The Bank of Canada held its key overnight lending rate unchanged at 0.25% on Wednesday, once again suggesting that a rate increase may come sometime in the New Year.
In its accompanying statement, the Bank also said it continues to expect inflation to remain elevated in the first half of 2022 and not ease back towards 2% until the second half of the year. Any possible rate hike will not likely come until the middle quarters of 2022 – sometime between April and September, the Bank said, unchanged from its previous stance.
Back in November, Statistics Canada reported the Canadian inflation rate near a 20-year high, with the consumer price index up 4.7% in October from a year earlier, compared with a year-over-year gain of 4.4% in September. At that time, some analysts suggested an interest rate hike might come in April, and potentially even sooner if inflation continued to run hot.
According to the Bank, CPI inflation is elevated and the impact of global supply constraints is feeding through to a broader range of goods prices. The effects of these constraints on prices will likely take some time to work their way through, given existing supply backlogs, it added. However, gasoline prices - which had been a major factor pushing up CPI inflation - have recently declined, it said.