The Bank of Canada kept its benchmark interest rate steady at 5.0 per cent on Wednesday and hinted that its tightening cycle might have peaked, though inflation remains a concern.

  • veee
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    85 months ago

    Desjardins and TD Bank are among forecasters calling for easing to begin in the spring, while RBC, CIBC and BMO are eyeing closer to mid-year for cuts. Money markets continue to fully price in a first, 25-basis-point cut in June, according to Reuters.

    CIBC chief economist Avery Shenfeld said in a note to clients Wednesday that if inflation comes in below expectations, cuts starting in April are not off the table. CIBC is calling for a total of 150 basis points of rate easing this year, with the possibility the second cut from the Bank of Canada is half a percentage point.

    The central bank’s next interest rate decision comes on March 6, with its updated forecasts for inflation and the economy set for April.

    • @ASaltPepper
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      105 months ago

      Housings still gonna be 30x median income…but I guess people will have incomes so that’s nice.

      • @rekabis@lemmy.ca
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        35 months ago

        It’s so bad in Kelowna BC that the average wage would have to jump 10× from $22/hr to $222/hr in order for the average wage earner to be able to afford the average home under the one-third rule.

        And yes, all other working-class wages would have to jump commensurately, with minimum wage rising to $167.50/hr.

        Or, on the flip side, housing values would have to drop by 90%.

        Either way, something has to give. This can only go on so long before people just start taking a page out of 1790s France.