Bank of Canada holds key interest rate at 2.75%
- The Bank of Canada held its key policy rate at 2.75%, marking its first pause after seven consecutive cuts, according to Governor Tiff Macklem.
- Economic forecasts were scrapped due to uncertainty around U.S. Tariffs, leading to two scenarios predicting recession and inflation, as stated by the Bank.
- Experts indicate the Bank may need to act aggressively if economic conditions worsen, with real estate market activity expected to remain sluggish, as reported by Analyst Victor Tran.
- Macklem indicated that the current pause in rate cuts does not signify an end to easing, stating it is prepared to act if needed to support the economy.
115 Articles
115 Articles
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2.75: Canada’s central bank held its key interest rate steady at 2.75% this week, ending a streak of seven consecutive cuts. Despite concerns about a slowing Canadian economy, and a lower-than-expected inflation reading earlier this week, the regulator opted not to cut rates due to massive uncertainty about the extent and impact of Donald Trump’s tariffs. 100 and 25: Canadian industries are busy lobbying one of the world’s largest economies for …

Lacking clarity on U.S. trade, Bank of Canada keeps 'powder dry' with rate hold
OTTAWA — The Bank of Canada doesn't know quite yet how to navigate monetary policy amid constantly shifting trade turbulence with the United States, so the central bank kept its powder dry with an interest rate hold on Wednesday.
US tariffs could trigger deep recession - Bank of Canada
Bank of Canada on Wednesday said inflation in Canada would spike and the country would enter a deep recession if US tariffs trigger a global trade war. The central bank, while citing the high level of uncertainty, did not issue its regular quarterly economic forecasts. The apex bank instead provided two scenarios as to what might happen. DAILY POST reports that in the first scenario, most tariffs are negotiated away, and Canadian and global grow…
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