Traders bet BOC rate-hike pause may come before Fed’s

Bloomberg

Money-market traders, already having written off a hike at Wednesday’s Bank of Canada (BOC) meeting, are beginning to doubt that policy makers will pull the trigger next month either.
While the Federal Reserve is widely expected to proceed with another quarter-point interest-rate increase in two weeks, overnight index swaps are pricing in just 16 basis points of tightening by the BOC’s January 9 meeting, down from 27 basis points less than a month ago.
Investors around the world are paring back expectations for policy tightening in the new year amid signs global growth is flagging. In Canada, tepid third-quarter GDP figures along with subdued oil prices are giving market participants reason to wager on a potential BOC pause. Signs of easing global trade tensions and a rebound in Canadian crude did little to sway traders. The odds of a hike by January hovered around 60 percent, based on OIS prices, down from more than 85 percent last month.
“You could take the mix of weakness in the data or the move in oil prices, and you’ve got some pretty substantial headwinds to the economy next year,” said Mark McCormick, North American head of foreign-exchange strategy at TD Securities in Toronto. “The market is just trying to pare back expectations on where they think the bank is headed early next year.”
Expectations have also swung as forward-looking indicators show the country’s economic expansion losing momentum, McCormick said. While third-quarter headline growth of 2 percent met forecasts last week, household consumption grew at the slowest pace in more than two years, while businesses trimmed investment and inventories, according to figures from Statistics Canada.
Oil’s plunge has also weighed on money managers’ minds as falling prices and output signal yet another risk to Canadian growth next year. Western Can-ada Select crude — the main blend sold by the nation’s oil sands — closed at $13.46 a barrel on November 15, the lowest in Bloomberg data stretching back to 2008. A record discount to US benchmark West Texas Intermediate oil forced the Alberta government to announce unprecedented production cuts beginning in January. They’re expected to further dent nation’s economy in the first half of next year, though should ease some of the concerns around pricing that were threatening the industry’s longer-term prospects.
Canadian government bonds have rallied this week, helped by large block trades in 10-year futures which all appeared consistent with buyers. The nation’s 10-year yield fell to 2.206 percent, the lowest since July.
“All these things are pointing towards a weaker economy in 2019, which means you could still move along with gradual rate hikes, but it also kind of caps how tight policy can get in Canada,” McCormick said. “It’s just headwind after headwind after headwind.”
Still, not everyone is convinced the BOC will tap the breaks on policy-tightening come January. Shaun Osborne, Scotiabank’s chief FX strategist, said the drop in expectations in November isn’t enough to erase chances of a hike next month. “We’ve seen some weakening,” he said. “But we’re still quite fully priced on January.”

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