logo
Sticker Shock Ahead: What Canadians Need to Know About Markets, Tariffs, and Inflation in 2025

Sticker Shock Ahead: What Canadians Need to Know About Markets, Tariffs, and Inflation in 2025

Reuters2 days ago
TORONTO, Canada, July 22, 2025 (EZ Newswire) -- As the global economy enters a year of recalibration, Canadian investors and households are bracing for a volatile but navigable 2025. According to Kate Leaman, AvaTrade, opens new tab's chief market analyst, Canada's economy is expected to post modest gains this year, growth hovering around 1.8%, but that calm surface belies a more turbulent undercurrent: trade friction with the United States, creeping inflation, and a changing global investment landscape.
A major flashpoint is the return of tariffs. In 2025, both Canada and the U.S. slapped 25% duties on a range of goods, opens new tab, from steel to everyday consumer products. While aimed at addressing trade imbalances, these tariffs have created a ripple effect that's beginning to show up where it matters most your grocery bill. According to forecasts, tariffs will impact nearly 9% of the consumer price basket tracked by Statistics Canada, with price hikes filtering through to households over the next 12 to 18 months.
Tariffs and Your Wallet: The New Inflation Driver
By mid-2025, Canada's inflation hovered around 2.3–2.5%, but that's set to change. Bank of Canada, opens new tab now predicts a temporary spike above 3% in 2026, largely driven by tariff-induced price increases. The impact will be most acute in non-energy consumer goods: groceries, household items, and apparel. For the average Canadian, that means $100 worth of groceries today could cost $103 or more within the year, small increments that add up across a family's monthly budget.
This inflationary jolt comes at a time when consumer confidence is slowly recovering, bolstered by wage growth and easing interest rates. But as AvaTrade analysts point out, shoppers should prepare for 'several choppy quarters in the aisles,' as tariffs push costs higher before supply chains fully adjust. The long-term upside? A potential reshoring of production and more 'Made in Canada' goods, though these may not come cheap, at least initially.
Market Strategy: Diversify and Stay Nimble
Despite the friction, Canada's financial markets, opens new tab remain resilient. The TSX is expected to grow, opens new tab, though more slowly than in 2024, with double-digit earnings growth led by energy, materials, and financials. Infrastructure projects like LNG terminals and high commodity prices are fueling optimism in key sectors. But volatility remains a theme, and AvaTrade suggests Canadian investors diversify, across geographies, sectors, and asset classes to weather potential shocks.
Meanwhile, export trends are likely to be erratic: a short-term surge in shipments as firms race to beat new tariffs, followed by potential declines if trade barriers persist. Canada's strategic pivot to the Indo-Pacific, however, offers hope for exporters seeking new markets beyond the U.S.
The Bigger Picture: Resilient, But Tested
The Canadian economy is not in crisis but it is at a crossroads. Tariffs, inflation, and geopolitical tensions will challenge both households and investors to adapt. For Canadians, 2025 is not the year to expect explosive growth but it is a year to plan smart, shop strategically, and watch global headlines closely. As AvaTrade's market outlook notes: Canada remains fundamentally sound, but navigating the months ahead will require patience, adaptability, and a clear-eyed view of risk.
This analysis was written by Kate Leaman, chief market analyst at AvaTrade.
About AvaTrade
AvaTrade is a globally licensed and regulated online trading broker, committed to providing traders with a secure and transparent trading environment. Nearly half of AvaTrade's activity stems from partnerships with institutional trading partners. The company prides itself on offering competitive trading conditions, including both fixed and floating spreads, as well as real-time quotes and instant trade execution.
AvaTrade supports a wide range of popular trading platforms across desktop and mobile, catering to traders of all levels. The multi-award-winning broker offers a diverse portfolio of CFD instruments, including precious metals, stocks, indices, ETFs, government bonds (from the US, Japan, and Europe), and vanilla options on Forex.
For more information, visit www.avatrade.ca, opens new tab.
Media Contact
Avatrade Supportinfo@avatrade.ca
###
SOURCE: AvaTrade
Copyright 2025 EZ Newswire
See release on EZ Newswire
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New FAA administrator calls current state of US air traffic unacceptable
New FAA administrator calls current state of US air traffic unacceptable

Reuters

time5 hours ago

  • Reuters

New FAA administrator calls current state of US air traffic unacceptable

OSHKOSH, Wisconsin, July 24 (Reuters) - The new head of the Federal Aviation Administration said Thursday the current state of the aging, understaffed U.S. air traffic control system is "not acceptable," vowing an aggressive modernization effort. Congress this month approved $12.5 billion to begin a massive overhaul over five years, while the Trump administration wants another $19 billion. FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford said at an air show that the U.S. air traffic control system has not been modernized in four decades. "We really do have some significant technology challenges," Bedford said, also calling for FAA leadership improvements and redesigning the national airspace.

Ghana narrows fiscal deficit target after better-than-expected first half
Ghana narrows fiscal deficit target after better-than-expected first half

Reuters

time5 hours ago

  • Reuters

Ghana narrows fiscal deficit target after better-than-expected first half

ACCRA, July 24 (Reuters) - Ghana has narrowed its fiscal deficit target for 2025 after a better-than-expected first six months of the year, its finance minister said on Thursday, pledging to get public finances back on track. The West African country is emerging from its worst economic crisis in a generation, featuring turmoil in its cocoa and gold industries, a severe cost-of-living squeeze and a lengthy debt-restructuring process. But this year, key macroeconomic indicators have improved, with growth accelerating to 5.3% year-on-year in the first quarter and inflation falling to 13.7% in June, its lowest since 2021. The government now expects a fiscal deficit of 3.8% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) this year, narrower than the 4.1% targeted in March, Finance Minister Cassiel Ato Forson told parliament during a mid-year review of public finances. In the first six months the deficit was 1.1% of GDP, ahead of the 2.4% targeted. Forson said economic growth could possibly exceed the March target of 4% and officials were hopeful they could hit the year-end inflation target of 11.9% ahead of schedule. "We have borrowed less than we planned, signifying strong expenditure control and fiscal discipline," Forson said. "This is a strong signal to the investor community and all stakeholders that the needed fiscal consolidation is happening here in Ghana and it will be sustained." In the first half of the year, total revenue and grants were roughly 3% short of target, but expenditure came in 14% below target. Forson said risks to the public purse included a shortfall in customs revenue, mounting wage pressures and smuggling of marine gas oil, adding Ghana was not out of the woods yet.

Explainer: Could Trump legally fire Fed chief Powell?
Explainer: Could Trump legally fire Fed chief Powell?

Reuters

time5 hours ago

  • Reuters

Explainer: Could Trump legally fire Fed chief Powell?

July 24 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump has repeatedly mused about firing Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and, ahead of a visit to the U.S. central bank's headquarters on Thursday, called him a "numbskull" for not cutting U.S. interest rates. If Trump fires Powell, he will be wading into uncharted legal territory by testing the Fed's historical independence. The Federal Reserve Act of 1913, which created the central bank, says that members of Board of Governors, including the Fed chief, can be "removed for cause by the president." But the law does not define "cause" or lay out any standard or procedures for removal. No president has ever removed a Fed board member, and the law has never been tested in court. Several federal laws shielding members of other agencies from being removed by the president without cause say that "cause" can include neglect of duty, malfeasance, and inefficiency. If Powell is fired and sues, those laws could be a guide for courts to determine if Trump had cause to remove him. In enacting those protections, Congress meant to distance the agencies from the White House. They also are intended to insulate their members from politics when they issue rulings in individual cases and craft policies with far-reaching impacts, such as the monetary policy set by the Fed. Maybe not. In several cases challenging Trump's firing of agency officials, his administration has argued that giving them any protections from removal violates his broad constitutional powers to control the executive branch. The administration could similarly claim that requiring cause to remove a Fed board member is unconstitutional, allowing Trump to fire Powell for any reason or none at all. And if Powell sued and won, the Trump administration could argue that courts lack the power to reinstate him. Government lawyers have said in some pending cases that fired officials would at most be entitled to back pay and a declaration from the court that their removal was unlawful. Several federal judges have ruled that Trump's firings of members of independent agencies were illegal and ordered officials to be reinstated. Appeals courts or the U.S. Supreme Court have paused those rulings pending appeals, including one involving a consumer product safety board that the Supreme Court paused on Wednesday. A Washington, D.C.-based appeals court is expected to rule soon on whether Trump had the power to remove Democratic members from two labor boards, likely teeing up a Supreme Court review. The fired officials in some of those cases have said that allowing them to be removed would open the door to Trump having virtually unfettered power over the entire executive branch and would threaten the Fed's independence. In a 1935 ruling involving the Federal Trade Commission, the Supreme Court said the president cannot fire top officials at multi-member agencies that act like courts or legislative bodies without cause. But the court's conservative majority in recent years has viewed that ruling as an exception to the general rule that the president gets to choose who executes federal laws. The court, however, recently signaled that the Fed may fit into that narrow exception, and that the court's rulings involving other boards and commissions may not apply. In an unsigned order, opens new tab in May allowing Trump to remove members of the labor boards, the court said the Fed "is a uniquely structured, quasi-private entity" with a singular historical tradition, distinguishing it from other agencies.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store