Inflation Rises in Canada. How Could This Impact the Bank of Canada’s Upcoming Decision on Rates?

Executive summary:

  • Canadian inflation rates ticked up during October
  • U.S. Q3 earnings continue to look resilient
  • U.S. credit spreads recently hit multi-year lows

On the latest edition of Market Week in Review, Investment Strategist BeiChen Lin reviewed the latest inflation numbers from Canada. He also provided an update on U.S. third-quarter earnings season and discussed the recent tightening in U.S. credit spreads.

October CPI, PPI numbers inch up in Canada

Starting with Canada, Lin said there were two major datapoints released the week of Nov. 18 pertaining to inflation—the consumer price index (CPI) and the producer price index (PPI). On the CPI side, both the core and headline readings came in hotter than expected, he remarked.

“The headline CPI increased to 2.0% in October on a year-over-year basis—slightly above consensus expectations for a 1.9% gain. In addition, two measures of core inflation—CPI-trim and CPI-median—also exceeded analysts’ expectations, rising 2.6% and 2.5%, respectively,” Lin stated.

All told, this pushed the average of the Bank of Canada’s (BoC) three preferred measures of core inflation to 2.4% year-over-year in October—up from 2.3% in September and 2.2% in August, he noted. Lin stressed that while inflation in Canada is still far below its 2022 peak, the numbers from the last few months have been a bit disappointing.

“Because of this, investors are carefully monitoring the situation to see if the recent uptick in inflation is a temporary setback—or a more worrisome trend for the BoC,” he remarked, adding that the October PPI numbers also came in stronger than anticipated.