Connect with us

News

Bank of Canada signals further cuts as interest rates fall to 4.25%

Published

on

Bank of Canada signals further cuts as interest rates fall to 4.25%

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

The Bank of Canada has signalled that borrowing costs could fall further in the coming months, after rate-setters cut interest rates for the third time in a row on Wednesday.

The central bank lowered its benchmark interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 4.25 per cent, in line with expectations.

Its governor, Tiff Macklem, said after the decision that if inflation continued to fall back towards the central bank’s 2 per cent goal, then it was “reasonable to expect further cuts”.

Advertisement

While inflation remains above rate-setters’ target at 2.5 per cent, growth has been weak for several quarters. The central bank expects inflation to fall to 2 per cent by the second half of 2025.

The unemployment rate has inched up to 6.4 per cent — nearly 2 percentage points higher than the record low set two summers ago.

The central bank’s decision comes against the backdrop of a pressing social and political issue: high housing costs.

Housing affordability has become a bellwether for Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government a year out from a national election.

Shortly after the announcement, Trudeau posted on social media that there was still a “lot of work to make life more affordable” for Canadians.

Advertisement

“But this is a strong signal that we’re going in the right direction, and it’s welcome relief for a lot of people looking to buy a home,” he said on X.  

Taylor Schleich, a rates strategist at National Bank of Canada, told the Financial Times that the rate cuts were a low-stakes tactic aimed at reducing mortgage costs for Canadian homeowners. Schleich said rates were so high that it was still quite “easy” for rate-setters to continue to incrementally cut them.

“Decisions start to get a bit more finely balanced probably next year,” he said.

While the central bank could move in bigger increments should growth come in lower than anticipated, Macklem indicated that the lender was likely to stick with smaller cuts.

“We will be assessing the data as it comes out,” the governor told the media. “If we need to take a bigger step, we are prepared to take a bigger step. At this point, 25 basis points looks appropriate.”

Advertisement

Tony Stillo, director of economics for Canada at Oxford Economics, said: “We think this means larger 50 basis-point cuts are off the table for now.” 

The latest Canadian rate cut comes amid expectations that the US Federal Reserve will lower borrowing costs for the first time in four years at its September 18 vote.

Other G7 central banks including the Bank of England and the European Central Bank have already started to reduce rates amid signs that the worst bout of inflation for a generation is over.

Carolyn Rogers, a deputy governor at the central bank, told reporters on Wednesday that Canada’s rapid population growth had had a big effect on the economy.  

“The Canadian economy is having trouble absorbing the number of workers into jobs,” she said. “We haven’t seen a big increase in unemployment but we have seen vacancies come down and we are seeing the unemployed rate tick up a bit.”

Advertisement

Last week, Trudeau announced measures to tighten Canada’s foreign workers programme.

While the programme is credited with helping Canada recover from the pandemic, it has been blamed for the high cost of housing, pressure on the healthcare system and rising youth unemployment.

Canada has added more than 1.6mn citizens since 2018, according to official data. The number of non-permanent residents in the country —  a figure that includes temporary workers, international students and asylum seekers — has more than doubled from about 1.3mn in 2021 to nearly 2.8mn in the second quarter of this year, Statistics Canada data shows.

“It is something we are watching closely,” Rogers said. 

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

News

Video: Former OceanGate Employees Testify at Hearing on Titan Implosion

Published

on

Video: Former OceanGate Employees Testify at Hearing on Titan Implosion

new video loaded: Former OceanGate Employees Testify at Hearing on Titan Implosion

transcript

transcript

Former OceanGate Employees Testify at Hearing on Titan Implosion

The Coast Guard’s first public hearing on OceanGate’s fatal Titan submersible accident revealed that the crew had sent a message saying, “All good here,” shortly before the vessel imploded.

“I stopped the 2019 Titanic dive because the data, the instrumentation that I put on it, wasn’t good, and I was fired for it. What I got from Stockton [Rush] is, ‘The board said that you should have known this was happening.’ And I said, ‘Well, let me point you to exhibits A, B, C and D that I’ve been telling you.’” “Did you ever have any safety concerns while you were employed at OceanGate? And if so, what were those concerns?” “I did. As a pilot in training, there were a couple of things that gave me pause. There was the acrylic dome. We had heard that there was paperwork on it, and we wanted to see that paperwork, and Tony [Nissen] wouldn’t let us see it. So that was my first red flag. It became abundantly clear to me that OceanGate was not the place I wanted to work, if that was our attitude towards safety.”

Advertisement

Recent episodes in U.S.

Continue Reading

News

Donald Trump promotes sons’ crypto company World Liberty Financial

Published

on

Donald Trump promotes sons’ crypto company World Liberty Financial

Unlock the US Election Countdown newsletter for free

Donald Trump and his sons are promoting a new crypto platform as the Republican presidential nominee courts the digital asset sector just 50 days before the US election.

Trump, Donald Trump Jr and Eric Trump, along with New York-based property developer and major Trump donor Steve Witkoff and sons Alex and Zach Witkoff, joined an X Spaces conversation on Monday where World Liberty Financial was officially announced.

The company says its “mission is crystal clear: make crypto and America great by driving the mass adoption of stablecoins and decentralised finance”. Few additional details were offered, although several speakers described a desire to improve accessibility and usability for crypto users. A token would also be offered, said Corey Caplan, an adviser to the project.

Advertisement

“We’re embracing the future with crypto and leaving the slow and outdated big banks behind,” Trump said in a video last week teasing the announcement.

During the interview at his Florida Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida on Monday, Trump told moderator and “proud crypto bro” Farokh Sarmad that conversations with his sons changed his mind on the benefits of digital assets. 

“He talks about his wallet — He’s got four wallets or something,” said Trump of his 18-year-old son Barron. “And I’m saying, ‘What is a wallet? Explain this to me.’”

“It’s almost like younger people know it a lot better than older people,” added Trump during the interview, a day after he was targeted in an apparent assassination attempt on a golf course in Florida.

“I think decentralised finance is the way of the future,” said Steve Witkoff during Monday’s event.

Advertisement

Zak Folkman, an employee at the company, said World Liberty Financial would not “rebuild the wheel” but use “simple products”, interacting with tokens known as stablecoins, whose value is tied to the US dollar.

The company has not given many details of how it will operate or what products it will offer. It warned on X on Monday night: “Beware of Scams! Fake tokens & AirDrop offers are circulating. We aren’t live yet!” 

Trump’s pro-crypto comments marked a departure from his previous views. He has said the value of cryptocurrencies is “based on thin air” and that investing in them is “potentially a disaster waiting to happen.”

But Trump has embraced digital assets during the 2024 campaign, accepting donations in cryptocurrencies and calling for the US to be the “crypto capital of the planet.”

He has won the support of investors in the sector such as influential venture capitalists Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz, Gemini exchange co-founders Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss and Kraken exchange co-founder Jesse Powell.

Advertisement

Crypto groups have increasingly exerted their power, raising hundreds of millions of dollars to support sympathetic candidates and intensifying a lobbying campaign against Gary Gensler, chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission, who has cracked down on the industry.

In July, Trump promised at the Bitcoin 2024 conference in Nashville that he would “fire” Gensler on his first day in office, to a huge roar from the audience.

Cryptofinance

Critical intelligence on the digital asset industry. 

Explore the FT’s coverage here.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

News

In interview on X, Trump addresses apparent assassination attempt for the first time

Published

on

In interview on X, Trump addresses apparent assassination attempt for the first time

The Republican presidential nominee, former President Donald Trump, greets supporters during a campaign rally in Las Vegas on Sept. 13, just two days before an apparent assassination attempt as he played golf in Florida.

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Advertisement

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

In an interview on the social media platform X, former President Donald Trump spoke publicly for the first time about the apparent attempted assassination the U.S. Secret Service thwarted on Sunday.

The interview, focused on his sons’ new cryptocurrency initiative and conducted by a crypto influencer, meandered to many of Trump’s typical campaign trail talking points.

He started by lauding the Secret Service, saying they did a “great job” Sunday in protecting him during the incident while he played golf at his course in West Palm Beach, Fla. He said he heard four to five gunshots and was whisked away in a golf cart.

Advertisement

He joked that he “would have loved to sink that last putt.”

He recounted the Secret Service agent who noticed the barrel of a gun in the bushes at the perimeter of the course, and started shooting. He went on to describe the apprehension of the alleged gunman, who authorities said didn’t fire his gun.

Trump also recalled an assassination attempt against him in Butler, Pa., in June. He said the attempt on Sunday was a “much better result” because there was no loss of life, as there was in June, when one man died and two others were injured, apart from Trump who suffered a wound on his ear.

He also recalled a conversation with President Biden Monday, saying he was “very nice” on the call and that Biden asked whether Trump needed more people on his detail.

“We do need more people on my detail because we have 50, 60,000 people showing up to events,” Trump said.

Advertisement

“And he couldn’t have been nicer,” Trump added of Biden. Trump did heavily criticize the policies of the Biden administration, as well as Biden and Vice President Harris personally, as is typical in his campaign appearances.

This comes after Trump blamed the “rhetoric” of Biden and Harris for the apparent attempt on his life in an interview with Fox News. In a post on X, he called Harris “hateful.”

Trump has often used incendiary language in his public remarks.

His running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, repeated that on the campaign trail Monday night at the Faith and Freedom Coalition’s Georgia Victory dinner in Atlanta.

“No one has tried to kill Kamala Harris in the last couple of months and two people now have tried to kill Donald Trump in the last couple of months,” Vance stated. “I’d say that’s pretty strong evidence that the left needs to, to tone down the rhetoric and needs to cut this crap out.”

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending