The Bank of Canada held its policy rate at 2.25% on Wednesday, but the more important change was in the message: officials are no longer treating the inflation spike as a brief glitch. Governor Tiff Macklem said the bank expects inflation to peak around 3% in April, even as it keeps rates steady for now.
That hold came with a clear warning from the central bank’s own forecast. The BoC assumes crude falls to $75 by mid-2027 and that U.S. tariffs on Canadian goods don’t worsen. In other words, the path back to easier policy depends on two outside variables staying contained: energy and trade.
- The BoC said housing will now cut 0.1 percentage points from GDP growth this year, down from an earlier forecast that housing would add to growth.
- Brent crude was about US$109 a barrel on Wednesday, with the Bank of Canada linking higher fuel prices to weaker growth and hotter inflation.
- The bank also said small-condo inventory in major Canadian cities is still clogging the housing market and holding back new construction.
That combination matters because it narrows the policy room around the bank. Inflation is being pulled up by energy, food and transport costs while housing is slowing growth rather than cushioning it. The result is a central bank that can justify standing still now, but has less freedom to cut aggressively if oil stays high.
The market response was straightforward: the hold was expected, but the tone was not dovish. The Bank of Canada is effectively telling borrowers and developers to plan for a longer stretch of tight conditions, not a quick reversal. The next big checkpoint is the bank’s inflation data and the persistence of energy prices before the next policy decision.