Abstract:CAD is the ISO 4217 currency code for the Canadian dollar - the official currency of the country of Canada. Currency Name:Canadian dollar. The Bank of Canada hiked by 75 bps to 3.25% as expected on Wednesday this week and is still assessing how much further rates will need to go in order to return inflation to target.
CAD is the ISO 4217 currency code for the Canadian dollar - the official currency of the country of Canada. Currency Name:Canadian dollar. The Bank of Canada hiked by 75 bps to 3.25% as expected on Wednesday this week and is still assessing how much further rates will need to go in order to return inflation to target.
The BoC on inflation
The Bank of Canada recognises that policy rates will still need to rise further. The Governing Council remains resolute in trying to achieve the 2% inflation target. The current level of inflation in Canada is 7.6% and that is down from 8.1% due to a fall in oil prices. However, core inflation remains high in the 5-5.5% band.
Domestic growth
The BoC noted that GDP grew by 3.3% in Q2 which was weaker than projected. However, domestic demand was very strong. Consumption grew by 9.15% and business investment was up near to 12% The housing market is cooling, as anticipated with higher mortgage rates, and down from the ‘unsustainable levels’ during the pandemic. The domestic labour market is tight, but the BoC does expect the economy to moderate in the second half of the year.
One step at a time
In a similar vein to the Fed and the RBA, the BoC will assess how much higher rates will need to go as the impact of tighter monetary policy works its way through the economy. Next meeting is on October 26, 2022. You can read the full BoC statement here.
The takeaway
There was no surprise here and nothing to obviously trade. One thing to note is that the BoC was less concerned about both domestic and international inflation. You can read that when you compare the statement here with the prior statement.
What we need to consider here is if the BoC reduces the neutral rate. This could see some of the recent CAD strength unwind. You can see the continued march of CAD strength and there was nothing in the latest BoC statement that was a massive surprise. As a result, there is no obvious trade outlook here aside from looking at short-term CAD catalysts. If anything, less concern over inflation could result in some CAD pullbacks, but it is a low conviction perspective
Several users of the trading platform Scope Market (RS Global Ltd.) have reported serious issues with their accounts, including large amounts of money being taken without warning and permanent suspensions without clear explanation
Recent allegations have cast a dark shadow over the trading platform KODDPA. Once positioned as a promising player in the broker industry, KODDPA now faces serious questions regarding its integrity and legitimacy. Multiple recent incidents—including widespread account disputes, claims of system hacking, and demands for users to pay taxes for fund withdrawals—suggest that the platform may be operating far from the transparent, regulated environment it purports to provide.
In the world of equity investing, few forces are as quietly destructive as the investor’s own sense of hope. This psychological trap often known as the "illusion of luck" convinces retail investors that they are among the fortunate few who can defy market logic. More often than not, it ends in losses, disillusionment, and a harsh lesson from the market.
Technical analysis is the go-to toolkit for countless investors. Candlestick patterns, moving averages, MACD signals, Elliott Waves—you name it, there’s a chart or model for it. Many spend years perfecting their craft, poring over price patterns and back testing strategies. Yet, despite all this effort, a large number still lose money. The reason? It’s not the tools as they’re merely instruments. It’s the human behind them that falters. In particular, wishful thinking and emotional bias often sabotage disciplined execution.