The Bank of Canada’s second-quarter business-outlook survey captures a period of heightened uncertainty, as firms braced for the fallout of elevated energy costs. Conducted largely in May, the data reveals that businesses intended to aggressively pass rising input costs onto customers, pushing expectations for price hikes to levels not seen since early 2023. However, the survey’s findings may already be dated. Much of the data collection occurred before a diplomatic deal between the U.S. and Iran eased tensions and oil prices retreated from their May peaks of nearly $110 a barrel to roughly $69.
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Bank of Canada Survey Reveals Inflation Anxiety as Energy Costs Spike
Forty-four percent of Canadian firms now expect inflation to exceed 3% over the next two years, a sharp increase from the 11% reported just one quarter prior. This surge in price expectations, driven by regional conflict in the Middle East, sets a tense backdrop for the central bank’s upcoming July 15 policy decision.

Governor Tiff Macklem acknowledged that the recent Middle East truce has tempered some inflationary pressure, though the central bank remains wary of the transition from energy costs to broader consumer prices. While inflation reached a two-year high of 3.2% in May, officials have maintained the main interest rate at 2.25%. With the economy showing signs of a rebound and growing at an annualized rate of over 2% in the second quarter, policymakers are balancing the need to avoid overreacting to energy volatility against the risk of persistent, long-term price acceleration.
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