Short-term bonds fell, pushing Canada’s benchmark two-year yield to 2.335 per cent as of 10:47 a.m. Ottawa time, about 3 basis points higher than immediately before the decision. The loonie strengthened slightly to $1.2634 per U.S. dollar.

The policy actions mark an acceleration of what’s expected to be one of the most forceful monetary tightening campaigns ever by the Bank of Canada, a tacit recognition from the central bank that it needs to quickly exit from ultra-loose policy before inflation becomes sticky.

“There is an increasing risk that expectations of elevated inflation could become entrenched,” the central bank said in its rate statement, adding it will “use its monetary tools to return inflation to target and keep inflation expectations well-anchored.”

In what officials described as a “substantial upward revision,” inflation is now seen averaging near 6 per cent in the first half of 2022, before easing to about 2.5 per cent in the second half of next year and to around its 2 per cent target by the end of 2024.

Inflation is projected to average 5.3 per cent in 2022, versus forecasts in January of 4.2 per cent. Price growth will slow to 2.8 per cent on average in 2023, versus previous forecasts of 2.3 per cent.

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“This isn’t the last 50+ move and I’d expect another in June,” Derek Holt, head of capital markets economics at Bank of Nova Scotia, said in an email. “The combination of saying they are further away from a neutral rate that is now estimated to be higher, alongside expedited worries about unmoored inflation expectations, indicates much greater concern that they are overstimulating conditions and have to address this at a quickened pace.”

SHRINKING BALANCE SHEET

Wednesday’s 50 basis point hike was anticipated by 25 of 30 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News, with markets pricing in about a 70 per cent chance of an increase of that size. Investors have been betting the central bank will continue hiking borrowing costs in coming months until the policy rate rises to near 3 per cent by this time next year.

The central bank is also providing some details of its quantitative tightening plan on Wednesday. The bank no longer plans to replace federal bonds as they roll off their balance sheet starting later in April. Over the next 12 months, about a quarter of the net $350 billion (US$275 billion) in government debt acquired during the pandemic will mature, pushing up yields, and complementing the increase in the policy rate.

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Despite the hawkish policy statement, there are some relatively optimistic assumptions weaved throughout the decision. Supply is seen jumping next year to meet strong demand as COVID-19 containment measures are lifted and global disruptions ease.

UKRAINE CRISIS

Officials are also assuming Canada’s economy won’t be negatively impacted by the Ukraine crisis thanks to the nation’s commodities sector, while global inflationary pressures are seen eventually abating. If these assumptions fail to materialize, the rate-hike path would need to be more aggressive.

The central bank also raised its estimates of how quickly the economy can grow without fueling inflation and forecast a temporary supply jump of 3.3 per cent in 2023, well above its long-term potential. That assumption gives the central bank more scope to raise interest rates more slowly.

On the other hand, the central bank also raises its estimate for its neutral rate to around 2.5 per cent from 2.25 per cent, which technically gives it more scope to hike.

The jumbo rate hike is the first by a Group of Seven central bank since the pandemic, but not the first on Wednesday. New Zealand’s central bank lifted its official cash rate by half a percentage point to 1.5 per cent earlier in the day. A hawkish pivot is also expected in the U.S., where Chairman Jerome Powell and other policy makers have put a half-point hike on the table for the Federal Reserve’s meeting in May.