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Bank of Canada downgrades growth outlook again, cites real estate, exports

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OTTAWA - The Bank of Canada has downgraded the country's growth outlook yet again as it released fresh projections Wednesday that pointed to dampened expectations for exports and real estate activity.

The central bank also held its trendsetting interest rate at its current low level of 0.5 per cent, which was widely expected.

The bank's latest monetary policy report blamed exports as a main contributor for the lower forecast, following a weaker-than-anticipated performance and somewhat gloomier prospects for the future.

The report also predicted growth to take a hit from an expected decline in real estate sales activity, which it said will follow the federal government's recently announced measures intended to stabilize the housing market.

On Wednesday, the bank provided an analysis of those measures, predicting they will lower the country's level of real GDP by 0.3 per cent by the end of 2018.

The report also reiterated the bank's position that it expects the changes, which seek to slightly limit borrowing and to cool hot markets, will help ease household vulnerabilities.

The bank is now projecting Canada's real gross domestic product to expand by just 1.1 per cent this year, down from its July projection of 1.3 per cent. For next year, the bank is forecasting growth of two per cent, down from its previous call of 2.2 per cent.

"The outlook for exports remains subject to considerable uncertainty, which has significant implications for the economic projection," the Bank of Canada said in the monetary policy report.

"The downward revision to exports, including spillovers to domestic demand and imports, lowers real GDP by 0.6 per cent by the end of 2018."

The bank added that the economy isn't expected to return to its full capacity until mid-2018, which it called "materially later" than the late-2017 time frame it had anticipated three months ago.

For a couple of years, the bank has been expecting a solid increase in non-commodity exports, helped along by a lower dollar, to offset the negative economic impact of low oil prices.

Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz has said the full adjustment should take three to five years, but the shift has been slower than expected — a process that has perplexed the bank.

"It's our lack of understanding that causes us to say something like ... there's a level gap between where we thought the economy would be ... and where it actually is," Poloz said earlier this month.

Despite the downgrades, the bank also offered reassurances that it sees promise ahead.

Thanks to momentum in the global and U.S. economies, the bank still predicts the Canadian economy to rebound over the final half of this year from a second-quarter contraction.

The hoped-for bounce back, however, is expected to come at a slower pace, with an average real GDP growth of about 2.5 per cent over the last two quarters of 2016.

The bank predicts third-quarter growth of 3.2 per cent, down from the July forecast of 3.5 per cent, and fourth-quarter growth of just 1.5 per cent, down from 2.8 per cent.

"The bank expects solid household spending to continue to be the main contributor to growth, with additional support from government spending and exports in 2017," said the report, which also noted that business investment is expected to provide some help.

The government's enhanced child-benefit program, which started mailing cheques to families in the summer, is also expected to deliver a boost in the second half of 2016. In addition, Ottawa's commitment to invest billions in infrastructure will begin having an impact moving forward, the bank said.

News from © The Canadian Press, 2016
The Canadian Press

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