| Bottom Line
Today’s employment report is stale news as the war in Iran, which began on February 28 with coordinated strikes by the US and Israel targeting Iranian nuclear and military infrastructure, has had profound effects on the global economy. Owing to the closure of the Straits of Hormuz, oil flows are down by roughly 20 million barrels. Even with the largest release ever from strategic petroleum reserves, oil prices remain near $100 a barrel, a dramatic uptick from just two weeks ago.
Ordinarily, such economic weakness would trigger central bank easing, but the surge in energy prices will add to inflation, at least temporarily. Labour markets remain soft as the economy bears the weight of US tariffs and an upcoming CUSMA review looms over business. This is likely to complicate the Bank of Canada’s future monetary policy path. While the Bank might otherwise consider a rate cut to return growth and labour markets to healthier levels, the surge in oil prices is inflationary.
The Bank of Canada’s sole mandate is to return inflation to its 2% target, while the Fed’s mandate is to control inflation while maximizing noninflationary growth. The energy shock, if persistent, could justify a rate hike.
The BoC meets again next Wednesday, March 18, and markets and economists expect officials to hold the policy rate steady at 2.25%. The February CPI report for Canada will be released on Monday, but the February data are now ancient history, given the war. Meanwhile, hourly wages for full-time permanent employees rose 4.2% from a year ago, compared with 3.3% in January. Economists surveyed were expecting a 3.2% increase.
Much depends upon how long the war will last. According to today’s Wall St. Journal, oil markets are “waking up to a new reality: Disruption to the Gulf’s prodigious energy supplies isn’t ending anytime soon.” Many analysts aver that crude could hit new multiyear highs if the conflict drags on.
“Goldman Sachs this week raised its oil price forecasts, citing longer-than-expected disruption. Brent crude could average $145 in March and April in a more extreme scenario, it said. The bank now expects disruption to flows through the strait to last 21 days, up from its previous forecast of 10 days. Macquarie Group is now predicting that crude prices could top $150 if the strait remains closed for a few weeks. Others say oil prices could go even higher.”
“One reason for the changing outlook is a surge in attacks on tankers near the strait. Over the past 24 hours, at least seven vessels were hit in waters off the coast of Dubai and Iraq. One of the ships, a foreign tanker carrying Iraqi fuel oil, was ablaze in Iraqi waters. US officials said that Iran has also started to litter the strait with sea mines that could give the country outsized power to wreak havoc with the global economy.
“The war in the Middle East is creating the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market,” the International Energy Agency said Thursday as it slashed its forecast for oil-supply growth this year. |