Optimistic Bank of Canada hikes rates for first time in 7 years - ING

Economists at ING explain that strong growth has led the Bank to hike rates, but they suspect that any future moves will be both cautious and gradual., which means that this could be as good as it gets for the Canadian dollar.

Key quotes:

"After a surprise turn-around in communication over the past few weeks, the Bank of Canada (BoC) has taken the decision to hike rates for the first time in seven years. That’s comes after a run of encouraging growth since the start of the year has “bolstered the Bank’s confidence in its outlook for above-potential growth”."
 
"The big question for markets now is what comes next. Well, in hiking rates, the BoC is banking on the stronger growth and employment backdrop pushing up inflation over the next 12-18 months – in effect hoping that the Philips Curve effect will come through."
 
"With all three of the Bank’s core inflation measures having fallen back considerably over recent months, markets may ultimately view this as a fairly bold move. The BoC is citing a range of temporary factors – electricity rebates in Ontario and heightened food price competition, amongst others – as reasons for the recent weakness in inflation (this argument will sound very familiar to Fed watchers)."
 
"Household debt/house prices will also be another big consideration. This issue is always a bit of a double edged sword – on the one hand, there is a need to curtail the boom in both prices and debt, but an overly aggressive rate hike path could risk causing economic damage."
 
"Add in the degree of uncertainty in the US related to Trump’s economic policies, and all this leads us to think the path of rate hikes will be fairly cautious and gradual. The four rate hikes being priced in by markets over the next 12-18 months may prove to be a little bit too steep at this stage."
 
FX Implications: Optimistic BoC projections means this could be as good as it gets for CAD

"The Bank's expectations for the output gap to close fully by year-end lie on the optimistic side (given that it stood at 1.4% in 1Q17). While the lack of forward guidance and explicit concern over currency strength will confirm the current hawkish market bias in the near-term, we think that the risks to short-term domestic rates – and CAD – lie to the downside once markets settle."
 
"2Y US-Canadian swap rates have narrowed quite substantially over the past month and making the case for any further narrowing is difficult; to see the BoC hiking faster than the Fed over a 2-year horizon would require a significant divergence in the outlooks for the two economies – something which is not our central scenario." 
 
"In reality, the ‘one (or two) and done’ nature of any policy normalisation means that chasing CAD upside from here could prove unrewarding. Key data releases over the coming months will either justify or disprove the BoC’s hawkish tone today; with officials setting the bar fairly high, the risks are that data disappoints. We would look for USD/CAD to consolidate in the 1.2750-1.2950 range over the near-term, with risks that the pair trades closer towards the top of this range. Any disappointing Canadian inflation data next week (21 Jul) would see a sharp correction towards 1.30."

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