i*****s 发帖数: 15215 | 1 TORONTO (Reuters) - Sluggish domestic growth and uncertainty about the
global economy will likely keep the Bank of Canada from raising rates until
the second quarter of 2013, according to a Reuters survey.
The Reuters poll of 42 economists and strategists released on Wednesday
showed the median forecast for the next interest rate hike was pushed back
by three months from the first quarter of 2013 projected in a January poll.
The results were similar to February 17 poll of Canadian primary dealers,
which forecast the next rate hike would happen in the third quarter of 2013.
The Bank of Canada's target for the overnight rate - its main policy tool -
has been at 1 percent since 2010.
None of the respondents expected Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney to
alter the rate when the central bank makes its scheduled interest rate
announcement on March 8.
Economists predicted the central bank will stay the course to align itself
more with the U.S. Federal Reserve, which has said it will likely hold rates
near zero at least through late 2014.
"If the Bank of Canada moves on rates too soon it would push the Canadian
dollar to the moon and that would kill our exports and possibly tip our
economy into recession," said Sal Guatieri, chief economist at BMO Capital
Markets.
Canada's dollar has soared along with equity markets so far this year as
commodity prices have benefited from an easing of Europe's debt crisis and
continued signs of a U.S. economic recovery. The currency is expected to
hover around parity with the greenback for the rest of the year, a Reuters
poll earlier this month showed.
Higher interest rates tend to help currencies strengthen by attracting
international capital flows, and the prospect of monetary easing typically
weakens them.
SLUGGISH ECONOMY
While the U.S. economy is showing signs of progress, Canada's has stumbled
recently. Canada added just 2,300 net new jobs in January and saw its
unemployment rate rise to 7.6 percent from 7.5 percent in December.
Growth also slowed, as the latest gross domestic product numbers showed
Canada's economy contracted slightly in November, defying forecasts for a
modest increase.
A slowing of Canada's once-hot housing market and escalation in household
debt to record levels gives the Bank of Canada even less impetus to tighten
policy.
A Reuters poll released February 21 showed economists expect Canadian house
price gains to stall in 2012.
"The domestic fundamentals of the Canadian economy are fragile," said Sheryl
King, head of Canadian economics at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch.
King broke with consensus by forecasting the Bank of Canada would cut its
rate 75 basis points in the second half of this year, predicting conditions
in Europe and the United States could deteriorate significantly.
King said the euro zone banking sector faces tough deleveraging targets this
summer and U.S. policymakers face a looming showdown over whether to extend
Bush era tax cuts.
These events could lead to a seizing up in the global funding market that
would pressure the euro and greenback, said King, adding it would put "a lot
of upward pressure on the Canadian dollar."
The possibility of an easing has been anticipated in overnightindex swaps
for some time, though odds have been scaled back as the situation in Europe
stabilized.
Forecasts for official interest rates at the end of 2012 were unchanged from
the previous poll, with the median target remaining at 1 percent.
(Editing by Jeffrey Hodgson and Peter Galloway) |
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