Canadian Tax Holiday Hiding Inflation Surge, BoC Should Pause Cuts: BMO

Canada’s tax holiday ran for two months but it probably felt much shorter, and with good reason. Statistics Canada (Stat Can) data shows the Consumer Price Index (CPI) accelerated in January. The central bank’s preferred inflation measures are now approaching the upper bound, and will bust through it like the Kool-Aid Man once the temporary suppression from the GST/HST Holiday fades. At least one Big Six bank told investors the central bank is likely to pause rate cuts in the coming months, as CPI is set to rip in just a few weeks. 

Canadian Headline Inflation Accelerates As Cheap Energy Disappears

Canadian headline inflation advanced but remained below that crucial 2-point mark the public watches. Annual growth of CPI climbed to 1.9% in January, accelerating 0.1 points from a month prior. Stat Can emphasized that volatile energy prices were behind much of the growth, and stripping gas prices reduces the rate to just 1.7% over the same month. 

Before dismissing headline growth, it’s worth realizing that gas prices provided much of the downward pressure in prior months. The negative growth wasn’t emphasized when it suppressed inflation, but becomes a point when dismissing rising inflation. Just a fun observation of how reporting this data seems to work. That volatility is largely why the Bank of Canada (BoC) typically prefers Core measures of CPI. 

Bank of Canada-Preferred Inflation Measure Near Upper Limit

The less volatile, BoC-preferred Core CPI measures all accelerated last month. “…there is little debate that underlying inflation is no longer improving in Canada, and in fact seems to be grinding a bit higher recently,” explained BMO Chief Economist Douglas Porter. 

Source: BMO Capital Markets; Bank of Canada; Statistics Canada.

The above chart provided by the bank shows the four major measures of the Core CPI index. He emphasized that the most recent 6-month trend shows a sharp acceleration in contrast to the previous six.  

“In fact, the Bank of Canada’s two main measures of core are each up at a 3%+ annual rate over that spell. Both are running at the strongest pace in a year, i.e. back when overnight rates were still 5.0%, not 3.0%,” said Porter. 

Adding, “While the Bank obviously has a lot to deal with amid the many tariff threats, the inflation backdrop alone would suggest it may be time for at least a brief pause.” 

GST/HST Holiday Concealing Inflation, Prices Set To Soar In March 

The issue with accelerating inflation gets even more concerning when considering temporary tax relief. In mid-December, Canada sent households on a GST/HST Holiday, exempting certain categories from the sales taxes. Since CPI prices are inclusive of sales taxes, this temporarily lowers prices for those segments. As we mentioned last month, since January is the first full month of the relief, the impact would be amplified in this report. However, the effect would fade by next month’s release, as the temporary suppression is reversed. 

Another economist at the Big Six bank wrote to investors separately, confirming the issue. “This relief will start fading in February before fully coming off the books in March,” said Shelly Kaushik, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets.  

Source: BMO Capital Markets; Statistics Canada.

She warns that headline inflation will pop above 2% in the coming months, and move potentially higher than pre-holiday. “If, as some anecdotal evidence suggests, some businesses raised prices while their items were exempt from sales tax, prices could rise above their pre-holiday levels,” Kaushik noted.   

Considering the BoC’s policy research shows each rate decision takes 18 to 24 months to be fully reflected at market, this can complicate their position. Looming tariffs are likely to require some easing, but with inflation already warming up before temporary suppressions fade, the last policy cut may have already pushed CPI into the danger zone.

12 Comments

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  • Reply
    Ethan Wu 2 days ago

    Canada’s inflation numbers are junk since it uses its own “unique” model. We shouldn’t let states determine how they’ll measure the decay of the currency they issue. It should be based on supply, and domestic spending.

    Asking a gov addicted to credit whether inflation is too high is like asking a barber about your hair—we should go for a cut is always the answer.

  • Reply
    Raj 2 days ago

    Interesting article because this data does two things:
    1. confirms that Canadian consumption isn’t as disconnected from the US, which is a bit of a relief tbh.
    2. inflation is underreported and they’re over easing since unlike the US, Canada includes mortgage interest in the equation which sheds another half point from annual growth.

    • Reply
      RW 2 days ago

      Trust the inflation science. You’re not an anti-deflation spiraler, are you?

    • Reply
      Trader Jim 2 days ago

      Isn’t it funny to see people on reddit constantly calling these guys “doomers,” but when you actually understand what they’re saying is the economy is better than people think?

      You’re a doomer if you don’t think we need emergency rate cuts all of the time, according to 60k+ plus real estate agents that have a ton of free time suddenly.

  • Reply
    Paul Hickey, Peterborough 2 days ago

    Interest rates MUST go down. Sorry naysayers, the rates are going down to support house prices. Canadians have worked hard and Trudeau promised higher house prices. Bank of Canada has 1 mandate – support house prices and ensure they increase.

    • Reply
      Chris 5 hours ago

      I cannot, for the life of me, tell if this is a bit or if you’re being sincere.

  • Reply
    T.H. 2 days ago

    This was all foreseen by Astrology.
    Astrology that has been correctly interpreted. (very few astrologers can actually do that is why there are so many doubters in the world)

    BTW, Retail Restaurants will continue into the bankruptcy dumpster for another 2.25 Years !

    • Reply
      Patiently Waiting 1 day ago

      What is Astrology saying about the price of homes? Will this bubble pop to come in line with incomes? Thank you.

  • Reply
    Frank 2 days ago

    The historical pattern of data manipulation by gov agencies to please their overlords is legend, with Canada being no exception and perhaps a world leader (yay!??) even. More and more have noticed and beyond the clear deception, the true risk is that the public will largely be turned off by it all and simply stick to the spending habits which gov has tried to flip to whatever advantage they seek as political aims or policy goals. And that would be a disaster for both as the signals between each would grow to be less and less reliable or hold believable predictive value with which to have a stable society.

  • Reply
    Frank 24 hours ago

    That micro managing an economy can be accomplished by frequent rate adjustments, for sentiment, rather than stability, and for solely satisfying lenders’ feelings, is as ridiculous as it is corrosive.

    Then there is their manipulated calculations, that we all know are unreliable. And yet are recycled in media like urban myths.

    Then there is their assertion, that frequent rate movements are solely accountable for the economic outcome. That is like believing buying more buckets for the Titanic is a solution.

    Rate stability and rate levels as a reasoned bases for the cost and allocation of capital, is unfortunately and sadly lacking. Rather, we’re offered casino like rate spinning like it’s a betting sport.

    SNAFU

  • Reply
    Leaf 21 hours ago

    Why are we listening to the opinions of private banks on interest rates?

    • Reply
      Travis Hunter 3 minutes ago

      I’m skeptical of banks for a lot of things but you need to understand what you’re reading. The banks make the same spread regardless of rates, they make more when rates are cut because you can lever up.

      The banks are the primary creator of money. But in any case, he’s right. The problem is the average person can understand their monthly payment going up in dollars amounts, but not in uncaptured inflation.

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