Base Effects Add To The Bank Of Canada’s Inflation Concerns

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Last month, the Bank of Canada worried about inflation staying more persistent than expected and decided to release the pause button on rate hikes. In this month’s Monetary Policy Report, the Bank of Canada added “base effects” to its list of concerns about stubborn inflationary pressures (emphasis mine):

“While CPI inflation has come down largely as expected so far this year, the downward momentum has come more from lower energy prices, and less from easing underlying inflation. With the large price increases of last year out of the annual data, there will be less near-term downward momentum in CPI inflation. Moreover, with three-month rates of core inflation running around 3½-4% since last September, underlying price pressures appear to be more persistent than anticipated. This is reinforced by the Bank’s business surveys, which find businesses are still increasing their prices more frequently than normal.”

I have seen more and more references to base effects regarding U.S. inflation. In the previous two years, base effects could be used to dismiss inflation’s threat. This year, base effects from more challenging comparables are looming as the end of the tailwinds for disinflation (on a year-over-year basis). The timing is poor. As the Bank of Canada noted, underlying inflation has gone nowhere for almost a year. At this point, sticky inflationary pressures cloak more uncertainty around prior inflation expectations:

“In the July MPR projection, CPI inflation is forecast to hover around 3% for the next year before gradually declining to 2% in the middle of 2025. This is a slower return to target than was forecast in the January and April projections. Governing Council remains concerned that progress towards the 2% target could stall, jeopardizing the return to price stability.”

Surprisingly, markets took the news in stride. At the same time, the U.S. stock market celebrated a pleasing report on U.S. June inflation, the Bank of Canada’s rate hike did not dampen spirits about the prospects for a more dovish Federal Reserve. Currency markets reacted as though the Fed might even be closer to rate cuts as losses in the US. dollar continued apace.

In fact, the market almost seemed to skip right over the Bank of Canada’s news. While majors like the euro and the British pound rallied all day against the U.S. dollar, the Canadian dollar enjoyed just brief intraday strength in the wake of the Bank of Canada’s decision to hike rates another 25 basis points. At the time of writing, USD/CAD is only just now returning to its low point following the rate hike (and looks stalled right at support).

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On a daily basis, the Canadian dollar looks set to resume its momentum against the U.S. dollar IF USD/CAD breaks below yesterday’s low. Otherwise, a countertrend rebound could take USD/CAD right back to downtrending resistance at the 50-day moving average (DMA) (the red line below) as the next move.

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I remain bearish on USD/CAD (bullish on the Canadian dollar), and I expect rallies to continue to fail just as they have since September. The path downward on USD/CAD (upward for Invesco CurrencyShares Canadian Dollar Trust (FXC)) has been slow and choppy yet ever so slightly biased toward more relative strength for the Canadian dollar. The next major test comes with the Federal Reserve’s meeting later this month. More Fed hawkishness at that time could refresh the U.S. dollar against all majors for a spell.

Be careful out there!


More By This Author:

Why Monetary Policy Was Late In Responding To The Pandemic-Era Inflation Surge
Stubborn Inflation And Excess Demand Spook The Bank Of Canada
Fed’s Bostic: Still Comfortable Leaning Into Tight Labor Markets

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