19 Jun Weekly Digest — June 17th, 2023
South of the Border |
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The Federal reserve in the US took a break this week from hiking rates, but it has signalled for more hikes before the end of the calendar year. After 500 basis points of hikes, the Fed paused for the first time in 11 meetings. The predictions moving forward in the US is listed below;
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‘Short Term’ Pain |
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What does the above mean for Canadians? Canada’s prime lending rate has over a 90% correlation with the Fed funds target rate. Peak rate expectations have jumped from 5.0% up from 4.50% just a few short weeks ago. The next crucial date in the calendar is the June 27th inflation report. Inflation should dip into the 3% range by this date which will help future rate expectations.
The Fed and the Bank of Canada is chasing the data which consistently lags behind. Until unemployment runs higher, rates are likely not restrictive enough. The glass floor of rates will not break until the central bank cuts become extremely obvious and fixed rates are increasing because traders expect another hike. Markets now predict a 73% chance of one final hike on July 12th before cuts to follow in 2024. |
Fixed Rates Continue to Climb |
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Short term rate expectations have increased dramatically with the recent spike to the bond yields. Interest rates are approaching the peak of October 2022. As short term fixed rates remain a popular strategy, all fixed rates have moved upwards of 0.50% in the last 10 days.
The below chart compares the trend of the 5 year fixed rates to the 5 year Canada bond.
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CONVENTIONAL
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Trends |
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Fast Facts |
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