FINWIRES · TerminalLIVE
FINWIRES

RBC Previews This Week's Bank of Canada Policy Meeting

By

-- Focus this week will be on the Bank of Canada's decision on interest rates Wednesday amid rising consumer prices, and then on February's gross domestic product print on Thursday, said RBC in its Forward Guidance note published last Friday.

RBC expects the BoC to hold interest rates unchanged for a fourth consecutive meeting, but said policymakers will be watching the impact of higher energy prices on inflation closely. Headline consumer price index growth looks likely to rise above the 1% to 3% inflation target range in April for the first time since December 2023, it added.

But there is nothing the BoC's interest rate policy can do to influence the global price of oil, and lags in the impact of interest rates on the economy mean the central bank needs to set monetary policy based on where inflation will be in the future, not just where it is today, RBC noted.

RBC estimates the BoC will be cautious about adding to near-term affordability challenges created by a supply-driven surge in fuel costs as long as inflation expectations and broader inflation pressures, outside of energy price increases, remain contained.

Inflation expectations did edge higher in the BoC's Business Outlook Survey (BOC) last week, but further signs of easing in "core" measures in March should leave the central bank flexibility to focus on incoming data against its recent projections, according to RBC.

Q1 GDP growth is tracking "broadly in line" with the BoC's January forecast, with recent data pointing to a modest pickup in momentum following a softer start to the year. Labor market conditions have also shown signs of stabilization, but with the unemployment rate still at levels that wouldn't imply underlying inflation pressures building, RBC said.

This combination suggests limited urgency for further policy adjustment in the near term, it added, noting the bank's base case forecast assumes rates remain on hold through 2026 with gradual increases beginning in 2027 as the economy continues to normalize.

Related Articles

Research

Research Alert: Waste Management: Broad-based Margin Gains Support Q1 Beat

CFRA, an independent research provider, has providedwith the following research alert. Analysts at CFRA have summarized their opinion as follows:WM's Q1 results exceeded expectations, with operating EPS of $1.81 (up 8.4% Y/Y) vs. consensus of $1.74, driven by better-than-anticipated margin execution. Adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 70 bps to 29.8%, with Recycling and Renewable segments showing impressive gains of 370 bps and 790 bps, respectively. We believe operational efficiency initiatives are paying dividends as WM invests in technology and automation to optimize its cost structure, a trend that should continue supporting margin expansion in 2026 and beyond. Core pricing remained robust at 6.3%, reflecting WM's pricing power as the company shifts toward higher-margin contracts. WM completed three recycling facilities during the quarter, adding nearly 300K tons of processing capacity in growing markets. We see newer automated facilities as making this business more profitable. Healthcare Solutions integration was notable, with adjusted EBITDA growing 11.6% despite slight revenue decline, driven by SG&A cost management and synergy capture.

$WM
Research

Research Alert: Essex Property Trust, Inc. Post Ffo Beat And Revenue In Line

CFRA, an independent research provider, has providedwith the following research alert. Analysts at CFRA have summarized their opinion as follows:ESS delivered solid Q1 2025 results, with FFO of $4.17 per share, $0.21 above consensus, and same-property revenue growth of 2.9%. Cash NOI grew 4.3% Y/Y due to rental revenue of $482M, with average monthly rent up 2.2% to $2,719. We believe the West Coast multifamily market is showing modest growth, with Northern California leading the recovery at 3.9% same-property revenue growth, followed by Seattle Metro at 2.3% and Southern California at 2.2%. Management reaffirmed 2026 guidance, with FFO expected at $15.69-$16.19 per share and same-property revenue growth of 1.7%-3.1%. ESS increased its annual dividend by 0.8% to $10.36 per share, marking the 32nd consecutive annual increase, while repurchasing $61.9M in shares YTD. We like the portfolio's performance trajectory amid the ongoing West Coast market recovery, though operating expenses continue outpacing revenue growth at +2.5% to +3.5%. This leads to cash NOI of only +0.8% to +3.4% with the midpoint at +2.1% Y/Y.

$ESS
Research

Research Alert: Eix Q1: Rate Increase Offsets Cost Recovery Non-recurral; Growth Targets Weak

CFRA, an independent research provider, has providedwith the following research alert. Analysts at CFRA have summarized their opinion as follows:Edison International reported Q1 2026 core EPS of $1.42 vs. $1.37 prior year, driven by 2025 General Rate Case rate relief, partially offset by the absence of $0.30 per share interest expense benefits from TKM Settlement Agreement cost recoveries. GAAP EPS declined to $1.38 from $3.73 due to the absence of $908M in prior-year non-core benefits. Operating revenue increased 7.7% to $4,103M while cash flow from operations grew 16.6% to $1,427M, though interest expense rose substantially to $524M from $301M due to capital funding requirements. Management affirmed 2026 core EPS guidance of $5.90-$6.20 and maintained confidence in 5%-7% core EPS growth from 2025 to 2030. We think the company's long-term EPS goals are overly optimistic as we forecast EPS growth closer to the 3%-4% range, suggesting EIX has the lowest earnings trajectory among peers with an 8.9% average, making even the 5%-7% target appear uncompetitive, in our view.

$EIX