17 Canadian Interest Rate Predictions from Seasoned Market-Watchers
Wahi asked real estate industry professionals — including economists, mortgage brokers, and REALTORS® — about their predictions for the Bank of Canada’s next rate announcement.
By Josh Sherman | 2 minute read

The Bank of Canada’s overnight rate, which influences borrowing costs, currently sits at 3%.
The Case Against Cuts (For Now)
The fact that President Trump’s stance on tariffs has changed several times in recent months (and more than once in recent days) is just one of the reasons some observers doubt the BoC will want to do anything concrete on Wednesday. “My reasoning is that the tariffs and the uncertainty about them will be putting downward pressure on the Canadian dollar and the Bank will not want to add to this by reducing interest rates,” adds Frank Clayton, senior research fellow for Toronto Metropolitan University’s Centre for Urban Research and Land Development.
Another reason to hold: the central bank is facing “two competing tensions,” according to Moshe Lander, a senior economics lecturer at Concordia University. By adding to the cost of goods, tariffs cause inflation, which is usually met with higher interest rates. However, the trade war is also expected to hurt the Canadian economy, which on its own would suggest the need for lower rates. “Best for the Bank to stay on the sidelines until it is clear which tension will dominate,” Lander explains.
Although RBC Assistant Chief Economist Robert Hogue suspects the BoC will hit pause this week, he wouldn’t be surprised if it went the other way. “We think it will hold but it’s a close call,” RBC Economics’s top economist tells Wahi in an email.
That’s because despite tariff risks clouding the outlook, Canada’s economy has been looking strong enough for the BoC to otherwise end its rate-cutting cycle, which began last June, when the overnight rate stood at 5%.
To Alex Leduc, CEO and founder of Perch Mortgages, current economic indicators don’t warrant action from the BoC. “The core factors that influence the BOC’s decision are all pointing towards hold,” he says. Leduc cites stable inflation, as well as steady unemployment and GDP growth standing at 1.8%.
“If the BOC does cut, it would be because they expect tariffs to cause serious damage and they would make that their priority and the above factors would be secondary,” says Leduc.
Bryan Yu, chief economist at Central 1, a Canadian credit union, agrees that the economy has looked fairly solid of late, which buys the bank some time before it takes action. “The data will likely show more signs of weakening going forward which should trigger rate cuts, but at this point, [the BoC] can be patient especially if the governments are leaning against the weakness with policy,” he says.

Josh Sherman
Wahi Writer
Become a Real
Estate Know-It-All
Get the weekly email that will give you everything you need to be a real estate rockstar. Stay informed and get so in the know.
Yes, I want to get the latest real estate news, insights, home value
estimates emailed to my inbox. I can unsubscribe at any time.