ING Says Bank of Canada to Look Through Inflation Threat

BY MT Newswires | ECONOMIC | 11:50 AM EDT

11:50 AM EDT, 03/18/2026 (MT Newswires) -- The Bank of Canada left its policy overnight interest rate unchanged at 2.25% on Wednesday, as widely predicted, citing the volatility in energy and financial markets and the "heightened risks to the global economy," said ING.

Regarding growth, the BoC acknowledged that the economy was weaker than anticipated in Q4 2025, but underlying consumer and government spending remained relatively firm, wrote the bank in a note.

While it is "too early to assess" the economic implications from the conflict in the Middle East, the jobs market is a concern, with unemployment rising to 6.7% in February from January's 6.5% rate, and the economy losing 109,000 jobs in the first two months of 2026.

At the same time, the BoC continues to highlight the headwinds that trade tensions and United States tariffs on Canadian-made products present.

Headline inflation was lower than predicted in February at 1.8% year over year, but this is being temporarily depressed by base effects tied to sales tax changes last year, while higher energy costs point to upward pressure on prices.

The BoC concludes that "risks to growth look tilted to the downside," while inflation risks "have gone up." Canada isn't alone in this situation, with Governor Tiff Macklem acknowledging this presents a "dilemma for central banks" since hiking rates to slow inflation will hurt growth, while lowering rates could stoke inflation to levels well above target.

For now, it appears that the BoC will "look through" the threat of near-term inflation, with Macklem suggesting that the BoC's base case is that with excess supply in the economy, the prospect of higher inflation feeding through into other prices "looks contained," added ING. Still, the BoC will be watchful for potential second-round effects, such as higher wage demands and stands ready to act should they appear.

Given uncertainty over how long the situation will last and the continued focus on trade as the USMCA trade deal between the U.S., Mexico and Canada is up for joint review in July, the bank sees little prospect of a near-term rate move from the BoC.

With the jobs market clearly cooling again and the economy looking set to grow by little more than 1% this year, ING doesn't see the demand impetus that would lead to broader, more persistent inflation. As such, the bank continues to expect the BoC to leave the overnight rate unchanged throughout 2026.

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