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National Bank of Canada to release its third quarter 2025 results on August 27, 2025 at 6:30 a.m. EDT Français
National Bank of Canada to release its third quarter 2025 results on August 27, 2025 at 6:30 a.m. EDT Français

Cision Canada

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Cision Canada

National Bank of Canada to release its third quarter 2025 results on August 27, 2025 at 6:30 a.m. EDT Français

MONTREAL, Aug. 5, 2025 /CNW/ - National Bank of Canada (TSX: NA) will release its third quarter 2025 results on Wednesday, August 27, 2025 at approximately 6:30 a.m. EDT and will hold its financial community conference call the same day at 11:00 a.m. EDT. Presentation materials referenced during the call will be posted on the Bank's website at approximately 6:30 a.m. EDT. The conference call will be accessible via live Internet broadcast or by telephone in listen-only mode at 1-800-806-5484 or 416-340-2217 with access code 9962511#. A recording will be available until November 27, 2025 at 1-800-408-3053 or 905-694-9451 with access code 5161030#. About National Bank of Canada With $536 billion in assets as at April 30, 2025, National Bank of Canada is one of Canada's six systemically important banks. The Bank has approximately 34,000 employees in knowledge-intensive positions and operates through three business segments in Canada: Personal and Commercial Banking, Wealth Management and Financial Markets. A fourth segment, U.S. Specialty Finance and International, complements the growth of its domestic operations. Its securities are listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX: NA). Follow the Bank's activities at or via social media. SOURCE National Bank of Canada

Bank of Canada signals possible cuts ahead, but holds key policy rate steady for now at 2.75%
Bank of Canada signals possible cuts ahead, but holds key policy rate steady for now at 2.75%

Yahoo

time30-07-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Bank of Canada signals possible cuts ahead, but holds key policy rate steady for now at 2.75%

The Bank of Canada (BoC) held its overnight interest rate steady at 2.75 per cent on Wednesday, in a move widely expected by economists and informed by still-persistent uncertainty related to U.S. trade tensions. The trade war remained the dominant focus in the announcement, and once again led the BoC to depart from its usual approach by offering a range of future economic scenarios. Governor Tiff Macklem declared that U.S. tariffs and policy are 'still too unpredictable to be able to provide a single forecast.' Macklem also cited resilience in the Canadian economy and 'evidence of underlying inflation pressures' as factors in the decision to hold, but outlined the conditions the Bank would need to see to make further interest rate cuts. 'If a weakening economy puts further downward pressure on inflation and the upward price pressures from the trade disruptions are contained, there may be a need for a reduction in the policy interest rate,' he said. Economists had universally expected a hold, according to a Reuters poll, but their views on the BoC's next moves were less uniform following the announcement. Expectations for a cut at the BoC's upcoming September 17 decision were mixed. At the very least, wrote National Bank of Canada economists Taylor Schleich and Ethan Currie, the explicit mention of what would justify a cut contradicted 'the growing view that the BoC's easing cycle is over.' The BoC's new Monetary Policy Report — a quarterly document that offers forecasts for the economy, inflation and risks — avoided a singular outlook for the second time in a row. The July report includes three scenarios for economic projections. One is based on current tariff conditions, as well as alternatives imagining an escalation and a de-escalation of trade tensions. Economic contraction Although the current scenario involves tariffs lower than what U.S. President Donald Trump had threatened, Macklem said, 'they are still outside post-war historical experience.' None of the scenarios, Macklem noted, involve a complete recovery. "Unfortunately, the sad reality is that tariffs mean the economy is going to work less efficiently. It means there's going to be less income, so there's going to be less consumption. So yes, the economy will resume growing, but it'll be on a permanently lower path." He acknowledged persistently high core inflation, which on its own could hinder further rate cuts, but said the Bank suspects it 'will gradually unwind' — with the Canadian dollar gaining value (which reduces import costs), labour costs falling and the economy in excess supply. The BoC expects an overall contraction of the economy in the second quarter of the year, followed by modest growth for the rest of 2025, Macklem said. Based on that outlook, BMO chief economist Douglas Porter said in a note to investors that the requirements for a September cut are likely high. 'Given the Bank already assumes a deep drop in Q2 economic activity … we will likely need two friendly CPI reports ahead of the next rate decision in September to meaningfully increase the chances of a cut at that time,' Porter said. At Desjardins Group, however, macro strategist Tiago Figueiredo and economist LJ Valencia see a set-up for multiple cuts, noting that reductions are likely in two of the BoC's three scenarios. 'Furthermore, the inflation forecasts in the current tariff scenario appear to be elevated, particularly considering recent figures on tariff revenues collected by the Canadian government, which have been lower than expected,' they wrote. 'That opens the door for inflation to print below expectations over the coming months, and help central bankers gain the confidence needed to deliver stimulus. As a result, we continue to see the Bank of Canada cutting rates three times this year, with the first 25-basis-point cut coming at the next Bank of Canada fixed announcement date in September.' In its June decision, the Bank also held its policy rate steady. Watch Governor Tiff Macklem and Senior Deputy Governor Carolyn Rogers' press conference following the rate announcement this morning. Follow Yahoo Finance Canada's live blog for news, updates and analysis of the Bank of Canada's interest rate announcement below. Potential implications of fiscal outlook missing from BoC: Holt The Bank of Canada's lack of clear forward guidance or a base case forecast suggests 'they haven't a clue what to do next,' said Scotiabank analyst Derek Holt. 'I don't find we learned anything new whatsoever about the policy bias from this set of communications,' he added. What was glaringly missing, according to Holt, was mention of the potential implications of the Fall budget or broader fiscal policy efforts outside of sector-specific reports. That might just be the BoC playing it politically safe, but it fails to acknowledge the clear risk posed by potentially large-scale fiscal stimulus that could be rolled out soon, building on the more modest measures announced this summer, he said. 'Fiscal easing could easily substitute for monetary easing if required, or pivot the monetary policy dialogue in the other direction pending what happens to the rest of the picture,' he said. While the threat of tariffs is a big deal for certain sectors, like metals, if tensions don't escalate and future deals follow the same pattern as past agreements with other nations, then the threat to Canada could be exaggerated, Holt added. 'If, say, we get a 15–20% tariff like the US imposed on Japan, the EU, and the UK's slightly lower rate among others, and the administration officials continue to indicate that it's likely to apply only to non-CUSMA/USMCA compliant trade, then 15–20% on 5–10% of our trade is frankly peanuts,' Holt said. Tariff shock must amp up to justify rate cuts: RBC RBC senior economist Claire Fan says the BoC delivered a "nuanced" message on Wednesday, balancing concern about slower growth so far in 2025, with optimism on inflation under U.S. tariffs. In a research report on Wednesday, Fan says the BoC signalled a rate cut is in play if inflation falls due to a weaker economy. The question is, how much weaker? "It would likely take a significantly larger international trade shock than is currently in place to prompt that reaction, and the central bank will also need to continue to take into account fiscal policy loosening, which is better suited to deliver targeted relief to trade impacted sectors than interest rate policy," she wrote. "A significantly more negative outlook, one that resembles spring [2025 forecasts] remains a downside risk," Fan added. "Barring such deterioration and following our base case, we expect the BoC will maintain current rates going forward." Monex pencils in rate cut for October Nick Rees, head of macro research at Monex Canada, says he's penciled in a rate cut for October, albeit with little conviction. Rees called today's announcement "another placeholder decision" in the absence of further certainty over tariffs and the path for inflation, suggesting that further rate cuts may be "some time away." However, according to Rees, the BoC will likely resume cutting earlier than traders expect as the country faces increasing headwinds to growth. Given the lack of fresh guidance on the path for Canadian rates, it's no surprise USDCAD was little changed after the announcement, he added. New BoC economic outlook 'better than originally feared': ATB Financial The Bank of Canada downgraded its base economic growth forecast to 1.3 per cent this year, and 1.1 per cent in 2026. That's a significant drop from the 1.8 per cent it projected for each year back in its January outlook. "In April, they offered no forecast at all - just scenarios, citing heightened tariff uncertainty. This time around they put out a forecast, but they call it a 'current tariff scenario,' and still ran two alternate scenarios," Mark Parsons of ATB Economics wrote on Wednesday. "The current projections are clearly better than originally feared," he added. "Expect the next two inflation reports before the September announcement to carry extra weight. An easing in underlying inflation could tip the scale towards a cut." BoC should cut rates twice this year to support economy, RSM economist says "The Bank of Canada can — and should — cut rates twice this year," said Joe Brusuelas, chief economist at business advisory firm RSM, following the BoC's July 30 rate pause. "Today's decision supports that view and we are confident that rate cuts during the final half of the year will bolster the economy and bring down unemployment." A possible recession depends on the outcome of current trade negotiations rather than the Bank's decision to hold rates, he added. "As the Bank of Canada moves to cut rates, we expect to lower that probability later this year." Small businesses already absorbing costs of U.S. tariffs: CFIB While the Bank of Canada announced its rate pause amid uncertainty around U.S. President Donald Trump's continually escalating trade war, the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CIFB) says that Canadian small businesses have already been absorbing some or all of the costs associated with U.S. tariffs. On imports from the U.S., nearly seven in 10 small businesses paid the full Canadian tariff, with the median cost of $9,000, a recent CFIB survey shows. As for exports, 63 per cent covered costs directly or shared them with their customers in the United States, paying a median of $22,500. "With a limited financial capacity, SMEs likely won't be able to act in the long-term as a primary economic buffer against tariffs," said Simon Gaudreault, CFIB's chief economist and vice president of research. He warns that without any support, the costs will eventually trickle down to consumers. Slow growth 'leaves the door open' for rate cuts: TD Bank TD Bank economist Andrew Hencic sees inflation guiding Bank of Canada rate decisions for the rest of 2025. In his opening statement to reporters on Wednesday, Governor Tiff Macklem said, "If a weakening economy puts further downward pressure on inflation, and the upward price pressures from the trade disruptions are contained, there may be a need for a reduction in the policy interest rate." The BoC sees the economy contracting 1.5 per cent on a quarterly basis in the second quarter, before recovering later in the year. At the same time, the bank expects inflation to stay close to its two per cent target under its "current tariff scenario." Canada's annual inflation rate rose to 1.9 per cent in June from 1.7 per cent in May, according to Statistics Canada. "The outlook for the economy under the current tariff regime shows a modest recovery starting in the third quarter, but with an economy expanding below trend," Hencic wrote in a report on Wednesday. "This leaves the door open for future rate cut(s) under stable inflation." Fixed and variable mortgage rates expected to stay in low-to-mid 4 per cent range: Mortgage expert Canada's housing market remains largely unchanged since the Bank of Canada's last rate hold in June, according to mortgage and real estate expert Victor Tran of 'Mortgage rates remain sticky,' he said. Canadians holding floating rate products, such as HELOCs or adjustable variable-rate mortgages, won't be experiencing payment relief in the near-term. Canadians taking out new mortgages or renewing can expect mortgage rates for fixed and variable-rate mortgages in the low to mid 4 per cent range, Tran says. Era of synchronized central banks may be ending, IG Wealth Management strategist says "The market is waking up to the idea that the easy part of the cutting cycle is behind us," said Pierre-Benoit Gauthier, vice-president of investment strategy at IG Wealth Management. Markets predict a roughly 66 per cent chance there will be a single cut by the end of the year. Meanwhile, in the U.S., markets expect another two cuts in 2025. "With rate differentials potentially changing soon, the loonie has some room to stay firm," Gauthier said. While political pressure for the Federal Reserve to cut is building, it's largely speculated the U.S. will announce another pause later today. However, if markets are right, "the era of synchronized central banking may be coming to an end soon," he said. Desjardins' Mendes: BoC 'setting up to deliver more monetary easing as early as this September' Although Macklem noted 'a clear consensus to hold' the overnight rate this time, two of the BoC's three scenarios in the MPR 'hint at a need for further rate cuts down the road,' says Desjardins Group economist Royce Mendes in a note to investors. The BoC's current tariff scenario projects core inflation to stay around 3.1 per cent in the last two quarters, Mendes says. However, data on retaliatory tariff collection suggests that number may be too high, he says, 'leaving room for core inflation to undershoot, particularly in the fourth quarter.' With that in mind, he writes, 'it looks like central bankers are setting up to deliver more monetary easing as early as this September.' BoC rate pause may spur fall housing activity, says Royal LePage CEO Although today's BoC rate pause was driven by tariff-related uncertainty, Royal LePage CEO Phil Soper says it could provide some reassurance to prospective homebuyers. "For real estate markets, it's likely more people who need to upgrade their housing will decide they can wait no longer, spurring activity heading into the fall." "Economic fundamentals, from strong employment to much improved affordability, are supporting conditions for growth in the housing market, along with material demand waiting in the wings." BMO chief economist Porter: Those seeking cuts may need to be patient In a note to clients, BMO chief economist Douglas Porter says the BoC is 'keeping the door fully open to the possibility of future rate cuts.' But Porter doesn't see good odds of that happening in September. Because the BoC expects the economy to contract in Q2, he says, 'we will likely need two friendly CPI reports ahead of the next rate decision in September to meaningfully increase the chances of a cut at that time.' However, he cautions, two consecutive months of acceptable inflation data 'may be a tall hurdle, so those looking for cuts may need to pack their patience." Porter also says the BoC's escalation and de-escalation scenarios are 'a nice way to handle the current either/or' of the trade war. 'There's simply too much lingering trade uncertainty for the BoC to be decisive on the outlook for now.' Macklem on protectionism: The world is fragmenting The uncertain state of global trade was once again front-and-centre in the Bank of Canada's latest rate announcement and Monetary Policy Report on Wednesday. Speaking to reporters in Ottawa, Governor Tiff Macklem addressed the issue of rising protectionist sentiment in the United States and other countries. "The world is fragmenting, and you know, that is going to have an impact," he said. "Some segments of society feel like they've lost out. That is having political consequences." "President Trump has dramatically increased U.S. protectionism. The effective U.S. tariff rate with the agreements that have been reached has increased significantly, and that's going to have an impact on the world economy," Macklem added. "Even before President Trump was elected, trade has been shifting." Rogers says defence spending boost could support Canada's productivity Canada's substantial increase in defence spending will likely, in the long run, help productivity in Canada, says BoC Senior Deputy Governor Carolyn Rogers. Prime Minister Mark Carney has committed to raising defence-related spending to the equivalent of five per cent of Canada's gross domestic product by 2035. 'What we want to see is those investments in our own economy so that they build our own capacity, [and] they generate some economic activity within Canada,' Rogers said. She noted the effects won't be immediate but said she's optimistic it will be net positive to productivity. Macklem: 'Trust is going to be hard to restore' ahead of 2026 CUSMA renegotiation North America's trilateral trade deal, known in Canada as the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA), is due for review in 2026. Under current Canada-U.S. tariffs, a vast swath of goods compliant with this deal are exempt from levies. In its "current tariffs scenario" outlined in its newly released Monetary Policy Report, the Bank of Canada estimates CUSMA-compliance at 95 per cent for non-energy exports. "There is a sense that U.S. policy may well remain unpredictable. There is a sense that trust is going to be hard to restore," BoC Governor Tiff Macklem told reporters on Wednesday. "I think some level of uncertainty will continue, and in the scenarios, particularly the current tariff scenario, and the escalation scenario, we do have a fair amount of uncertainty through much of the projection. It does diminish over time, but it's not falling off quickly." U.S. President Donald Trump signed CUSMA during his first presidency in 2018. Macklem stays cautious on future of rate cuts Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem remains cautious on commenting whether there will be a rate cut this year. "Our future decisions are going to depend on what happens in the future," he said, adding: "We continue to proceed carefully." "Given the unusual amount of uncertainty, we're continuing to put more weight on the risks, and we're ready to respond to new information," Macklem said. BoC's cautious tone, rate-cut readiness could push loonie towards 1.39 "There's light at the end of the tunnel for the Canadian economy and the loonie, but it remains far off in the distance," said Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist at Corpay, in response to the Bank of Canada's rate pause. In today's BoC announcement, Governor Tiff Macklem said that due to the unusual degree of uncertainty, the BoC has to put more weight on risks, consider a shorter horizon than usual, and be ready to respond to new information. Schamotta says this "far from optimistic" economic outlook, paired with the Bank's readiness to resume easing, should keep the Canadian dollar under pressure, "potentially putting it on course to challenge the 1.39 mark before September, especially if the greenback resumes its appreciation." 'The Bank is inching closer to a cut': CIBC CIBC economist Andrew Grantham sees hints the BoC is "inching closer to a cut" in the central bank's Monetary Policy Report released on Wednesday. He points to a weaker estimate for economic growth in the second quarter from the Bank's policymakers. "The Bank appears to be getting a little more comfortable with the notion that the Canadian economy will need the support from further interest rate cuts in the future," Grantham wrote in a report following today's rate announcement. "However, it is clearly not there yet, and upcoming data will remain more important than today's slight change in language in determining if that support comes at the September meeting as we currently forecast." Bank of Canada to cut rates twice more in 2025, bringing overnight rate to 2.25%: Vanguard Canada The Canadian arm of mutual fund and exchange-traded fund giant Vanguard now expects the Bank of Canada to cut rates twice more in 2025, following Wednesday's decision to hold. "Despite leaving rates unchanged, we expect the BoC to reduce its policy rate to 2.25 per cent by the end of the year, given a lower growth environment,' Vanguard Canada chief investment strategist Ashish Dewan stated in a news release after Wednesday's announcement. "Although the 'uncertainty tax' has already shown signs of impacting the Canadian labour market and business investment, a 2.9 per cent year-over-year increase in CPI-median data in March, one of the BoC's preferred measures of inflation, coupled with uncertainty around the economic outlook from U.S. tariffs, gave the central bank reasons to pause rate cuts." Key takeaways from Macklem's opening statement On Canada-U.S. trade war: "Some tariff agreements have been negotiated between the United States and its trading partners, and that has reduced the risk of a severe and escalating global trade war. Unfortunately, the tariffs in those agreements also suggest the United States is not returning to open trade." No normal forecast: "U.S. tariffs are still too unpredictable to be able to provide a single forecast for the Canadian economy." The BoC once again opted against a conventional forecast due to ongoing U.S. tariff uncertainty. Today's Monetary Policy Report includes three scenarios. A "current view," and two more looking at an escalation or de-escalation. Optimism on inflation: "There are reasons to think that the recent increase in underlying inflation will gradually unwind. The Canadian dollar has appreciated, which reduces import costs. Growth in unit labour costs has moderated, and the economy is in excess supply." "At the same time, tariffs impose new direct costs, which will be gradually passed through to consumers. In the current tariff scenario, upside and downside pressures roughly balance out, so inflation remains close to two per cent." A clear consensus to hold, for now: "There was clear consensus to hold our policy rate unchanged." "If a weakening economy puts further downward pressure on inflation and the upward price pressures from the trade disruptions are contained, there may be a need for a reduction in the policy interest rate." Potential implications of fiscal outlook missing from BoC: Holt The Bank of Canada's lack of clear forward guidance or a base case forecast suggests 'they haven't a clue what to do next,' said Scotiabank analyst Derek Holt. 'I don't find we learned anything new whatsoever about the policy bias from this set of communications,' he added. What was glaringly missing, according to Holt, was mention of the potential implications of the Fall budget or broader fiscal policy efforts outside of sector-specific reports. That might just be the BoC playing it politically safe, but it fails to acknowledge the clear risk posed by potentially large-scale fiscal stimulus that could be rolled out soon, building on the more modest measures announced this summer, he said. 'Fiscal easing could easily substitute for monetary easing if required, or pivot the monetary policy dialogue in the other direction pending what happens to the rest of the picture,' he said. While the threat of tariffs is a big deal for certain sectors, like metals, if tensions don't escalate and future deals follow the same pattern as past agreements with other nations, then the threat to Canada could be exaggerated, Holt added. 'If, say, we get a 15–20% tariff like the US imposed on Japan, the EU, and the UK's slightly lower rate among others, and the administration officials continue to indicate that it's likely to apply only to non-CUSMA/USMCA compliant trade, then 15–20% on 5–10% of our trade is frankly peanuts,' Holt said. The Bank of Canada's lack of clear forward guidance or a base case forecast suggests 'they haven't a clue what to do next,' said Scotiabank analyst Derek Holt. 'I don't find we learned anything new whatsoever about the policy bias from this set of communications,' he added. What was glaringly missing, according to Holt, was mention of the potential implications of the Fall budget or broader fiscal policy efforts outside of sector-specific reports. That might just be the BoC playing it politically safe, but it fails to acknowledge the clear risk posed by potentially large-scale fiscal stimulus that could be rolled out soon, building on the more modest measures announced this summer, he said. 'Fiscal easing could easily substitute for monetary easing if required, or pivot the monetary policy dialogue in the other direction pending what happens to the rest of the picture,' he said. While the threat of tariffs is a big deal for certain sectors, like metals, if tensions don't escalate and future deals follow the same pattern as past agreements with other nations, then the threat to Canada could be exaggerated, Holt added. 'If, say, we get a 15–20% tariff like the US imposed on Japan, the EU, and the UK's slightly lower rate among others, and the administration officials continue to indicate that it's likely to apply only to non-CUSMA/USMCA compliant trade, then 15–20% on 5–10% of our trade is frankly peanuts,' Holt said. Tariff shock must amp up to justify rate cuts: RBC RBC senior economist Claire Fan says the BoC delivered a "nuanced" message on Wednesday, balancing concern about slower growth so far in 2025, with optimism on inflation under U.S. tariffs. In a research report on Wednesday, Fan says the BoC signalled a rate cut is in play if inflation falls due to a weaker economy. The question is, how much weaker? "It would likely take a significantly larger international trade shock than is currently in place to prompt that reaction, and the central bank will also need to continue to take into account fiscal policy loosening, which is better suited to deliver targeted relief to trade impacted sectors than interest rate policy," she wrote. "A significantly more negative outlook, one that resembles spring [2025 forecasts] remains a downside risk," Fan added. "Barring such deterioration and following our base case, we expect the BoC will maintain current rates going forward." RBC senior economist Claire Fan says the BoC delivered a "nuanced" message on Wednesday, balancing concern about slower growth so far in 2025, with optimism on inflation under U.S. tariffs. In a research report on Wednesday, Fan says the BoC signalled a rate cut is in play if inflation falls due to a weaker economy. The question is, how much weaker? "It would likely take a significantly larger international trade shock than is currently in place to prompt that reaction, and the central bank will also need to continue to take into account fiscal policy loosening, which is better suited to deliver targeted relief to trade impacted sectors than interest rate policy," she wrote. "A significantly more negative outlook, one that resembles spring [2025 forecasts] remains a downside risk," Fan added. "Barring such deterioration and following our base case, we expect the BoC will maintain current rates going forward." Monex pencils in rate cut for October Nick Rees, head of macro research at Monex Canada, says he's penciled in a rate cut for October, albeit with little conviction. Rees called today's announcement "another placeholder decision" in the absence of further certainty over tariffs and the path for inflation, suggesting that further rate cuts may be "some time away." However, according to Rees, the BoC will likely resume cutting earlier than traders expect as the country faces increasing headwinds to growth. Given the lack of fresh guidance on the path for Canadian rates, it's no surprise USDCAD was little changed after the announcement, he added. Nick Rees, head of macro research at Monex Canada, says he's penciled in a rate cut for October, albeit with little conviction. Rees called today's announcement "another placeholder decision" in the absence of further certainty over tariffs and the path for inflation, suggesting that further rate cuts may be "some time away." However, according to Rees, the BoC will likely resume cutting earlier than traders expect as the country faces increasing headwinds to growth. Given the lack of fresh guidance on the path for Canadian rates, it's no surprise USDCAD was little changed after the announcement, he added. New BoC economic outlook 'better than originally feared': ATB Financial The Bank of Canada downgraded its base economic growth forecast to 1.3 per cent this year, and 1.1 per cent in 2026. That's a significant drop from the 1.8 per cent it projected for each year back in its January outlook. "In April, they offered no forecast at all - just scenarios, citing heightened tariff uncertainty. This time around they put out a forecast, but they call it a 'current tariff scenario,' and still ran two alternate scenarios," Mark Parsons of ATB Economics wrote on Wednesday. "The current projections are clearly better than originally feared," he added. "Expect the next two inflation reports before the September announcement to carry extra weight. An easing in underlying inflation could tip the scale towards a cut." The Bank of Canada downgraded its base economic growth forecast to 1.3 per cent this year, and 1.1 per cent in 2026. That's a significant drop from the 1.8 per cent it projected for each year back in its January outlook. "In April, they offered no forecast at all - just scenarios, citing heightened tariff uncertainty. This time around they put out a forecast, but they call it a 'current tariff scenario,' and still ran two alternate scenarios," Mark Parsons of ATB Economics wrote on Wednesday. "The current projections are clearly better than originally feared," he added. "Expect the next two inflation reports before the September announcement to carry extra weight. An easing in underlying inflation could tip the scale towards a cut." BoC should cut rates twice this year to support economy, RSM economist says "The Bank of Canada can — and should — cut rates twice this year," said Joe Brusuelas, chief economist at business advisory firm RSM, following the BoC's July 30 rate pause. "Today's decision supports that view and we are confident that rate cuts during the final half of the year will bolster the economy and bring down unemployment." A possible recession depends on the outcome of current trade negotiations rather than the Bank's decision to hold rates, he added. "As the Bank of Canada moves to cut rates, we expect to lower that probability later this year." "The Bank of Canada can — and should — cut rates twice this year," said Joe Brusuelas, chief economist at business advisory firm RSM, following the BoC's July 30 rate pause. "Today's decision supports that view and we are confident that rate cuts during the final half of the year will bolster the economy and bring down unemployment." A possible recession depends on the outcome of current trade negotiations rather than the Bank's decision to hold rates, he added. "As the Bank of Canada moves to cut rates, we expect to lower that probability later this year." Small businesses already absorbing costs of U.S. tariffs: CFIB While the Bank of Canada announced its rate pause amid uncertainty around U.S. President Donald Trump's continually escalating trade war, the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CIFB) says that Canadian small businesses have already been absorbing some or all of the costs associated with U.S. tariffs. On imports from the U.S., nearly seven in 10 small businesses paid the full Canadian tariff, with the median cost of $9,000, a recent CFIB survey shows. As for exports, 63 per cent covered costs directly or shared them with their customers in the United States, paying a median of $22,500. "With a limited financial capacity, SMEs likely won't be able to act in the long-term as a primary economic buffer against tariffs," said Simon Gaudreault, CFIB's chief economist and vice president of research. He warns that without any support, the costs will eventually trickle down to consumers. While the Bank of Canada announced its rate pause amid uncertainty around U.S. President Donald Trump's continually escalating trade war, the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CIFB) says that Canadian small businesses have already been absorbing some or all of the costs associated with U.S. tariffs. On imports from the U.S., nearly seven in 10 small businesses paid the full Canadian tariff, with the median cost of $9,000, a recent CFIB survey shows. As for exports, 63 per cent covered costs directly or shared them with their customers in the United States, paying a median of $22,500. "With a limited financial capacity, SMEs likely won't be able to act in the long-term as a primary economic buffer against tariffs," said Simon Gaudreault, CFIB's chief economist and vice president of research. He warns that without any support, the costs will eventually trickle down to consumers. Slow growth 'leaves the door open' for rate cuts: TD Bank TD Bank economist Andrew Hencic sees inflation guiding Bank of Canada rate decisions for the rest of 2025. In his opening statement to reporters on Wednesday, Governor Tiff Macklem said, "If a weakening economy puts further downward pressure on inflation, and the upward price pressures from the trade disruptions are contained, there may be a need for a reduction in the policy interest rate." The BoC sees the economy contracting 1.5 per cent on a quarterly basis in the second quarter, before recovering later in the year. At the same time, the bank expects inflation to stay close to its two per cent target under its "current tariff scenario." Canada's annual inflation rate rose to 1.9 per cent in June from 1.7 per cent in May, according to Statistics Canada. "The outlook for the economy under the current tariff regime shows a modest recovery starting in the third quarter, but with an economy expanding below trend," Hencic wrote in a report on Wednesday. "This leaves the door open for future rate cut(s) under stable inflation." TD Bank economist Andrew Hencic sees inflation guiding Bank of Canada rate decisions for the rest of 2025. In his opening statement to reporters on Wednesday, Governor Tiff Macklem said, "If a weakening economy puts further downward pressure on inflation, and the upward price pressures from the trade disruptions are contained, there may be a need for a reduction in the policy interest rate." The BoC sees the economy contracting 1.5 per cent on a quarterly basis in the second quarter, before recovering later in the year. At the same time, the bank expects inflation to stay close to its two per cent target under its "current tariff scenario." Canada's annual inflation rate rose to 1.9 per cent in June from 1.7 per cent in May, according to Statistics Canada. "The outlook for the economy under the current tariff regime shows a modest recovery starting in the third quarter, but with an economy expanding below trend," Hencic wrote in a report on Wednesday. "This leaves the door open for future rate cut(s) under stable inflation." Fixed and variable mortgage rates expected to stay in low-to-mid 4 per cent range: Mortgage expert Canada's housing market remains largely unchanged since the Bank of Canada's last rate hold in June, according to mortgage and real estate expert Victor Tran of 'Mortgage rates remain sticky,' he said. Canadians holding floating rate products, such as HELOCs or adjustable variable-rate mortgages, won't be experiencing payment relief in the near-term. Canadians taking out new mortgages or renewing can expect mortgage rates for fixed and variable-rate mortgages in the low to mid 4 per cent range, Tran says. Canada's housing market remains largely unchanged since the Bank of Canada's last rate hold in June, according to mortgage and real estate expert Victor Tran of 'Mortgage rates remain sticky,' he said. Canadians holding floating rate products, such as HELOCs or adjustable variable-rate mortgages, won't be experiencing payment relief in the near-term. Canadians taking out new mortgages or renewing can expect mortgage rates for fixed and variable-rate mortgages in the low to mid 4 per cent range, Tran says. Era of synchronized central banks may be ending, IG Wealth Management strategist says "The market is waking up to the idea that the easy part of the cutting cycle is behind us," said Pierre-Benoit Gauthier, vice-president of investment strategy at IG Wealth Management. Markets predict a roughly 66 per cent chance there will be a single cut by the end of the year. Meanwhile, in the U.S., markets expect another two cuts in 2025. "With rate differentials potentially changing soon, the loonie has some room to stay firm," Gauthier said. While political pressure for the Federal Reserve to cut is building, it's largely speculated the U.S. will announce another pause later today. However, if markets are right, "the era of synchronized central banking may be coming to an end soon," he said. "The market is waking up to the idea that the easy part of the cutting cycle is behind us," said Pierre-Benoit Gauthier, vice-president of investment strategy at IG Wealth Management. Markets predict a roughly 66 per cent chance there will be a single cut by the end of the year. Meanwhile, in the U.S., markets expect another two cuts in 2025. "With rate differentials potentially changing soon, the loonie has some room to stay firm," Gauthier said. While political pressure for the Federal Reserve to cut is building, it's largely speculated the U.S. will announce another pause later today. However, if markets are right, "the era of synchronized central banking may be coming to an end soon," he said. Desjardins' Mendes: BoC 'setting up to deliver more monetary easing as early as this September' Although Macklem noted 'a clear consensus to hold' the overnight rate this time, two of the BoC's three scenarios in the MPR 'hint at a need for further rate cuts down the road,' says Desjardins Group economist Royce Mendes in a note to investors. The BoC's current tariff scenario projects core inflation to stay around 3.1 per cent in the last two quarters, Mendes says. However, data on retaliatory tariff collection suggests that number may be too high, he says, 'leaving room for core inflation to undershoot, particularly in the fourth quarter.' With that in mind, he writes, 'it looks like central bankers are setting up to deliver more monetary easing as early as this September.' Although Macklem noted 'a clear consensus to hold' the overnight rate this time, two of the BoC's three scenarios in the MPR 'hint at a need for further rate cuts down the road,' says Desjardins Group economist Royce Mendes in a note to investors. The BoC's current tariff scenario projects core inflation to stay around 3.1 per cent in the last two quarters, Mendes says. However, data on retaliatory tariff collection suggests that number may be too high, he says, 'leaving room for core inflation to undershoot, particularly in the fourth quarter.' With that in mind, he writes, 'it looks like central bankers are setting up to deliver more monetary easing as early as this September.' BoC rate pause may spur fall housing activity, says Royal LePage CEO Although today's BoC rate pause was driven by tariff-related uncertainty, Royal LePage CEO Phil Soper says it could provide some reassurance to prospective homebuyers. "For real estate markets, it's likely more people who need to upgrade their housing will decide they can wait no longer, spurring activity heading into the fall." "Economic fundamentals, from strong employment to much improved affordability, are supporting conditions for growth in the housing market, along with material demand waiting in the wings." Although today's BoC rate pause was driven by tariff-related uncertainty, Royal LePage CEO Phil Soper says it could provide some reassurance to prospective homebuyers. "For real estate markets, it's likely more people who need to upgrade their housing will decide they can wait no longer, spurring activity heading into the fall." "Economic fundamentals, from strong employment to much improved affordability, are supporting conditions for growth in the housing market, along with material demand waiting in the wings." BMO chief economist Porter: Those seeking cuts may need to be patient In a note to clients, BMO chief economist Douglas Porter says the BoC is 'keeping the door fully open to the possibility of future rate cuts.' But Porter doesn't see good odds of that happening in September. Because the BoC expects the economy to contract in Q2, he says, 'we will likely need two friendly CPI reports ahead of the next rate decision in September to meaningfully increase the chances of a cut at that time.' However, he cautions, two consecutive months of acceptable inflation data 'may be a tall hurdle, so those looking for cuts may need to pack their patience." Porter also says the BoC's escalation and de-escalation scenarios are 'a nice way to handle the current either/or' of the trade war. 'There's simply too much lingering trade uncertainty for the BoC to be decisive on the outlook for now.' In a note to clients, BMO chief economist Douglas Porter says the BoC is 'keeping the door fully open to the possibility of future rate cuts.' But Porter doesn't see good odds of that happening in September. Because the BoC expects the economy to contract in Q2, he says, 'we will likely need two friendly CPI reports ahead of the next rate decision in September to meaningfully increase the chances of a cut at that time.' However, he cautions, two consecutive months of acceptable inflation data 'may be a tall hurdle, so those looking for cuts may need to pack their patience." Porter also says the BoC's escalation and de-escalation scenarios are 'a nice way to handle the current either/or' of the trade war. 'There's simply too much lingering trade uncertainty for the BoC to be decisive on the outlook for now.' Macklem on protectionism: The world is fragmenting The uncertain state of global trade was once again front-and-centre in the Bank of Canada's latest rate announcement and Monetary Policy Report on Wednesday. Speaking to reporters in Ottawa, Governor Tiff Macklem addressed the issue of rising protectionist sentiment in the United States and other countries. "The world is fragmenting, and you know, that is going to have an impact," he said. "Some segments of society feel like they've lost out. That is having political consequences." "President Trump has dramatically increased U.S. protectionism. The effective U.S. tariff rate with the agreements that have been reached has increased significantly, and that's going to have an impact on the world economy," Macklem added. "Even before President Trump was elected, trade has been shifting." The uncertain state of global trade was once again front-and-centre in the Bank of Canada's latest rate announcement and Monetary Policy Report on Wednesday. Speaking to reporters in Ottawa, Governor Tiff Macklem addressed the issue of rising protectionist sentiment in the United States and other countries. "The world is fragmenting, and you know, that is going to have an impact," he said. "Some segments of society feel like they've lost out. That is having political consequences." "President Trump has dramatically increased U.S. protectionism. The effective U.S. tariff rate with the agreements that have been reached has increased significantly, and that's going to have an impact on the world economy," Macklem added. "Even before President Trump was elected, trade has been shifting." Rogers says defence spending boost could support Canada's productivity Canada's substantial increase in defence spending will likely, in the long run, help productivity in Canada, says BoC Senior Deputy Governor Carolyn Rogers. Prime Minister Mark Carney has committed to raising defence-related spending to the equivalent of five per cent of Canada's gross domestic product by 2035. 'What we want to see is those investments in our own economy so that they build our own capacity, [and] they generate some economic activity within Canada,' Rogers said. She noted the effects won't be immediate but said she's optimistic it will be net positive to productivity. Canada's substantial increase in defence spending will likely, in the long run, help productivity in Canada, says BoC Senior Deputy Governor Carolyn Rogers. Prime Minister Mark Carney has committed to raising defence-related spending to the equivalent of five per cent of Canada's gross domestic product by 2035. 'What we want to see is those investments in our own economy so that they build our own capacity, [and] they generate some economic activity within Canada,' Rogers said. She noted the effects won't be immediate but said she's optimistic it will be net positive to productivity. Macklem: 'Trust is going to be hard to restore' ahead of 2026 CUSMA renegotiation North America's trilateral trade deal, known in Canada as the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA), is due for review in 2026. Under current Canada-U.S. tariffs, a vast swath of goods compliant with this deal are exempt from levies. In its "current tariffs scenario" outlined in its newly released Monetary Policy Report, the Bank of Canada estimates CUSMA-compliance at 95 per cent for non-energy exports. "There is a sense that U.S. policy may well remain unpredictable. There is a sense that trust is going to be hard to restore," BoC Governor Tiff Macklem told reporters on Wednesday. "I think some level of uncertainty will continue, and in the scenarios, particularly the current tariff scenario, and the escalation scenario, we do have a fair amount of uncertainty through much of the projection. It does diminish over time, but it's not falling off quickly." U.S. President Donald Trump signed CUSMA during his first presidency in 2018. North America's trilateral trade deal, known in Canada as the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA), is due for review in 2026. Under current Canada-U.S. tariffs, a vast swath of goods compliant with this deal are exempt from levies. In its "current tariffs scenario" outlined in its newly released Monetary Policy Report, the Bank of Canada estimates CUSMA-compliance at 95 per cent for non-energy exports. "There is a sense that U.S. policy may well remain unpredictable. There is a sense that trust is going to be hard to restore," BoC Governor Tiff Macklem told reporters on Wednesday. "I think some level of uncertainty will continue, and in the scenarios, particularly the current tariff scenario, and the escalation scenario, we do have a fair amount of uncertainty through much of the projection. It does diminish over time, but it's not falling off quickly." U.S. President Donald Trump signed CUSMA during his first presidency in 2018. Macklem stays cautious on future of rate cuts Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem remains cautious on commenting whether there will be a rate cut this year. "Our future decisions are going to depend on what happens in the future," he said, adding: "We continue to proceed carefully." "Given the unusual amount of uncertainty, we're continuing to put more weight on the risks, and we're ready to respond to new information," Macklem said. Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem remains cautious on commenting whether there will be a rate cut this year. "Our future decisions are going to depend on what happens in the future," he said, adding: "We continue to proceed carefully." "Given the unusual amount of uncertainty, we're continuing to put more weight on the risks, and we're ready to respond to new information," Macklem said. BoC's cautious tone, rate-cut readiness could push loonie towards 1.39 "There's light at the end of the tunnel for the Canadian economy and the loonie, but it remains far off in the distance," said Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist at Corpay, in response to the Bank of Canada's rate pause. In today's BoC announcement, Governor Tiff Macklem said that due to the unusual degree of uncertainty, the BoC has to put more weight on risks, consider a shorter horizon than usual, and be ready to respond to new information. Schamotta says this "far from optimistic" economic outlook, paired with the Bank's readiness to resume easing, should keep the Canadian dollar under pressure, "potentially putting it on course to challenge the 1.39 mark before September, especially if the greenback resumes its appreciation." "There's light at the end of the tunnel for the Canadian economy and the loonie, but it remains far off in the distance," said Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist at Corpay, in response to the Bank of Canada's rate pause. In today's BoC announcement, Governor Tiff Macklem said that due to the unusual degree of uncertainty, the BoC has to put more weight on risks, consider a shorter horizon than usual, and be ready to respond to new information. Schamotta says this "far from optimistic" economic outlook, paired with the Bank's readiness to resume easing, should keep the Canadian dollar under pressure, "potentially putting it on course to challenge the 1.39 mark before September, especially if the greenback resumes its appreciation." 'The Bank is inching closer to a cut': CIBC CIBC economist Andrew Grantham sees hints the BoC is "inching closer to a cut" in the central bank's Monetary Policy Report released on Wednesday. He points to a weaker estimate for economic growth in the second quarter from the Bank's policymakers. "The Bank appears to be getting a little more comfortable with the notion that the Canadian economy will need the support from further interest rate cuts in the future," Grantham wrote in a report following today's rate announcement. "However, it is clearly not there yet, and upcoming data will remain more important than today's slight change in language in determining if that support comes at the September meeting as we currently forecast." CIBC economist Andrew Grantham sees hints the BoC is "inching closer to a cut" in the central bank's Monetary Policy Report released on Wednesday. He points to a weaker estimate for economic growth in the second quarter from the Bank's policymakers. "The Bank appears to be getting a little more comfortable with the notion that the Canadian economy will need the support from further interest rate cuts in the future," Grantham wrote in a report following today's rate announcement. "However, it is clearly not there yet, and upcoming data will remain more important than today's slight change in language in determining if that support comes at the September meeting as we currently forecast." Bank of Canada to cut rates twice more in 2025, bringing overnight rate to 2.25%: Vanguard Canada The Canadian arm of mutual fund and exchange-traded fund giant Vanguard now expects the Bank of Canada to cut rates twice more in 2025, following Wednesday's decision to hold. "Despite leaving rates unchanged, we expect the BoC to reduce its policy rate to 2.25 per cent by the end of the year, given a lower growth environment,' Vanguard Canada chief investment strategist Ashish Dewan stated in a news release after Wednesday's announcement. "Although the 'uncertainty tax' has already shown signs of impacting the Canadian labour market and business investment, a 2.9 per cent year-over-year increase in CPI-median data in March, one of the BoC's preferred measures of inflation, coupled with uncertainty around the economic outlook from U.S. tariffs, gave the central bank reasons to pause rate cuts." The Canadian arm of mutual fund and exchange-traded fund giant Vanguard now expects the Bank of Canada to cut rates twice more in 2025, following Wednesday's decision to hold. "Despite leaving rates unchanged, we expect the BoC to reduce its policy rate to 2.25 per cent by the end of the year, given a lower growth environment,' Vanguard Canada chief investment strategist Ashish Dewan stated in a news release after Wednesday's announcement. "Although the 'uncertainty tax' has already shown signs of impacting the Canadian labour market and business investment, a 2.9 per cent year-over-year increase in CPI-median data in March, one of the BoC's preferred measures of inflation, coupled with uncertainty around the economic outlook from U.S. tariffs, gave the central bank reasons to pause rate cuts." Key takeaways from Macklem's opening statement On Canada-U.S. trade war: "Some tariff agreements have been negotiated between the United States and its trading partners, and that has reduced the risk of a severe and escalating global trade war. Unfortunately, the tariffs in those agreements also suggest the United States is not returning to open trade." No normal forecast: "U.S. tariffs are still too unpredictable to be able to provide a single forecast for the Canadian economy." The BoC once again opted against a conventional forecast due to ongoing U.S. tariff uncertainty. Today's Monetary Policy Report includes three scenarios. A "current view," and two more looking at an escalation or de-escalation. Optimism on inflation: "There are reasons to think that the recent increase in underlying inflation will gradually unwind. The Canadian dollar has appreciated, which reduces import costs. Growth in unit labour costs has moderated, and the economy is in excess supply." "At the same time, tariffs impose new direct costs, which will be gradually passed through to consumers. In the current tariff scenario, upside and downside pressures roughly balance out, so inflation remains close to two per cent." A clear consensus to hold, for now: "There was clear consensus to hold our policy rate unchanged." "If a weakening economy puts further downward pressure on inflation and the upward price pressures from the trade disruptions are contained, there may be a need for a reduction in the policy interest rate." On Canada-U.S. trade war: "Some tariff agreements have been negotiated between the United States and its trading partners, and that has reduced the risk of a severe and escalating global trade war. Unfortunately, the tariffs in those agreements also suggest the United States is not returning to open trade." No normal forecast: "U.S. tariffs are still too unpredictable to be able to provide a single forecast for the Canadian economy." The BoC once again opted against a conventional forecast due to ongoing U.S. tariff uncertainty. Today's Monetary Policy Report includes three scenarios. A "current view," and two more looking at an escalation or de-escalation. Optimism on inflation: "There are reasons to think that the recent increase in underlying inflation will gradually unwind. The Canadian dollar has appreciated, which reduces import costs. Growth in unit labour costs has moderated, and the economy is in excess supply." "At the same time, tariffs impose new direct costs, which will be gradually passed through to consumers. In the current tariff scenario, upside and downside pressures roughly balance out, so inflation remains close to two per cent." A clear consensus to hold, for now: "There was clear consensus to hold our policy rate unchanged." "If a weakening economy puts further downward pressure on inflation and the upward price pressures from the trade disruptions are contained, there may be a need for a reduction in the policy interest rate." Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

The bitter truth is that cheaper housing means a retirement crisis for homeowners
The bitter truth is that cheaper housing means a retirement crisis for homeowners

Globe and Mail

time29-06-2025

  • Business
  • Globe and Mail

The bitter truth is that cheaper housing means a retirement crisis for homeowners

John Turley-Ewart is a contributing columnist for The Globe and Mail, a regulatory compliance consultant and a Canadian banking historian. Economists choose their words judiciously. That is why National Bank of Canada's June Economic Monitor report is notable. The authors say Canada's largest real estate market, Ontario, is in 'disarray.' In British Columbia, the market is 'struggling.' Nationally, it 'continues to slow.' Canada's housing problems are worsening. Federal Housing Minister Gregor Robertson, when asked by a reporter in May if home prices should drop, was clear: 'No, I think we need to deliver more supply, make sure the market is stable. It's a huge part of our economy.' His words left many scratching their heads, including Mike Moffatt, an economist and the founding director of the Missing Middle Initiative, a project based at the University of Ottawa's Institute of the Environment. 'It's simply not possible to restore broad-based affordability to the middle class without prices going down,' he told The Canadian Press. For homeowners, borrowing money is easy. But how do renters borrow money? So why the Housing Minister's emphasis on price stability? Ottawa does not want to trade one crisis, housing affordability, for another, a middle-class retirement disaster. Cheaper homes are the obvious solution to Canada's housing crisis at first blush, a point made in these pages by The Globe and Mail's editorial board. Increase supply to meet demand, and prices fall. Over the last 20 years, home prices to income ratios have risen over 70 per cent, as supply stalled while demand intensified. Ontario's Building Industry and Land Development Association's recent data paints a picture of what 'disarray' looks like. New home sales in the Greater Toronto Area are '87 per cent below the 10-year average.' Based on that average, GTA new home sales should have been about 2,750 in May. Instead, new home sales came in at 345. Dr. Moffatt has helped define what should be affordable for Canada's middle class using the country's National Housing Strategy Act: 'Any young middle-class family should be able to afford a 3-bedroom home in any community.' Such homes are almost always ground-orientated, single-detached, semi-detached or townhouses. What sets these homes apart, according to Dr. Moffatt, is that 'only the growth of ownership-based homes with three or more bedrooms is strongly correlated with the population growth of children under the age of five.' Two decades ago, a young middle-class family in B.C. or Ontario typically spent 40 to 45 per cent of disposable income on such homes. Today, the number is roughly 60 per cent, according to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. Prime Minister Mark Carney's housing plan, promising billions in financing and building 500,000 new homes a year by 2035, leaves to the imagination exactly what types of units will be constructed. If Mr. Robertson is to be believed, the vast majority will not be ownership-based, three-bedroom or more, ground-orientated houses that can accommodate middle-class families with children under five. They would undercut the pricing on similar existing homes. The real reason housing got expensive, and why it will get cheaper For young and older homeowners, equity from the future sale of their houses is the critical piece solving their retirement puzzle. Only 38 per cent of the current workforce has the benefit of an employer-registered pension plan, with most being dependent on their own resources. Yet, less than 40 per cent of Canadian tax filers contribute to a registered retirement savings plan or tax-free savings account. Canada Pension Plan and Old Age Security payments won't suffice. The average CPP monthly payment is about $900 at age 65, while OAS is essentially meant to assist the poorest seniors. Today, and for much of the last decade and more, many middle-class Canadians have been saving for retirement through their mortgage payments. The expected payout comes when they sell their homes and use all or a portion of the equity to generate passive income for retirement. In B.C., where the average house price is about $1-million, and Ontario, where it is roughly $860,000, a dramatic decrease in prices of 40 to 50 per cent is needed to restore affordability, given the median after-tax household income in Canada is $70,500. But this would cut retirement income by thousands annually for homeowners depending on their home equity to finance their later years. To maintain price stability, Ottawa is counting on a strong future economy to boost incomes and close the affordability gap. Dr. Moffatt's research suggests that could take roughly two decades or more to produce results. Canada's Housing Minister has to make a Sophie's choice on housing, as he faces two evils. The first is an affordability crisis keeping young families out of the market. The second is a future retirement crisis for homeowners vulnerable to price shocks because they have all their financial eggs in a real estate basket. Mr. Robertson's emphasis on market stability suggests he has chosen to save many existing homeowners from a future in which retirement marks a quick descent into poverty.

Retail sector shows strength amid global volatility, but consumption trends might slow: Analysis
Retail sector shows strength amid global volatility, but consumption trends might slow: Analysis

Yahoo

time24-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Retail sector shows strength amid global volatility, but consumption trends might slow: Analysis

Despite significant macroeconomic and global geopolitical volatility, the Canada and U.S. retail sectors have held up surprisingly well in recent stock and financial performance, according to new industry analysis. A review of retail spending shows that restaurant, grocery and apparel spending in Canada are, respectively, solid, resilient and strong, says National Bank of Canada analyst Visha Shreedhar, in a report. In the U.S., restaurant spending is mixed but has improved since February, while apparel spending is strong — albeit the U.S. market has choppier spending trends. Signs of resiliency were mostly seen in year-to-date earnings results that have largely been described as better than expected, he adds. 'A reasonable question to consider is whether the current uncertainty is transient (and therefore constructive spending trends will continue), or if the economic impact due to recent heightened uncertainty has not fully manifested,' Shreedhar said. Last week, in grocery retailer Empire's ( Q4 conference call with analysts, the company reported net earnings of $173 million compared to $149 million last year. Empire president and CEO Michael Medline says that 'basket size continues to improve,' while noting that he sees a disconnect between reported consumer sentiment and customer spending. Empire operates Safeway, Sobeys, FreshCo, Farm Boy and Longo's, among others. In Canadian Tire's ( first-quarter earnings call in May, the company noted growing consumer confidence, highlighting that positive discretionary spending trends were encouraging, especially since they're observed across all housing income levels, including higher-debt households that had previously held back. Another major retailer, Walmart (WMT), in its May outlook, was optimistic that it will meet full-year guidance for both sales and operating income. However, the company warned that prolonged elevated tariffs could pose a downside risk. Despite resilience in the retail sector, Shreedhar cautions that consumption trends may slow in the coming months. While Canadian retailers offer a mixed outlook, commentary from U.S. dollar stores points to increased traffic and signs of higher-income consumers trading down — a sign of consumer fatigue. Shreedhar's top investment picks in the retail sector are Loblaw ( in the staples space, as well as Dollarama ( and Groupe Dynamite ( in the discretionary spending space. 'We view these names to have clear growth trajectories, low direct exposure to tariffs and/or demonstrated ability to pass through tariff-related costs, and a track record of growing despite heightened uncertainty.' Sign in to access your portfolio

National Bank Investments Announces June 2025 Cash Distributions for Its Exchange-Traded Funds Français
National Bank Investments Announces June 2025 Cash Distributions for Its Exchange-Traded Funds Français

Cision Canada

time16-06-2025

  • Business
  • Cision Canada

National Bank Investments Announces June 2025 Cash Distributions for Its Exchange-Traded Funds Français

MONTREAL, June 16, 2025 /CNW/ - National Bank Investments Inc. ('NBI") announced today the June 2025 cash distribution amounts per unit for certain NBI exchange-traded funds ('NBI ETFs"). Unitholders of record on June 23, 2025, will receive cash distributions on June 30, 2025, as detailed in the table below. About NBI ETFs NBI ETFs are offered by National Bank Investments Inc., an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of National Bank of Canada and sold by authorized dealers. Management fees, brokerage fees and expenses all may be associated with investments in exchange-traded funds (ETFs). Please read the prospectus or ETF Facts document before investing. ETFs are not guaranteed, their values change frequently, and past performance may not be repeated. ETF units are bought and sold at market price on a stock exchange and brokerage commissions will reduce returns. About National Bank Investments Inc. National Bank Investments Inc. ("NBI") is an investment funds management firm committed to manufacturing and offering mutual funds, investment solutions and services designed to help Canadian investors pursue their financial goals. As at March 31, 2025, assets under management in NBI products were valued at over $98.92 billion. Guided by an open architecture strategy, NBI is dedicated to providing diverse solutions to meet the evolving needs of its clients. NBI consistently strives to be recognized as a key partner by combining innovation and excellence. NBI's role is not limited to administrative aspects of management; NBI Advisory Services and its registered representatives form a team of specialists who provide information and advice to help advisors build portfolios adapted to their clients' financial needs. Follow NBI's activities at or via social media. National Bank Investments is a signatory of the United Nations-supported Principles for Responsible Investment, a member of Canada's Responsible Investment Association, and a founding participant in the Climate Engagement Canada initiative. About National Bank of Canada With $536 billion in assets as at April 30, 2025, National Bank of Canada is one of Canada's six systemically important banks. The Bank has approximately 34,000 employees in knowledge-intensive positions and operates through three business segments in Canada: Personal and Commercial Banking, Wealth Management and Financial Markets. A fourth segment, U.S. Specialty Finance and International, complements the growth of its domestic operations. Its securities are listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX: NA). Follow the Bank's activities at or via social media.

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