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14 Comments
Article:
The Canadian economy appeared to lose its strength toward the end of this year even as the central bank cut interest rates at a rapid pace.
Advance data suggested gross domestic product shrank 0.1% in November, the first monthly contraction this year, after 0.3% expansion a month earlier, Statistics Canada said Monday. The October figure beat economist expectations of 0.2% in a Bloomberg survey.
With October’s stronger-than-expected gain and November’s decline, the industry-based data point to the economy growing at a 1.7% annualized pace in the final quarter, assuming December growth is flat. That would be above economist estimates of 1.5% but below the central bank’s forecast of 2%. It would also be an acceleration from the expenditure-based 1% growth in the third quarter.
Canadian government two-year bond yields fell just over a basis point to 3.038%, while the loonie extended declines, dropping to C$1.4430 per US dollar as of 9 a.m. in Ottawa.
Policymakers at the Bank of Canada want to see economic growth pick up after inflation was within their target range of 1% to 3% for the past 11 months. They reduced borrowing costs by a half percentage point for the second straight meeting earlier this month, bringing the accumulative rate cuts since June to 175 basis points.
Governor Tiff Macklem and his officials have already signaled that they’re ready to slow down their rapid easing campaign, and output figures that are slightly below their forecasts will likely keep them cutting, albeit at a more gradual rate next year.
Their next decision is due on Jan. 29, when they will also publish a new set of economic forecasts. But Canada’s immigration crackdown, a two-month sales tax holiday, potential US tariffs and the uncertainty surrounding the future of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will affect the outlook for growth and inflation in the months ahead.
“While there is evidence that interest-rate sensitive areas of the economy have already strengthened as the Bank of Canada has lowered rates, further interest rate relief will be needed in the New Year to help close the output gap,” Andrew Grantham, economist at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, said in a report to investeors.
The bank’s benchmark overnight rate is currently 3.25%. Grantham said CIBC continues to see rates needing to dip slightly below neutral, forecasting a low of 2.25% in 2025.
In October, mining, quarrying and oil and gas extraction contributed most to the growth, expanding 2.4% following three straight months of decline. But the strength appeared short-lived, with the sector contributing to the decline in output in November.
Transportation and warehousing grew for the third straight month, increasing 0.2% in October, despite strike activities at the Port of Montreal and several eastern ports in the US. But November’s preliminary data showed the sector contracted, ending that streak of growth.
November’s contraction “is hardly a surprise given the slump in rail freight traffic following the earlier port strikes and the start of the Canada Post strike, some of which will be reversed in December,” Stephen Brown of Capital Economics said in a report to investors.
He said with growth tracking close to the bank’s forecast, it’s “raising the chance of the Bank of Canada pausing at its next meeting in January.”
There are signs that the central bank’s rapid rate cuts are starting to boost economic activity, especially in the housing market.
Real estate rose 0.5% in October, the sixth straight monthly increase and the largest monthly growth rate since January.
The offices of real estate agents and activities related to the housing sector was the largest contributor to the sector’s increase in October as home sales rose that month, driven by higher activity in key markets in Toronto and Vancouver regions.
The industry’s activity level in October was at its highest point since April 2022, just after the Bank of Canada began its hiking cycle.
“All told, this is a pretty decent report,” Benjamin Reitzes, rates and macro strategist at Bank of Montreal, said in an email, pointing to fourth-quarter growth in line with economists’ forecasts. There is “nothing here to change the more gradual rate cut narrative,” he said.
Advance data also suggest the real estate momentum continued in November, with the sector along with accommodation and food services leading the gains that month.
The increases in these two sectors, however, couldn’t offset output losses in mining and oil and gas extraction, transportation and warehousing, and finance and insurance in November.
The federal tax holiday and proposed cheques is all starting to make sense now. But, I thought we were just in a vibecession? Surely, it’s just our stupid little feelings that make us feel poorer than we actually are.
it would’ve been shrinking for the past year had the federal government not pumped up immigration to hide actual numbers.
Not only the budget isn’t balancing on its own, now the economy isn’t growing from the heart outwards.
It’s ok though because real estate did good again so everyone is still incentivized to be little land barons and continue to fuck it up for everyone else.
Yes, the economy is in bad shape. The Liberals had long been papering over that by dumping huge numbers of people into the country and propping up real estate prices and consumer spending. The second they were forced to take their foot off the immigration gas because of all the problems that was creating, they were no longer going to be able to cover up the disaster they’d made of the economy.
And now here we are, staring down the imminent imposition of 25% tariffs that will be absolutely devastating, and thanks to their totally irresponsible spending we will have much reduced ability to mitigate the pain this causes. And this is why you don’t run massive deficits unnecessarily.
Justin Trudeau, the Liberals and their NDP enablers have screwed this country with their foolishness, and everyone is going to pay a heavy price for it.
And this is BEFORE Trump’s 2nd term. The next 4 years will be brutal.
The Canada post strike had an impact on GDP.
Who knew things would get worse with a Teacher as PM and a Journalist as Finance Minister?
We have been in reality in recession for more than a year, only masked by government direct spending (more debt) and increase in immigration, both short term reckless policies that aimed to hide the reality.
It will take a long time to recover from the damage.
the bank of canada massively overreacted on inflation in 2022/2023. the next two years are gonna be rough.
Trudeaunomics
Actual GDP numbers have finally caught up with the weak GDP-per-capita we’ve had every quarter for two years now.
Turns out you when you were using immigration to juice up the numbers and you cut immigration… the numbers look like shit.
It’s a flash estimate and it follows disproportionate growth in mining in October (today’s actual release). It says so in the actual piece. Jesus Christ this doomer sub sometimes.