Monday Market Minute | May 29, 2023
Sticky inflation raises the spectre of resumed BoC hikes
What Moved
April CPI came in at 4.4%, a surprise uptick from March's 4.3% and the first acceleration in ten months. Core measures were the real concern: CPI-trim and CPI-median both remained above 4%, showing no meaningful progress toward the Bank's target. Shelter costs — driven by mortgage interest and rents — were the primary contributors. The bond market repriced aggressively, with the probability of a June hike jumping from 20% to over 60% within days.
Why It Matters
The inflation surprise posed a direct threat to the "conditional pause" framework that had given private markets four months of stability. If the BoC resumed hiking, the implications cascaded: housing recovery would stall, borrower stress in private credit portfolios could accelerate, and PE deal underwriting would need to incorporate even higher financing costs. The irony was acute — the housing rebound that had supported real estate portfolios was itself a contributor to the shelter inflation that threatened rate stability.
Signal to Watch
Governor Macklem's public remarks in early June would telegraph the Bank's thinking. Any language suggesting the conditions for the pause were no longer being met would be a clear signal to brace for a June hike.
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