleration in Ontario (+6.4%) and Alberta (+3.4%).

Gasoline Prices Dipped

Bottom Line

With some luck, price pressures might be peaking. The chart above shows the Bank of Canada’s most recent forecast for inflation. The Bank of Canada estimated inflation would average about 8% through the third quarter of 2022 before slowing. Now, the estimate could be revised a bit lower this time. That is why roughly half of the market participants expect a 50-bps rate hike next month, revised down from the 75-bps figure widely expected a month ago. Either way, the prime rate is rising more rapidly than the five-year government of Canada bond yield, making fixed mortgage rates relatively more attractive than variable rates tied to prime. Regardless of which path the Bank takes at the next meeting, the Bank will stay the course for some time.

Central banks cannot return to easy money quickly without risking another burst of inflation. Even with the Canadian economy slowing sharply in the second half of this year, labour markets remain very tight, and the central Bank is behind the curve. With hindsight, we know they kept rates too low for too long, triggering excess demand, particularly in the red-hot housing sector. Watching that unwind, especially in the country’s most expensive and frothy housing markets, will be the Bank’s most prudent option.

Overshooting the Mark

Gasoline Prices Dipped

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Gasoline Prices Dipped

Housing Slowdown Continues in July

General Jon Muir 15 Aug

Housing Slowdown Continues in July

Slow

Housing Slowdown Continues in July. Statistics released today by the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) show that the slowdown that began in March in response to higher interest rates continued in July, albeit at a slower pace. Home sales recorded over Canadian MLS® Systems fell by 5.3% between June and July 2022. The pace of home sales last month was well below its 10-year moving average as buyers and sellers moved to the sidelines in response to rising mortgage rates and a reassessment of the outlook. While this was the fifth consecutive month-over-month decline in housing activity, it was also the smallest of the five.

Sales were down in about three-quarters of all local markets, led by the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), Greater Vancouver, Fraser Valley, Calgary and Edmonton.
The actual (not seasonally adjusted) number of transactions in July 2022 came in 29.3% below that same month last year.

Housing market analysts at the Canadian banks continued to revise their home price forecasts over the next year. Royal Bank, TD, Desjardin and BMO all project that Canadian benchmark prices will fall roughly 20%-to-25% from their February peak by the end of 2023. Of course, this will vary from region to region. The hardest hit has been the geographies where prices surged the most, especially in the Greater Golden Horseshoe in Ontario and, to a lesser extent, in BC.

Housing Slowdown Continues in July

However, even if these forecasts prove to be correct, home prices in most regions will remain well above the levels posted before the pandemic began in early 2020. Housing in Canada’s largest cities will remain unaffordable for median-income households.

New Listings

The number of newly listed homes fell back by 5.3% month-over-month in July. The decline in new supply was broad-based, with listings decreasing in about three-quarters of local markets, including most significant markets.

With sales and new listings down by 5.3% in July, the sales-to-new listings ratio remained unchanged at 51.7% – slightly below the long-term average for the national sales-to-new listings ratio of 55.1%.

There were 3.4 months of inventory on a national basis at the end of July 2022, still historically low but up quite a bit from the all-time low of 1.7 months set at the beginning of 2022.

Housing Slowdown Continues in July

Home Prices
The Aggregate Composite MLS® Home Price Index (HPI) edged down 1.7% month-over-month in July 2022. This was similar but less than the 1.9% decline in June.
Regionally, most of the monthly declines in recent months have been in markets across Ontario and, to a lesser extent, in British Columbia.

Prices continue to be more or less flat across the Prairies while only now showing minor signs of dipping in Quebec. On the East Coast, prices continue to rise at a much slower pace. The exception is relatively more expensive Halifax-Dartmouth, where prices have dipped slightly.

The non-seasonally adjusted Aggregate Composite MLS® HPI was still up by 10.9% on a year-over-year basis in July. However, those year-over-year comparisons have been winding down quickly from the near-30% record year-over-year increases logged in January and February.

Residential Sales Activity
Bottom Line

The Bank of Canada raised the overnight policy rate by a percentage point on July 13, so the full effect of this jumbo hike will likely spill into the August data. Inflation fell a bit more than expected last month in the US. We expect to see a decline in Canadian CPI inflation in July, as well, when it is published tomorrow morning. Nevertheless, central banks will continue to tighten monetary policy further. CREA today said they expect an additional 100 bp hike in the remainder of this year, which would take the policy rate up to 3.5% by yearend. That would imply a prime rate of 5.7%.

In contrast, the five-year government of Canada bond yield is hovering just under 2.8%, reflective of the economic slowdown in Canada in the second half of this year. This could make fixed mortgage rates more attractive to future borrowers. Should the prime rate hit those levels, many fixed-payment variable rate borrowers that first booked their mortgages when prime touched 2.45%–it’s low posted since mid-March 2020– might be hearing from their lenders regarding potential trigger points. Will this temper Bank of Canada rate hikes?

Probably not. The Governing Council makes its next decision on September 7. Another 50-to-75 bps is baked in at this point.

Aggregate Composite

Housing Slowdown Continues in July

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Housing Slowdown Continues in July

Good News on the Inflation Front

General Jon Muir 10 Aug

Good News on the Inflation Front

Good News on the Inflation Front

Good News on the Inflation Front. It was widely expected that US consumer price inflation would decelerate in July, reflecting the decline in energy prices that peaked in early June. The US CPI was unchanged last month following its 1.3% spike in June. This reduced the year-over-year inflation rate to 8.5% from a four-decade high of 9.1%. Oil prices have fallen to roughly US$90.00 a barrel, returning it to the level posted before the Russian invasion of Ukraine. This has taken gasoline prices down sharply, a decline that continued thus far in August. Key commodity prices have fallen sharply, shown in the chart below, although the recent decline in the agriculture spot index has not shown up yet on grocery store shelves. US food costs jumped 1.1% in July, taking the yearly rate to 10.9%, its highest level since 1979.

Good News on the Inflation Front

Good News on the Inflation Front

Good News on the Inflation Front

The biggest surprise was the decline in core inflation, which excludes food and energy prices. The shelter index continued to rise but did post a smaller increase than the prior month, increasing 0.5 percent in July compared to 0.6 percent in June. The rent index rose 0.7 percent in July, and the owners’ equivalent rent index rose 0.6 percent.

Travel-related prices declined last month. The index for airline fares fell sharply in July, decreasing 7.8%. Hotel prices continued to drop, falling 2.7% on the heels of a similar decrease in June. Rental car prices fell as well from historical highs earlier this cycle. Good News on the Inflation Front.

Bottom Line

The expectation is that the softening in inflation will give the Fed some breathing room. Fed officials have said they want to see months of evidence that prices are cooling, especially in the core gauge. They’ll have another round of monthly CPI and jobs reports before their next policy meeting on Sept. 20-21.

Treasury yields slid across the curve on the news this morning while the S&P 500 was higher and the US dollar plunged. Traders now see a 50-basis-point increase next month as more likely than 75. Next Tuesday, August 16, the July CPI will be released in Canada. If the data show a dip in Canadian inflation, as I expect, that could open the door for a 50 bps rise (rather than 75 bps) in the Bank of Canada rate when they meet again on September 7. That is particularly important because, with one more policy rate hike, we are on the precipice of hitting trigger points for fixed payment variable rate mortgages booked since March 2020, when the prime rate was only 2.45%. The lower the rate hike, the fewer the number of mortgages falling into that category.

Good News on the Inflation Front

Questions? Comments? Reach out:

📲 705-606-2727
📧 jmuir@dominionlending.ca
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Dominion Lending Centers – The Mortgage Source. Independently Owned and Operated.
License #: 10145
92 Caplan Ave #609, Barrie, ON L4N 9J2

Good News on the Inflation Front

The Canadian Economy Is Slowing

General Jon Muir 5 Aug

The Canadian Economy Is Slowing–Job Markets Will Begin To Shift

The Canadian Economy Is Slowing

The Canadian Economy Is Slowing. The July employment report, released this morning by Statistics Canada, is a real head-scratcher. The job numbers fell for a second consecutive month, but so did the number of job seekers, so the unemployment rate remained unchanged at a historic low of 4.9%. I have been pondering the profusion of labour market data for longer than usual today to decide where I come out on this. My bottom line is the Canadian economy is slowing in response to the whopping rise in interest rates. Labour markets across the country are still very tight as massive job vacancies continue, but the market’s tenor (or mood) is shifting.

There are still labour shortages in businesses that need customer-facing employees–think restaurants, hotels, travel, retail, household services, as well as in construction and the trades. But we are also now hearing of layoffs and cutbacks in businesses that boomed during the lockdowns. Many of those over-expanded and are currently cutting back. A great Canadian example is Shopify, but the same can be said of major retailers like Walmart and Target, which now find themselves overstocked.

The housing markets in Canada are slowing sharply, especially in the highest-cost regions around the Greater Vancouver and Toronto areas.

Central banks worldwide took interest rates down to near-zero levels in the early days of the pandemic, triggering a massive boom in housing. Canada’s boom was second to none, reflecting the long-standing housing shortage. Since 2015, home construction for rent and purchase in Canada has paled compared to the rising demand generated by surging immigration targets. First-time buyers’ FOMO, combined with record-low mortgage rates, especially on variable rate loans, triggered a buying frenzy. Millennial parents helped by tapping their homeowner equity to make those down payments possible. Some of those parents could be left with the legacy of home equity loans whose monthly payments have sky-rocketed with the prime rate. Cabin fever during lockdown generated a host of other buyers who just wanted more space and were willing to move to the exurbs and beyond to afford it. Investors, long tantalized by the surge in condo prices and the growing demand for rental properties, piled on.

Central banks kept interest rates too low for too long. They should have started to raise them when inflation percolated. They thought inflation was transitory, and we all thought vaccines were the magic bullet to end the Covid pandemic. The Russian invasion of Ukraine created the perfect storm, exacerbated by China’s zero Covid policy. Supply chains crumbled further, and commodity prices surged.

Now that oil prices below $90 a barrel have returned to pre-war levels, and gasoline prices have fallen since early June, inflation might have peaked. But central banks must continue tightening to return policy interest rates to normal levels. This means an overnight rate in Canada of roughly 3.5% and nearly 5% in the US. That’s still a far cry from today’s level of 2.5%. And the central banks will not and cannot return rates to last year’s lows. Not soon, and possibly not ever. Unless you believe an equivalent global shutdown will be required sometime in the foreseeable future.

The economy lost 30,600 jobs last month, adding to a loss of 43,200 jobs in June. Canada’s job market is losing momentum as the broader economy is cooling. The job loss also reflects labour shortages and insufficiently trained new workers. Just look at the chaos at Pearson Airport. Labour market conditions are still very tight, and wage rates are rising, up 5.2% y/y last month.

The Canadian Economy Is Slowing

The Canadian Economy Is Slowing

The Canadian Economy Is Slowing

In Direct Contract, US Employment Surged in July

In other relevant news today, Bloomberg reports that “US employers added more than double the number of jobs forecast, illustrating rock-solid labour demand that tempers recession worries and suggests the Federal Reserve will press on with steep interest-rate hikes to thwart inflation.” So much for a Fed pivot. The idea that the bond market rallied on the premature news of a US recession made no sense at this point in the cycle.

Similarly, the Bank of Canada is still likely to hike the policy rate by 75 basis points when they meet again on September 7. That would take the prime rate up to 5.45%. Currently, the 5-year government of Canada bond yield is 2.87%, well below its peak of 3.6% in mid-June. Consequently, we may see variable mortgage rates rise above fixed rates before year-end.

The Canadian Economy Is Slowing

Questions? Comments? Reach out:

📲 705-606-2727
📧 jmuir@dominionlending.ca
💻 https://jonmuirmortgages.ca
🌎 Google Business Page

Dominion Lending Centers – The Mortgage Source. Independently Owned and Operated.
License #: 10145
92 Caplan Ave #609, Barrie, ON L4N 9J2

The Canadian Economy Is Slowing

The Canadian Economy Is Slowing

General Jon Muir 5 Aug

The Canadian Economy is Slowing

Job Market

The July employment report, released this morning by Statistics Canada, is a real head-scratcher. The job numbers fell for a second consecutive month, but so did the number of job seekers, so the unemployment rate remained unchanged at a historic low of 4.9%. I have been pondering the profusion of labour market data for longer than usual today to decide where I come out on this. My bottom line is the Canadian economy is slowing in response to the whopping rise in interest rates. Labour markets across the country are still very tight as massive job vacancies continue, but the market’s tenor (or mood) is shifting.

There are still labour shortages in businesses that need customer-facing employees–think restaurants, hotels, travel, retail, household services, as well as in construction and the trades. But we are also now hearing of layoffs and cutbacks in businesses that boomed during the lockdowns. Many of those over-expanded and are currently cutting back. A great Canadian example is Shopify, but the same can be said of major retailers like Walmart and Target, which now find themselves overstocked.

The housing markets in Canada are slowing sharply, especially in the highest-cost regions around the Greater Vancouver and Toronto areas.

The Canadian Economy Is Slowing

Central banks worldwide took interest rates down to near-zero levels in the early days of the pandemic, triggering a massive boom in housing. Canada’s boom was second to none, reflecting the long-standing housing shortage. Since 2015, home construction for rent and purchase in Canada has paled compared to the rising demand generated by surging immigration targets. First-time buyers’ FOMO, combined with record-low mortgage rates, especially on variable rate loans, triggered a buying frenzy. Millennial parents helped by tapping their homeowner equity to make those down payments possible. Some of those parents could be left with the legacy of home equity loans whose monthly payments have sky-rocketed with the prime rate. Cabin fever during lockdown generated a host of other buyers who just wanted more space and were willing to move to the exurbs and beyond to afford it. Investors, long tantalized by the surge in condo prices and the growing demand for rental properties, piled on.

Central banks kept interest rates too low for too long. They should have started to raise them when inflation percolated. They thought inflation was transitory, and we all thought vaccines were the magic bullet to end the Covid pandemic. The Russian invasion of Ukraine created the perfect storm, exacerbated by China’s zero Covid policy. Supply chains crumbled further, and commodity prices surged.

Now that oil prices below $90 a barrel have returned to pre-war levels, and gasoline prices have fallen since early June, inflation might have peaked. But central banks must continue tightening to return policy interest rates to normal levels. This means an overnight rate in Canada of roughly 3.5% and nearly 5% in the US. That’s still a far cry from today’s level of 2.5%. And the central banks will not and cannot return rates to last year’s lows. Not soon, and possibly not ever. Unless you believe an equivalent global shutdown will be required sometime in the foreseeable future.

The economy lost 30,600 jobs last month, adding to a loss of 43,200 jobs in June. Canada’s job market is losing momentum as the broader economy is cooling. The job loss also reflects labour shortages and insufficiently trained new workers. Just look at the chaos at Pearson Airport. Labour market conditions are still very tight, and wage rates are rising, up 5.2% y/y last month.

The Canadian Economy Is Slowing

In Direct Contract, US Employment Surged in July

In other relevant news today, Bloomberg reports that “US employers added more than double the number of jobs forecast, illustrating rock-solid labour demand that tempers recession worries and suggests the Federal Reserve will press on with steep interest-rate hikes to thwart inflation.” So much for a Fed pivot. The idea that the bond market rallied on the premature news of a US recession made no sense at this point in the cycle.

Similarly, the Bank of Canada is still likely to hike the policy rate by 75 basis points when they meet again on September 7. That would take the prime rate up to 5.45%. Currently, the 5-year government of Canada bond yield is 2.87%, well below its peak of 3.6% in mid-June. Consequently, we may see variable mortgage rates rise above fixed rates before year-end.

Labour Force

The Canadian Economy Is Slowing

Questions? Comments? Reach out:

📲 705-606-2727
📧 jmuir@dominionlending.ca
💻 https://jonmuirmortgages.ca
🌎 Google Business Page

Dominion Lending Centers – The Mortgage Source. Independently Owned and Operated.
License #: 10145
92 Caplan Ave #609, Barrie, ON L4N 9J2

The Canadian Economy Is Slowing