Posthaste: These 3 charts bolster case for two 50-bps Bank of Canada rate cuts, says economist

Red signals are flashing on the state of economy

The chatter around the Bank of Canada supersizing its next cut has grown in volume ever since the United States started its interest rate trimming campaign with a jumbo reduction.

Some economists said the Fed’s 50-basis-point cut blew “the doors wide open” for the Canadian central bank to cut by a similar magnitude because it could make the difference between a soft economic landing and a recession.

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Meanwhile, currency analysts at CIBC Capital Markets said interest rates remained too restrictive and that a compelling argument exists for them to come down in larger increments than the standard 25 basis points per meeting.

One economist said more evidence has built up that interest rates need to come down faster, noting that Canada’s small-business sector is flashing all kinds of warning signs, as are other data including jobs vacancies and business creation numbers.

Stephen Brown, deputy chief North America economist at Capital Economics Ltd., said the latest CFIB Business Barometer, released on Sept. 26, showed “worrying signs” regarding the state of commerce for small firms.

“Although the CFIB Business Barometer covers only small firms, in recent years, the survey indicators have provided a fairly accurate steer to economic conditions,” he said in an analysis.

The barometer fell to 55 in September from 56.8 the month before, still over the 50 no-change mark, but Brown said the reading points to annualized gross domestic product (GDP) of roughly one per cent in the third quarter, well off the Bank of Canada forecast of 2.8 per cent.

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“The details were downbeat,” he said, adding that the number of small businesses experiencing “insufficient demand” rose to 53.3 per cent last month.

“That seems to suggest that the output gap (the difference between what the economy is creating and its potential) is far larger than 1.25 per cent of GDP, as the Bank of Canada estimates,” Brown said.

That’s not all the economist found in the CFIB report to make him think the Bank of Canada needs to increase the size of its next interest rate cut.

Projections by small firms for prices and wages as well as the number of businesses experiencing labour shortages have all fallen below pre-pandemic peaks.

Job vacancy data from Statistics Canada reinforced the slowing labour picture. Vacancies fell by 4.1 per cent to 526,900 in July, the third consecutive monthly decline and down by nearly half from the peak reached in May 2022, the agency said.

Brown estimated the job vacancy rate is now at three per cent, which is below the 2019 average of 3.2 per cent.

A decline in the number of small businesses created was the third warning sign to flash at Brown. The number of active businesses in Canada fell the most since the pandemic, declining by five per cent in June, Statistics Canada said.

Brown also noted that the business exit rate was the highest since the first of the COVID lockdowns and that June was the “second-worst month on record” for the net number of business exits.

“The soft pace of third-quarter growth, combined with the host of worrying indicators elsewhere, leads us to think that the (Bank of Canada) will enact 50 basis point cuts at both the October and December policy meetings,” he said.

The Bank of Canada’s remaining meetings for 2024 will be held on Oct. 23 and Dec. 11.

Brown said markets are currently pricing in one 50-basis-point cut “with 75 basis points priced in across the two meetings” to the end of the year.


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The persistent rally in stocks was knocked for a loop Tuesday as investors retreated to safer corners of the market when the conflict in the Middle East intensified.

Haven assets were bid up with bonds, oil, gold and the U.S. dollar all advancing after Iran fired a barrage of missiles at Israel following an advance of armed forces into Lebanon. The United States is actively supporting preparations to defend Israel, according to an earlier report.

Gold climbed above US$2,670 an ounce during the trading day while oil briefly topped US$71 a barrel.

“Markets are in wait and see mode,” said Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB. “The next 24 hours will be critical to see how far this situation escalates and whether the rush to safe havens was justified.” — Bloomberg


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Today’s Posthaste was written by Gigi Suhanic, with additional reporting from Financial Post staff, The Canadian Press and Bloomberg.

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