TORONTO — A deteriorating European with slower
growth and the longer we go without economy and weak global growth will keep
the Bank of Canada from raising rates for at least another year, though an
interest rate cut looks highly unlikely, according to a Reuters survey.
The Reuters poll of 41 economists and strategists
released on Tuesday showed the median forecast for the next interest rate hike
was pushed back by three months to the first quarter of 2013 from the fourth
quarter of 2012 projected in a November poll. The Bank of Canada's target for
the overnight rate - its main policy rate - has been at 1 per cent for more
than a year.
"The longer we spend struggling the Europeans
coming to some cohesive policy solution, the worse the economic drag will
be," said David Tulk, chief Canada macro strategist at TD Securities.
"You get the sense that growth I think is
likely to remain lower for longer, just like interest rates."
Investors in the first quarter of 2012 are expected to focus on the heavy supply of euro zone debt coming due, with fears about a possible lack of demand at auctions. Italian and Spanish bond sales in particular are viewed as the next big tests.
Some economic data has also been worrisome. A Bank
of Canada business survey on Monday showed an increasing number of firms are
pessimistic about the rate of sales growth, further reducing pressure for the
central bank to take interest rates higher.
The most recent domestic jobs report also
disappointed, reversing a trend that saw Canada outperform the United States
both during and after the global financial crisis.
Monthly employment data on Friday showed Canada
missed forecasts while the U.S. beat them. This gives the Bank of Canada even
less impetus to tighten policy before the U.S. Federal Reserve, which has said
it expects to keep its key interest rate near zero through mid-2013.
But many analysts expect an even longer pause, and
bet the Fed's next move will be to stimulate the economy, rather than tighten
monetary policy.
"If the Fed comes out with its published
interest rate forecast at the end of the month and says the consensus points to
an even longer hold than the middle of 2013 then that could handicap the Bank
of Canada to an even greater extent," said Derek Holt, vice president of
economics at Scotia Capital.
FEW SEE RATE CUT AHEAD
Yet many analysts say the case for an interest rate
cut is difficult. Governor Mark Carney has repeatedly warned about the dangers
of Canadians borrowing too much as a result of very low interest rates. Data
last month showed the level of household debt swelled to another record high in
the third quarter.
"A cut in the policy rate anytime in 2012 is
extremely unlikely. It would take a global recession of 2008 proportions for
the BoC to even consider cutting policy rates," said Carlos Leitao, chief
economist at Laurentian Bank Securities in Montreal. "In our view, 1.00
per cent is the new, effective, zero-bound."
Of the contributors, 32 see a rate hike happening
after the second quarter of 2012. Five forecasters - BNP Paribas, Capital
Economics, Goldman Sachs, IFR Markets and ING Financial - predicted a rate cut
across the forecast horizon, up from only three forecasters in the last poll.
All five expect the cut by mid-2012.
The possibility of an ease has been anticipated in
overnight index swaps for some time, though the timing has been pushed out.
Forecasts for official interest rates at the end of
2012 also dropped from the previous poll - with the median target declining to
1 per cent, from 1.25 per cent in November - indicating one less rate increase
next year than was previously assumed.
Interest rate expectations for the four quarters of
2012 have been downgraded continuously in all nine global Reuters polls
conducted since last January, with the target for the first quarter of 2012
revised down to 1 per cent from 2.25 per cent.
The poll showed a 96 per cent probability there
won't be a change in rates at the next policy announcement on Jan 17.
All of the contributors in the survey - barring ING
Financial which is forecasting a rate cut - are expecting the BOC to keep rates
unchanged next week.

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