Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Subdued Business Outlook For The Next Year, Bank Of Canada Poll Says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Jul, 2016 12:47 PM
    OTTAWA — Canadian businesses are anticipating only a minimal acceleration in sales growth over the next 12 months amid bleak expectations among firms linked to the energy industry, a new Bank of Canada poll suggests.
     
    The central bank's latest business outlook survey released Monday said that companies hit hard by the oil price slump reported that indicators of future sales, such as new orders, had seen scant improvement compared to a year ago.
     
    "The moderation in future sales expectations was concentrated among firms in the Prairies, which see few signs of a recovery from the oil price shock," the bank's quarterly survey said.
     
    In other regions of the country, the poll said "steady, albeit modest, domestic momentum" supported brighter sales outlooks.
     
    The survey found that businesses outside the affected commodity industries and in the service sectors were more optimistic about the coming year. Rising demand from the United States and the past depreciation of the Canadian dollar remained key sources of stronger sales expectations, the poll said.
     
    The survey also suggested that overall, firms generally expected to add jobs over the coming year — but found hiring intentions remained below post-recession levels and diverged considerably by sector.
     
    Plans to reduce staff were prominent among companies in the goods sector, while firms in the service industries intended to boost their workforces to meet growing demand, the poll found.
     
    "Hiring intentions remain modest overall," the bank said.
     
    Firms also remained cautious about business investment, with many companies tied to the energy sector budgeting for further cuts, the survey said. However, businesses in the service sectors were found to be more willing to invest and expand, it added.
     
    CIBC chief economist Avery Shenfeld said the survey indicates that the repercussions from the fall in energy prices will continue to be felt.
     
    "We're not out of the woods yet," Shenfeld said in a note to clients. "The energy shock dented Canada over the past 12 months, but the Bank of Canada's latest survey suggests that the tide isn't yet turning back in our favour."
     
    The Bank of Canada's survey of senior managers from about 100 companies was conducted between May 9 and June 8, and therefore doesn't reflect any potential changes in expectations linked to the United Kingdom's referendum to leave the European Union.
     
    National Bank senior economist Krishen Rangasamy said that companies' actual investment and hiring may end up being softer following the result of the so-called Brexit vote than the opinions reported in Monday's survey.
     
    "Intentions to hire and invest remain weak, which does not bode well for economic growth in the second half of the year," Rangasamy wrote in a research note.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Higher Speed Limits Lowered Crashes On Some B.C. Highways: Minister

    Higher Speed Limits Lowered Crashes On Some B.C. Highways: Minister
    Transportation Minister Todd Stone says the 120 km/h speed limit on the Coquihalla Highway from Hope to Kamloops will remain because that section has had low collision rates.

    Higher Speed Limits Lowered Crashes On Some B.C. Highways: Minister

    B.C. Privacy Commissioner Orders Province To Disclose Soil Contamination Tests

    Elizabeth Denham says the Freedom of Information and Privacy Act requires public bodies to proactively disclose information that is in the public interest.

    B.C. Privacy Commissioner Orders Province To Disclose Soil Contamination Tests

    Ontario Offers HPV Vaccine To Gay, Bisexual Men, Plus All Grade 7 Boys And Girls

    Ontario Offers HPV Vaccine To Gay, Bisexual Men, Plus All Grade 7 Boys And Girls
    Ontario is expanding its free vaccine for the human papillomavirus or HPV to people aged 26 or younger who identify as gay, bisexual or men who have sex with men, including some transgender people

    Ontario Offers HPV Vaccine To Gay, Bisexual Men, Plus All Grade 7 Boys And Girls

    One Dead, 9 With Minor Injuries In House Explosion In Mississauga, Ont.

    One Dead, 9 With Minor Injuries In House Explosion In Mississauga, Ont.
    One person is dead and nine others suffered minor injuries in an explosion that levelled one home and damaged at least two dozen others in Mississauga, Ont., west of Toronto.

    One Dead, 9 With Minor Injuries In House Explosion In Mississauga, Ont.

    20 Years Since Murder, But Rebecca Middleton 'Still Part Of The Family'

    20 Years Since Murder, But Rebecca Middleton 'Still Part Of The Family'
    Rebecca Middleton's family members celebrated what would have been her 37th birthday this past Monday with a cake, two decades after the Belleville, Ont., woman was raped, stabbed repeatedly and left to die on the purported island paradise that is Bermuda.

    20 Years Since Murder, But Rebecca Middleton 'Still Part Of The Family'

    Canadians 'Happy At Home' When It Comes To Travel, New Poll Suggests

    Canadians 'Happy At Home' When It Comes To Travel, New Poll Suggests
    TORONTO — A new poll finds that while most Canadians have lived or travelled abroad, the majority see their homeland as a top vacation destination.

    Canadians 'Happy At Home' When It Comes To Travel, New Poll Suggests