John Ivison: New GDP numbers spell gloom for Harper

mentalfloss

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John Ivison: New GDP numbers spell gloom for a PM whose only hope of re-election is to deliver on economy

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John Ivison
Tuesday, Jun. 30, 2015


Prime Minister Stephen Harper speaks at a news conference in Toronto on Thursday, June 4, 2015. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette

It must be galling for the Prime Minister that every time he tries to pump some sunshine up the collective posterior of the electorate, the Governor of the Bank of Canada shows up and ruins things.

Stephen Harper has been holding campaign style events across the country, touting the government’s stellar economic record and claiming the other guys would send us back to the dark days of the great recession.

“People should be confident about the future,” he said.

But then along comes Stephen Poloz, pointing out that things are not nearly as rosy as the Prime Minister would have people believe – and that if it had not been for him, things would be even worse.

Poloz was on a panel at the Bank of International Settlements in Switzerland on Sunday, when he said his “very controversial” quarter point interest rate cut in January had acted like life-saving surgery on an ailing Canadian economy, after the oil price collapse.

“If the doctor says you need surgery to avoid death, the side-effects usually don’t deter you, you just go ahead and manage through somehow,” he said, in defence of his decision to loosen monetary policy at a time when consumer debt to income ratios are at record highs.

The bigger problem for the Prime Minister than the Governor trotting around the globe using words like “atrocious” to describe the Canadian economy, is that Poloz is closer to the mark than he is.


The GDP numbers for April came out Tuesday and showed the economy contracted 0.1%. That follows the three previous months of negative growth. With the second quarter just about to end, it is entirely possible that Canada is back in recession (defined as two straight quarters of economic contraction), for the first time since April 2009.

For a Conservative Party whose only prayer of re-election is to deliver on its pledge of jobs and growth, this must be prompting some duodenal percolation.

The Tories did get some unexpected good news in May, with a big gain in jobs. The government is still projecting growth of 1.9% this year, and even the Bank of Canada expects a rebound in the second half of the year, based on a weak Canadian dollar, firmer oil prices and a growing U.S. economy.

But the Conservatives might still enter an election campaign against the backdrop of an economy in recession.

Unemployment rate remains at a stubborn 6.8% and other indicators, from retail to manufacturing sales, are weak. Exports, the supposed savior of the economy, have declined for seven months in a row.

Harper’s message has been tweaked accordingly – with more emphasis on lower taxes for families and keeping Canadians safe in an uncertain world. He is convinced these are the issues Canadians care about, and he is likely correct.


Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz. The Canadian Press

John Ivison: New GDP numbers spell gloom for a PM whose only hope of re-election is to deliver on economy
 

B00Mer

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www.getafteritmedia.com
 

CDNBear

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He's getting desperate BOOMer...

From his own article "Harper’s message has been tweaked accordingly – with more emphasis on lower taxes for families and keeping Canadians safe in an uncertain world. He is convinced these are the issues Canadians care about, and he is likely correct."
 

taxslave

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Nov 25, 2008
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Harper's record on much more than just the economy is what will get him reelected. Eliminating the repressive long gun registry is just one. His tough on crime and anti terrorism stance are a couple more. This is the kind of government Canadians want. Now if we could just get him to quit preaching to the choir on marijuana the Conservatives would be guaranteed a landslide.
 

mentalfloss

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Canada's shrinking economy could open door to second rate cut - BNN News
BNN - Business and Financial News, Analysis, Video and Blogs - Business News Network

Canada’s economy unexpectedly shrank for the fourth month in a row in April as oil and mining slumped, opening the door to a second interest-rate cut from the central bank this year, economists say.

"This latest growth disappointment—along with the rumbling uncertainty surrounding Greece—has simply cranked up the odds of another Bank of Canada rate cut at some point this year, and heaped renewed downward pressure on the Canadian dollar," wrote Douglas Porter, chief economist, BMO Capital Markets in a research note.

Benjamin Tal, deputy chief economist at CIBC World Markets is on the same page.

"I don't think they should have cut in January, and I don't think they should, but in this environment, maybe they will," he tells BNN.

Another economist agrees with the heightened probability of a second rate cut, but maintains a modestly positive outlook on Canada's economic picture.

"Overall, while the decline in Canadian real GDP in April raises the risk of a technical recession, we still believe the economy will manage to eke out marginally positive growth in the second quarter," according to Diana Petramala from TD Economics, in a note to clients.

Apart from strong real estate markets of Toronto and Vancouver, Canada’s economy is all but stalled, Sal Guatieri, Senior Economist, at BMO Capital Markets tells BNN. He also says the odds of another rate cut have increased.

Output shrank 0.1 percent to an annualized $1.65 trillion, Statistics Canada said Tuesday in Ottawa. None of the 20 economists surveyed by Bloomberg predicted a decline and their median estimate was for a 0.1 percent expansion.

The oil and gas, mining and quarrying group fell 2.6 percent in April, marking the sixth consecutive decline. Oil and gas extraction dropped 3.4 percent as non-conventional oil producers experienced “maintenance shutdowns and production difficulties,” Statistics Canada said. Mining and quarrying fell 3.4 percent on declines in copper, nickel, iron and coal.

The first report for the second quarter shows weakness extended from the January-to-March period, when output shrank at a 0.6 percent annualized pace on a drop in energy prices and investment. The data failed to show strength in non-energy exports and consumer spending the Bank of Canada was counting on to take over as drivers of growth, and raises the pressure to cut interest rates again at the next meeting July 15.

“They shouldn’t wait any longer, and proceed with a rate cut,” Jimmy Jean, a strategist in the fixed-income group at Desjardins Capital Markets in Montreal, told Bloomberg News by telephone. “We aren’t seeing the expected recovery in the non-energy sectors.”

Canada’s dollar reversed gains after the report and was down 0.2 percent to $1.2423 at 9:15 a.m. Toronto time. Federal government bond yields declined, including five-year debt that fell 4 basis points to 0.87 percent.

STRUGGLING FACTORIES

Manufacturing fell 0.2 percent in April, with the fourth consecutive decline led by non-durable goods such as food and paper. Canada’s factories have struggled to recapture orders they lost in the 2008-2009 recession, even with the aid of a weaker currency, cheaper energy and signs of a U.S. recovery.

Retailing declined 0.2 percent after a 0.3 percent gain in March, Statistics Canada said.

The Bank of Canada’s April 15 economic forecast predicted gross domestic product would grow at a 1.8 percent annualized pace between April and June.

Governor Stephen Poloz on Sunday likened his interest-rate cut in January to life-saving surgery following the shock of a drop in crude oil prices, saying that was a greater concern than record consumer debts.

“If the doctor says you need surgery to avoid death, the side effects usually don’t deter you, you just go ahead and manage them somehow,” Poloz said during a panel talk at the Bank for International Settlements. “Other issues must be subordinate and I think of them as side effects.”

SMALLER PROJECTS

Lower crude oil prices and a lack of pipelines are prompting producers from Suncor Energy Inc. to Imperial Oil Ltd. to accelerate a shift to smaller projects. Crude oil is Canada’s top export.

“We expect commodity prices to be range-bound for a significant period of time with West Texas Intermediate trading in the $60 to $75 range,” Steve Laut, president of Canadian Natural Resources Ltd., the nation’s largest heavy oil producer, said on a June 17 conference call.

Canada's shrinking economy could open door to second rate cut - BNN News
 

pgs

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Canada's shrinking economy could open door to second rate cut - BNN News
BNN - Business and Financial News, Analysis, Video and Blogs - Business News Network

Canada’s economy unexpectedly shrank for the fourth month in a row in April as oil and mining slumped, opening the door to a second interest-rate cut from the central bank this year, economists say.

"This latest growth disappointment—along with the rumbling uncertainty surrounding Greece—has simply cranked up the odds of another Bank of Canada rate cut at some point this year, and heaped renewed downward pressure on the Canadian dollar," wrote Douglas Porter, chief economist, BMO Capital Markets in a research note.

Benjamin Tal, deputy chief economist at CIBC World Markets is on the same page.

"I don't think they should have cut in January, and I don't think they should, but in this environment, maybe they will," he tells BNN.

Another economist agrees with the heightened probability of a second rate cut, but maintains a modestly positive outlook on Canada's economic picture.

"Overall, while the decline in Canadian real GDP in April raises the risk of a technical recession, we still believe the economy will manage to eke out marginally positive growth in the second quarter," according to Diana Petramala from TD Economics, in a note to clients.

Apart from strong real estate markets of Toronto and Vancouver, Canada’s economy is all but stalled, Sal Guatieri, Senior Economist, at BMO Capital Markets tells BNN. He also says the odds of another rate cut have increased.

Output shrank 0.1 percent to an annualized $1.65 trillion, Statistics Canada said Tuesday in Ottawa. None of the 20 economists surveyed by Bloomberg predicted a decline and their median estimate was for a 0.1 percent expansion.

The oil and gas, mining and quarrying group fell 2.6 percent in April, marking the sixth consecutive decline. Oil and gas extraction dropped 3.4 percent as non-conventional oil producers experienced “maintenance shutdowns and production difficulties,” Statistics Canada said. Mining and quarrying fell 3.4 percent on declines in copper, nickel, iron and coal.

The first report for the second quarter shows weakness extended from the January-to-March period, when output shrank at a 0.6 percent annualized pace on a drop in energy prices and investment. The data failed to show strength in non-energy exports and consumer spending the Bank of Canada was counting on to take over as drivers of growth, and raises the pressure to cut interest rates again at the next meeting July 15.

“They shouldn’t wait any longer, and proceed with a rate cut,” Jimmy Jean, a strategist in the fixed-income group at Desjardins Capital Markets in Montreal, told Bloomberg News by telephone. “We aren’t seeing the expected recovery in the non-energy sectors.”

Canada’s dollar reversed gains after the report and was down 0.2 percent to $1.2423 at 9:15 a.m. Toronto time. Federal government bond yields declined, including five-year debt that fell 4 basis points to 0.87 percent.

STRUGGLING FACTORIES

Manufacturing fell 0.2 percent in April, with the fourth consecutive decline led by non-durable goods such as food and paper. Canada’s factories have struggled to recapture orders they lost in the 2008-2009 recession, even with the aid of a weaker currency, cheaper energy and signs of a U.S. recovery.

Retailing declined 0.2 percent after a 0.3 percent gain in March, Statistics Canada said.

The Bank of Canada’s April 15 economic forecast predicted gross domestic product would grow at a 1.8 percent annualized pace between April and June.

Governor Stephen Poloz on Sunday likened his interest-rate cut in January to life-saving surgery following the shock of a drop in crude oil prices, saying that was a greater concern than record consumer debts.

“If the doctor says you need surgery to avoid death, the side effects usually don’t deter you, you just go ahead and manage them somehow,” Poloz said during a panel talk at the Bank for International Settlements. “Other issues must be subordinate and I think of them as side effects.”

SMALLER PROJECTS

Lower crude oil prices and a lack of pipelines are prompting producers from Suncor Energy Inc. to Imperial Oil Ltd. to accelerate a shift to smaller projects. Crude oil is Canada’s top export.

“We expect commodity prices to be range-bound for a significant period of time with West Texas Intermediate trading in the $60 to $75 range,” Steve Laut, president of Canadian Natural Resources Ltd., the nation’s largest heavy oil producer, said on a June 17 conference call.

Canada's shrinking economy could open door to second rate cut - BNN News
Would any other party or their dear leader do better ?
 

tay

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Well there he was in this PMO picture, at the Calgary Stampede in his black bad guy cowboy hat, framed between a horse and a horse's ***.

Watching the parade and trying to put on a brave face, or smile like a winner. Or at least open his mouth and show his teeth.

But it couldn't have been easy. Not with Rachel Notley, the new sheriff of Alberta, riding triumphantly past him...




The political landscape appears to be shifting in subtle but important ways. The Liberals seem to have stopped the bleeding and are now statistically tied with the floundering Conservatives who are over 12 points back from their majority achievement in 2011.



The NDP continues to hold on to a narrow but significant lead which would be more decisive save for the entry of Gilles Duceppe into the Quebec race.

Harper has absolutely no reason to whoop it up over the latest Ekos........




EKOS: A renewed three-way race with NDP on top





























 

captain morgan

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I can tell that you are sweating bullets over Harper having as much support as he has.

Not with Rachel Notley, the new sheriff of Alberta, riding triumphantly past him...


Memo to ideologues: Provincial politics have little bearing on the Federal scene.

The Liberals seem to have stopped the bleeding and are now statistically tied with the floundering Conservatives who are over 12 points back from their majority achievement in 2011.



Was invited to a posh Trudeau speaking engagement yesterday..... $1,500 a seat.... Reassessing the value after hearing JT... Maybe $4.95

He was thoroughly uninspiring, unimpressive and uncompetitive





A horse's azz mounted atop a horse.

How ironic