BoC surveys show business fears of tariff impacts are easing
View all comments(0)
The Bank of Canada (BoC) released triplicate survey reports on Monday, with the Q2 Business Outlook Survey showing less direct tariff impact in Q2 compared to Q1, while the BoC Business Leaders' Pulse showed less export-focused firms expect worst-case tariff scenarios than before. The BoC's Survey of Consumer Expectations also showed that despite improvements, the average Canadian consumer overwhelmingly expects to face recession conditions in the next year.
Key highlights
- Tariffs and related uncertainty continue to have major impacts on businesses' outlooks.
- Most firms expect to maintain current staffing levels and limit investment to regular maintenance over the next 12 months.
- 23% of firms expect inflation to be above 3% for the next 2 years, unchanged from Q1.
- 43% of firms expect lower labor costs over the next 12 months, 9% see higher labor costs.
- Consumer 5-year inflation expectations have risen to 3.45%.
- 24% of firms reported outright decline in sales over previous 12 months, down from 28% in Q1.
- 28% of firms expect Canada to be in a recession over the next year, down from 32% in Q1.
- Balance of opinion on indicators of future sales drops to -6 from +22 in Q1.
- 64.5% of Canadian consumers expect a recession in the next 12 months, down slightly from Q1's 66.5%.
Disclaimer: The information provided on this website is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice.
Like
Recommended Articles
Featured Tools
Top News
Nvidia’s Trillion-Dollar Market Value Stock Price Flash Crashes, Intraday Drop Exceeds 4.6%. What Are the Reasons?

SpaceX to IPO in June, How Ordinary Investors Seize the Last Opportunity?

SpaceX IPO Date Moved Up to June 12: What Should Investors Watch? How Can European and Asian Investors Buy SpaceX Shares? What Is the Impact on Broad US Markets?

Nvidia Reports Q1 FY2027 Earnings on May 20 - Is NVDA a Buy at $224 Before the Most Important Print of the Year?

US Treasuries Continue to Rise. Could a US Debt Sell-Off Erupt in 2026?

Tradingkey







Comments (0)
Click the $ button, enter the symbol, and select to link a stock, ETF, or other ticker.