indicatorThe Twenty-Four

The Seven, October 25, 2024

The week of the cuts | By Mark Parsons, ATB Economics

25 October 2024 10 min read

In this week’s The Seven…

  • The fourth cut is the deepest - BofC goes supersized
  • Immigration turn - Federal government cuts target
  • Wait and see - Consumers need more time
  • What’s your forecast? For oil demand
  • Success Story: Edmonton-based Nanostics 
  • Interesting Fact: Misunderstood terms in economics
  • Chart of the Week: Edmonton region - Population liftoff

Rate cuts turn 50

The big news this week is that the Bank of Canada chopped 50 basis points from its policy interest rate in a ‘Jumbo Wednesday’. We made this 50 call in our October forecast, and locked it in after the inflation report was released last week.

I explored the decision in detail on Wednesday, but I’ll just make this point: the Bank is clear we’ve reached a new chapter in the battle against inflation. It’s now confident about inflation and much more concerned about growth. The goal now is to ‘stick the landing’ so that growth does not slow too much.

If you didn’t have time to read the 57-page Monetary Policy Report (MPR) or watch the press conference, I suggest reading this paragraph:

“In the past few months, inflation has come down significantly from 2.7% in June to 1.6% in September. Recent indicators suggest it will be around 2% in October. Price pressures are no longer broad-based, and both our measures of core inflation are now under 2.5%. Our surveys also find that business and consumer expectations of inflation have shifted down and are nearing normal. All this suggests we are back to low inflation. This is good news for Canadians” (emphasis added).

This has a tone of “we’ve won the inflation battle.” The “good news” is a new addition. The Bank wouldn’t be saying such things in prepared remarks without a lot of confidence that inflation won’t rear its ugly head again any time soon.

Will the Bank make more cuts? Of course they will—as long as inflation cooperates. Governor Tiff Macklem was clear on that. We expect them to move quickly to the neutral rate (estimated by the Bank to be 2.25-3.25%) by mid 2025. For now, we’re in the 25-basis point cut camp for December, but we’re on the fence and we’d easily change our call to 50 in December if we get soft CPI and job reports.

Another cut this week…This time to federal immigration targets

Yesterday, the federal government announced a sharp 21% reduction in its target for permanent residents next year, from 500,000 to 395,000. This is on top of previous plans to reduce the share of non-permanent residents (NPR) from 7.3% of the population to 5% over three years.

This is a big move. We had accounted for the NPR pullback when it was announced, but this latest development has new forecast implications.

Our initial analysis suggests that this change, if implemented, could push Alberta’s population growth down to around 2% next year compared to 2.8% in our October forecast.

An open question is whether these measures will actually reduce population by the targeted amounts. Previous Statistics Canada projections have not jived with the Bank of Canada’s much higher forecasts, with the Bank assuming it will take longer for the federal NPR targets to be reached (Statistics Canada’s forecast for Alberta was 1.7% (M2 scenario) in 2025). Our view is more aligned with the Bank on this.

We maintain that Alberta will be less impacted on the NPR front, as new international student caps are allocated on a per capita basis. Alberta is well below the national per capita average for international students, and already near the 5% NPR target. Alberta is also expected to experience interprovincial inflows and larger natural increases than other provinces.

The impact of this change is complex and comes with competing economic effects. Our initial reaction is that it will have the following implications for our forecast:  

  • Less pressure on housing. The construction industry is still in catch-up mode, so we see construction activity staying strong in Alberta. But the slower pace of immigration will take some pressure off demand, rents and prices, and will ultimately reduce long-term housing requirements relative to the previous targets.

  • Drag on overall consumer demand. Fewer people arriving means less spending. That said, the Canadian economy has not grown fast enough to absorb new entrants into the labour market and output has not kept pace. The change could speed up the recovery in per capita spending in Alberta and across Canada. 

  • Mixed effects on the labour market. The Canadian and Alberta labour markets are churning out jobs, just not at the pace at which people are arriving and entering the labour force. Higher unemployment rates have been observed among youth and newcomers in particular. The slowdown in labour force entry should put downward pressure on unemployment rates, even as the population slowdown shaves demand (and associated employment). But it may also make it harder for sectors facing hiring challenges to find workers in areas like construction, hospitality and healthcare. The Canadian Chamber of Commerce stressed the challenge these large changes pose to workforce planning.

This is just guidance for now, as we incorporate this (and every other change happening in the economy) into our forthcoming December forecast.

Demand (forecast) divergence

How much will oil demand increase next year? Depends who you ask.  

On October 14, OPEC revised down its world oil demand forecast for 2024. It now expects global oil demand to grow by 1.93 million barrels per day (b/d) (a 1.9% increase) and by 1.64 million b/d day in 2025.

But that’s still higher than the latest International Energy Agency outlook, which sees global oil demand rising by 0.86 million b/d in 2024 and 1.0 million b/d in 2025.

Coming up the middle is the U.S. Energy Information, which is expecting demand to grow by 0.92 million b/d this year and 1.29 million b/d next year.

Oil demand is notoriously hard to forecast, and the variation underscores the uncertainty.  But to some observers, the variation is more than normal—the DOB notes that the difference between the IEA’s forecast for 2024 and OPEC’s equates to 1% of global oil demand.

Why does this matter? Keep in mind that the next meeting of OPEC decision-makers is scheduled for December 1. If oil demand falls well below OPEC forecasts, it could result in downward pressure on prices and lead to longer delays in bringing back the production the cartel has been holding in check. But, with reports that Saudi Arabia may no longer be interested in supporting its unofficial $100 per barrel price target, it’s unclear how long OPEC will be willing to give up market share.

Our latest forecast sees WTI averaging US$76 per barrel this year and US$74 next year, supported by continued increases in oil demand and a gradual return of curtailed OPEC production.

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Consumer spending - A convincing comeback will need to wait

It’s hard to get a handle on the retail numbers released this morning.

In Alberta, retail sales fell 1.1% in August, but that was after a 2% surge in July (seasonally adjusted). We didn’t overreact to the increase in July, and we’re not reading too much into the August drop either.

Let's instead focus on the trend. And the trend is, well, meh for both Canada-wide and Alberta sales. Alberta retail sales have failed to gain much ground in the last year and are still holding below the January 2023 spike. The latest ATB Mastercard data point to a jump in September, but that won’t be enough to convince us that the consumer is coming back.

Consumers are clearly fatigued from past high inflation and rate hikes, and we see this continuing for the rest of the year. An improvement is forecast in 2025 as rate cuts kick in with a lag.

This is all baked into our October forecast, where we had only a 0.7% increase in retail sales this year (tracking close to the year-to-date figure) and a  per capita decline in consumer spending. The weakness on the consumer side is being offset in other areas of the economy, namely exports and residential construction.

More on the retail report next week.

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Alberta success story: Nanostics Precision Health

This week I moderated a “State of the Region” panel for the Edmonton Metropolitan Region Board. Joining me were Laura Jo Gunter, President and CEO, NAIT; Catalina Vasquez, Co-Founder and COO, Nanostics, Inc; and Mark Plamondon, Executive Director, Alberta’s Industrial Heartland Association. I will profile all three organisations in the next few weeks, starting with Nanostics.

Catalina's inspiring story of co-founding Nanostics in Edmonton highlights the crucial role of community, business, and government support in fostering innovative startups. She emphasised the importance of skilled labour and local capital in driving growth for companies like Nanostics, which uses AI to enhance healthcare decision-making. Their flagship product, ClarityDX Prostate, helps reduce unnecessary biopsies in prostate cancer diagnosis.

In October, Nanostics announced their prostate screening tool will be available in the U.S. and Middle East. According to Global Edmonton CEO Malcolm Bruce: “The Edmonton Region is quickly emerging as an exciting hub for the life science sector, more than 60% of Alberta’s life science companies are located here and the University of Alberta is globally ranked for their advancements in health research. Nanostics’ expansion of ClarityDX Prostate is yet another example of what’s possible for our life science sector.”

Interesting Fact…Misunderstood terms in economics

Public good, discriminatory pricing and soft landings. These are just some of the potentially confusing terms thrown around by economists on a daily basis. To help make sense of the lingo, the Planet Money podcast recently surveyed 188 economists about the most misunderstood terms in the field of economics.

Public good is a prime example. “It's confusing because those are two ordinary English words. And together, people think public good means something that's good for the public.” But there is more to it. A public good has to be both non-excludable (e.g. a public park is “there for everyone”) and non-rivalrous (“one person enjoying the park doesn't take away from other people enjoying it, too”).

A lot of the responses were terms that have a double meaning such as welfare. “Welfare can be defined as a measure of people's well being, how well off they are. But it can also refer to a government income support program for low-income families.”

Price discrimination can also be confusing. It simply means charging a different price for the same product or service. It could be a discount for seniors or charging extra for booking a flight the same day it leaves. “But when people hear price discrimination, they often focus on the discrimination part. They think it is a bad thing.”

Another example that has been in the news a lot lately is soft landing. “The thing that people don't get is it just means you've avoided a full-blown recession.” “It sounds nice and cushy,” but a soft landing can be quite painful. Money Planet host Alexi Horowitz-Ghazi suggested “mini-bust,” “quasi-recession” or “soft-boiled landing” as alternatives, but they are yet to catch on.

Is there a term we or other economic groups use that you find confusing or want defined? Send us an email and let us know.

Chart of the Week: The Edmonton region’s population growth

During the “State of the Region” panel this week for the Edmonton Metropolitan Region Board, the word “opportunity” kept coming to the surface. The Edmonton region has a combination of a young and skilled workforce, natural resources, and leading post-secondary institutions. Some big projects are underway such as Dow’s Path2Zero and Air Products’ hydrogen energy complex that we see as anchor projects for the region. Oil and gas extraction investment is not the driver it once was, but there is more downstream activity and investment in emissions reduction. The region is no slouch either in the tech space with the University of Alberta and the Alberta Machine Intelligence Institute leaders in artificial intelligence. It’s also home to pioneering work in the health sciences, including by Nanostics.

With this in mind, today’s Chart of the Week looks at population growth in the Edmonton Census Metropolitan Area (CMA).

After a 4.2% increase in 2023, the Edmonton CMA’s population is expected to expand by more than 5% this year. Longer-term, the 1.8% annual growth over the 2024-2051 period exceeds the 1.6% anticipated for the province as a whole according to the latest Alberta Treasury Board and Finance projections.

Answer to the previous trivia question: The United Nations was founded on October 24, 1945.

Today’s trivia question: What commodity recently reached an all-time high in the U.S. for weekly production?

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