Bank of Canada Holds at 2.25%: Why Vancouver Housing Activity Just Got a Breather (But Not a Bailout)
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The Bank of Canada maintained its overnight rate at 2.25% on June 10, 2026, holding the line for the fifth consecutive decision as global uncertainty mounts. In its official statement, the central bank acknowledged that Canadian GDP contracted by 0.1% in the first quarter—weaker than projected in April—with housing activity specifically noted as declining during the period. Governor Tiff Macklem's governing council cited the ongoing four-month Middle East conflict, which has pushed oil prices roughly $10 per barrel above April assumptions, alongside persistent U.S. tariff threats and elevated trade policy uncertainty as key reasons for caution.
For Greater Vancouver real estate watchers, the hold signals a continuation of the status quo that has defined 2026: borrowing costs remain at levels not seen since early 2023, but the central bank is clearly looking past short-term housing market weakness. The statement emphasized that while consumer spending grew 1.4%, business investment remained weak and the economy is expected to stay in "excess supply" even with an anticipated second-quarter rebound. Notably, the bank highlighted that shelter inflation is continuing to slow—a potential relief for landlords and tenants—even as headline CPI hit 2.8% in April driven by energy costs.
