The Bank of Canada kept its overnight rate target at 2.25% on April 29, 2026 — the level it has held since October. The Bank Rate sits at 2.5% and the deposit rate at 2.20%. On its own, a hold is not news. Seven consecutive holds would barely register.
What changed is the language.
Governor Tiff Macklem used the accompanying Monetary Policy Report to lay out something Canadian borrowers have not heard since the last tightening cycle: a scenario in which the Bank raises rates multiple times in a row. The trigger is oil prices. Driven sharply higher by the war in the Middle East, crude has pushed headline inflation to 2.4% in March and, by the Bank's own projection, will send it to roughly 3% in April. The Bank is "looking through" the near-term spike — but only conditionally.
"If oil prices continue to increase, and particularly if they remain elevated, the risk that higher energy prices become ongoing generalized inflation increases," Macklem said. "If this starts to happen, monetary policy will have more work to do — there may be a need for consecutive increases in the policy rate."
In the same breath, he offered the opposite scenario. If the United States imposes significant new trade restrictions on Canada, the Bank may need to cut rates further to support growth. Two directions. One policy rate. No certainty about which path Canada follows.