Three trends that will drive Canada’s economy in 2017

By Staff | December 21, 2016 | Last updated on December 21, 2016
2 min read

There are three trends that will guide the Canadian economy in 2017. Those are:

  • the strength, or lack thereof, of oil prices;
  • domestic housing developments; and
  • whether the U.S. economy continues to improve.

So says Russell Investments’ 2017 Global Market Outlook, which calls for modest growth in the coming year for Canada.

“Moderate improvement in the price of oil and reasonable growth of the U.S. economy are weighed down by debt-laden households,” says Shailesh Kshatriya, director of Canadian strategies at Russell Investments Canada Limited. “We expect domestic equities to be positive, but without the exuberance of 2016. However, domestic bonds likely will be challenged as lacklustre fundamentals may be partially offset by rising yields in the U.S. […] On balance, we see 2017 economic growth in the range of 1.6% to 2%.”

Further, the report highlights the Bank of Canada’s admission that it did entertain cutting interest rates during its October 2016 meeting. However, Russell Investments strategists question how effective rate cut would be, given current market conditions (read more on monetary policy and how it affects you).

Kshatriya says, “Cutting rates in the near term, while recession probabilities are low, is a view that is difficult to reconcile. As such, we expect the central bank will keep their target rate steady at 0.50% in 2017.”

Canadian 10-year bond yields are headed higher, albeit moderately, and Kshatriya expects them to trade within a range 1.5% and 1.9% by year-end 2017. “With our anticipation that the U.S. Federal Reserve will raise the federal funds rate, potentially as many as three times by the end of 2017, we believe the upward bias in the U.S. yields could help pull domestic yields higher.”

Global forecast overview

Russell Investments’ strategists anticipate a challenging global market environment in 2017. The team says global economic growth is likely to improve–spurred by fiscal stimulus as political leaders worldwide move away from austerity.

But the picture isn’t as rosy in the long term.

In the U.S., the strategists see equity market valuations as already expensive, and they caution that the anticipation of Trump stimulus could lead to overvalued U.S. equities. Also, corporate profit growth is likely to be in the mid-single digits at best, there could be pressure from rising labor costs and a stronger dollar on margins.

“Trumponomics is directionally pro-growth, pro-inflation, and our central scenario is a net addition of half a percentage point to real GDP growth,” said Paul Eitelman, multi-asset investment strategist for North America at Russell Investments. “We continue to favor Europe and Japan equities over the U.S. in global portfolios, and expect expensive U.S. valuations to limit future market performance.”

Inflation and a more hawkish U.S. Federal Reserve could be a boon for bonds, the report says, but uncertainty is the primary reason that Russell Investments has upgraded the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield forecast. Trumponomics is untested, it says, and too much stimulus could overheat the U.S. economy–resulting in more Fed rate hikes and an economic downturn in 2018.

Advisor.ca staff

Staff

The staff of Advisor.ca have been covering news for financial advisors since 1998.