-Global
growth picture has improved
-raising
growth rate for 2012 from 2.4% to 2.8%
-hints
at removing stimulus sooner than later.
-starting
to see inflation move higher and higher interest rates may be needed to combat
inflation.
Given
all this the Canadian Dollar rallied as I thought it would and we are now below
.9950
We should
have a very busy day, US Dollar buyers need to take advantage of this move, It
may not last long.
Mike
Michael J Smith | President GFX - Partners Inc.
229 Yonge Street, Suite 502 | Toronto, ON
M5B 1N9Trading Room: 416.217.3088 | Direct Line: 416.217.3095| Toll Free: 1.877.717.3088 | Fax: 416.217.3089
E:| msmith@gfxpartners.ca | W: www.gfxpartners.ca
Ottawa, Ontario -
The Bank of Canada today announced that it is maintaining
its target for the overnight rate at 1 per cent. The Bank Rate is
correspondingly 1 1/4 per cent and the deposit rate is 3/4 per cent.
The profile for global economic growth has improved since
the Bank released its January Monetary Policy Report (MPR). Europe is expected
to emerge slowly from recession in the second half of 2012, although the risks
around this outlook remain high. The
profile for U.S. growth is slightly stronger, reflecting the balance of somewhat
improved labour markets, financial conditions and confidence on the one hand,
and emerging fiscal consolidation and ongoing household deleveraging on the
other. Economic activity in
emerging-market economies is expected to moderate to a still-robust pace over
the projection horizon, supported by an easing of macroeconomic policies. Improved global economic prospects, supply
disruptions and geopolitical risks have kept commodity prices elevated. In particular, the international price of oil
has risen further and is now considerably higher than that received by Canadian
producers. If sustained, these oil price
developments could dampen the improvement in economic momentum.
Overall, economic momentum in Canada is slightly firmer than
the Bank had expected in January. The external headwinds facing Canada have
abated somewhat, with the U.S. recovery more resilient and financial conditions
more supportive than previously anticipated.
As a result, business and household confidence are improving faster than
forecast in January. The Bank projects that private domestic demand will
account for almost all of Canada’s economic growth over the projection
horizon. Household spending is expected
to remain high relative to GDP as households add to their debt burden, which
remains the biggest domestic risk.
Business investment is projected to remain robust, reflecting solid
balance sheets, very favourable credit conditions, continuing strong terms of
trade and heightened competitive pressures.
The contribution of government spending to growth is expected to be
quite modest over the projection horizon, in line with recent federal and
provincial budgets. The recovery in net exports is likely to remain weak in
light of modest external demand and ongoing competitiveness challenges,
including the persistent strength of the Canadian dollar.
The Bank projects that the economy will grow by 2.4 per cent
in both 2012 and 2013 before moderating to 2.2 per cent in 2014. The degree of
economic slack has been somewhat smaller than the Bank had anticipated in
January, and the economy is now expected to return to full capacity in the
first half of 2013.
As a result of this reduced slack and higher gasoline
prices, the profile for inflation is expected to be somewhat firmer than
anticipated in January. After moderating
this quarter, total CPI inflation is expected, along with core inflation, to be
around 2 per cent over the balance of the projection horizon as the economy
reaches its production potential, the growth of labour compensation remains
moderate, and inflation expectations stay well-anchored.
Reflecting all of these factors, the Bank has decided to
maintain the target for the overnight rate at 1 per cent. In light of the
reduced slack in the economy and firmer underlying inflation, some modest
withdrawal of the present considerable monetary policy stimulus may become
appropriate, consistent with achieving the 2 per cent inflation target over the
medium term. The timing and degree of any such withdrawal will be weighed
carefully against domestic and global economic developments.
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