Bank of Canada hikes interest rate to 2.5% — biggest jump since 1998 | CBC News

The Bank of Canada has raised its benchmark interest rate by the largest amount in more than 20 years, sharply increasing the cost of borrowing in an attempt to rein in runaway inflation.

Canada’s central bank raised its benchmark interest rate Wednesday by a full percentage point to 2.5 per cent. That’s the biggest one-time increase in the bank’s rate since 1998.

The bank’s rate impacts the rate that Canadians get from their lenders on things like mortgages and lines of credit.

All things being equal, a central bank cuts the lending rate when it wants to stimulate the economy by encouraging people to borrow and invest. It raises rates when it wants to cool down an overheated economy.

After slashing its rate to record lows at the start of the pandemic, the bank has now raised its rate four times since March as part of an aggressive campaign to fight inflation, which has risen to its highest level in 40 years. 

Economists had been expecting the bank to raise its rate by three-quarters of a percentage point, but the full percentage point increase was ahead of even those high expectations. And even after this record-setting increase, more hikes are expected, because of how serious the spectre of stubbornly high inflation is.

Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem said the bank made the decision to front-load its rate-hiking campaign because Canadians “are getting more worried that high inflation is here to stay. We cannot let that happen.”

“We are increasing our policy interest rate quickly to prevent high inflation from becoming entrenched. If it does, it will be more painful for the economy — and for Canadians — to get inflation back down,” he said, noting that the bank doesn’t expect the official inflation rate to come down to three per cent until next year, and wont get back to its two per cent target until 2024.

WATCH | Prime Minister says government will help Canadians to stay on top of inflation:

Trudeau reacts to Bank of Canada interest rate hike

After the Bank of Canada announced Wednesday that it is raising the interest rate to 2.5 per cent, the biggest one-time increase in the bank’s rate since 1998, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the government would support Canadians during these difficult times.

Housing market will feel the pinch

The impact of higher rates will be felt most directly on the housing market, as variable rate mortgages are closely tied to the central bank’s rate.

Canada’s housing market was red hot for most of the pandemic, as record low rates fuelled demand and pushed prices up to their highest levels ever. But that direction turned in the first part of this year, as the central bank’s signal that higher rates were coming took the wind out of the sails of insatiable demand. 

Average prices have fallen since March across the country, the Canadian Real Estate Association says. Wednesday’s rate hike will do nothing to reverse that trend.

Existing owners on variable rate loans, and those looking to buy, will likely notice their mortgage rates go up almost immediately. 

Tim Capes, shown here holding his infant son Ben, owns a home in Markham Ontario. He had a variable rate mortgage on the property, but he recently decided to switch to a fixed-rate loan because he's worried interest rates are set to rise quickly.
Tim Capes holds his infant son, Ben, in front of his Markham, Ont., home. He had a variable rate mortgage on the property but recently decided to switch to a fixed-rate loan because he’s worried interest rates are set to rise quickly. (Craig Chivers/CBC)

More rate hikes expected

The hike is exactly what home owner Tim Capes was worried about last month when he switched his home loan from a variable rate to a fixed term.

“We felt the pain every time interest rates would go up and we’d get a letter from the bank that our mortgage would go up by a certain amount and the budget would get a tiny bit tighter,” he told CBC News in an interview.

After seeing his payment go up each time the central bank raised its rate in March, April and then June, Capes decided to bite the bullet and lock in at a fixed rate that is costing him about $700 more per payment than he was paying before, but at least comes with the certainty that it won’t change for the next five years.

“I definitely wish I had done it earlier when the rates were even lower because definitely selecting a variable in the first place was a mistake,” the Markham, Ont., resident said. “But we ultimately decided it was a mistake we could afford to correct. So we did.”

Economists are expecting several more rate hikes to come, and so is Capes.

“As those rate hikes start happening, it’s a lot easier knowing that my mortgage isn’t going up with every single rate hike.”

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