Markets see two more Bank of Canada rate cuts as economy slows, survey shows
- Steve Huebl
- 7 days ago
- 2 min read

Markets are widely expecting two additional quarter-point cuts from the Bank of Canada this year, according to the Bank’s first-quarter Market Participants Survey.
Respondents see the BoC’s policy rate falling from 2.75% currently to 2.25% by the end of 2025, suggesting two additional 25-basis-point cuts in the months ahead. The median forecast calls for the first cut to come by June, with rates drifting lower in the second half of the year.
The market’s median call for two rate cuts by year-end broadly matches forecasts from RBC, CIBC, and TD, which all see the Bank of Canada lowering its policy rate to 2.25% by the end of the year.
BMO and National Bank expect a slightly more aggressive easing, with the policy rate forecast to reach 2.00% by year end.
Scotiabank, which had previously forecast the Bank of Canada would hold rates steady through the end of next year, has now updated its call to reflect three quarter-point cuts in 2026. The revision comes amid a sharply downgraded North American growth outlook, driven by escalating U.S. trade tensions and weaker global demand.
“In Canada, we assume that Governor Macklem keeps rates unchanged for the remainder of the year, but this depends critically on the evolution of the global trade war, the magnitude of the decline in U.S. economic activity, and the Canadian government’s response to it,” Scotia economist Jean-Francois Perrault wrote in a recent note. “If the U.S. or Canadian economies weaken more than expected, the BoC would likely lower rates.”
The bank now expects the BoC’s policy rate to remain at 2.75% through 2025 before falling to 2.00% by the end of 2026.
Steve Huebl
Mortgage Industry News
April 28, 2025
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