The RBA Are Expecting Inflation To Rise, Will The Bank Of Canada Increase Interest Rates Again?

Wednesday's data is expected to reveal another CPI rise, but both the Treasury and the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) predicted a peak in the December quarter. In the coming week, the Bank of Kandy will make decisions regarding its monetary policy.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics will release its Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for the December quarter on Wednesday as the cost of many household items rises. Commonwealth Bank analysts forecast inflation to rise by 1.7 per cent over the quarter, compared with an increase of 1.3 per cent in the same period a year earlier.
In the minutes of its November meeting, the Reserve Bank of Australia said it expected headline inflation to peak around 8% and core inflation to peak at 6.5%. at the end of 2022, before both start declining earlier this year.
None of the forecasts have been updated after the meeting in December.
A print above 7.6% would flag a problem for the central and could alter expectations for their February monetary policy meeting. The futures market is currently pricing around a 15 bp increase in the cash rate target, reflecting uncertainty between a 25 bp lift or no change.
Source: investing.com
Canada's central bank is expected to announce its eighth consecutive rate hike on Wednesday, with most commercial banks anticipating a quarter-percentage-point increase. That would raise the central bank's key interest rate to 4.5 percent, the highest level since 2007. But also in line with this view, some gleeful experts predict that the Bank of Canada will hold back and not raise its key interest rate above the current level of 4.25%. However, the bank does not seem determined to end the tightening cycle.
After peaking at 8.1 percent in June, year-on-year inflation slowly declined and reached 6.3 percent in December. For some economists, this drop in inflation is proof that the Bank of Canada's restrictive monetary policy is working. In any case, headline inflation at 6.3 percent is still three times above target - so the inflation hawks will conclude that the bank must keep raising the interest rate. And similarly when we take into account core inflation - which excludes food and energy, two volatile components of the CPI basket.
The Canadian economy added 104,000 jobs in December — far exceeding forecasts of an increase of 8,000 jobs — and the unemployment rate fell to 5 per cent from 5.1 per cent in November. The labour market, therefore, continues to be very tight. And this is what really worries the Bank of Canada
If the decision to raise interest rates depended solely on the latest available data, then the answer would be simple: the main interest rate will not be raised above the current 4.25 percent. But if the decision depended on the bank's inflation outlook, the rate would definitely be raised on January 25 and later.
Source: investing.com, rba.com,