Strength in the manufacturing sector helped the Canadian economy grow more than expected in July and boost expectations the Bank of Canada will raise its key interest rate next month.
Statistics Canada said Friday real gross domestic product grew by 0.2% in July, an increase that followed essentially no change in June.
Economists had expected an increase of 0.1% for July, according to Thomson Reuters Eikon.
Stephen Brown, senior Canada economist at Capital Economics, said the overall economy is on track for annualized growth of around 2% in the second quarter.
“That would be stronger than the 1.5% expected by the Bank of Canada in its July monetary policy report and is another reason to expect the bank to raise interest rates next month,” Brown wrote in a report.
The stronger-than-expected GDP figure follows signs of growing price pressures that have also raised expectations of higher interest rates. The annual inflation rate was 2.8% in August, down from 3% in July, but still at the top end of the Bank of Canada’s target range of 1% to 3%.
The central bank kept its key interest rate target on hold at its rate announcement earlier this month, but most economists expect the central bank to raise the rate at its announcement on Oct. 24.
The Bank of Canada’s trend-setting interest rate sits at 1.5% after four increases since the middle of last year.
“On balance, the Canadian economy looks to have had a wee bit more underlying momentum than expected through the summer, and the ding from the Syncrude outage was not as deep as feared,” Bank of Montreal chief economist Doug Porter said.
“As we opined in the wake of last week’s solid core CPI (2.1% on average), the ducks are in a row for an October rate hike, barring a shock on the NAFTA front.”
The Bank of Canada has said it is closely watching the NAFTA talks and other trade policy developments, which could hurt the Canadian economy.
Bank governor Stephen Poloz has said uncertainty over NAFTA has resulted in less business investment in Canada than there otherwise should be.
In its report Friday, Statistics Canada said goods-producing industries grew 0.3%, while services-producing industries increased 0.2%.
The agency said 12 of 20 sectors gained ground as the manufacturing sector grew 1.2% in the month, its strongest showing since November 2017.
Wholesale trade grew 1.4%, while transportation and warehousing services grew 0.9%.
Meanwhile, the construction sector fell for the third time in four months as it moved down 0.6% in the month.