Written By
Nick Raffoul
Nick Raffoul is the Founder and Lead Analyst at Best Canadian Stocks. He graduated with a degree in Business Administration, has over a decade of writing experience, and grew his personal portfolio 153% from 2020 to 2024.
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The Bank of Canada released its Q2 2026 Business Outlook Survey and Canadian Survey of Consumer Expectations on Monday, revealing a sharp increase in recession concerns among Canadian businesses. With the central bank’s next rate decision just days away, the data paints a mixed picture of an economy caught between persistent inflation and weakening sentiment.
Here’s what Canadian investors need to know about the surveys and what they signal for portfolios ahead of the July 15 rate decision.
Survey Results: Recession Planning Nearly Doubles
Data as of July 7, 2026. The most striking finding from the Business Outlook Survey is the jump in recession planning. Seventeen percent of firms are now budgeting for a Canadian recession in the next 12 months, up from just 9% in Q1 2026.
Overall business sentiment deteriorated after three consecutive quarters of improvement. Sales outlooks softened slightly, with firms citing the war in the Middle East as the primary constraint. However, not all indicators turned negative.
Export outlooks improved to well above the historical average, with fewer firms citing trade uncertainty. Strong demand for commodity exports, particularly oil and metals, drove the improvement. Oil producers revised capital spending and production plans upward during the consultation period, when WTI crude averaged approximately US$101 per barrel.
Investment plans remained strong and unchanged from Q1 2026, while employment intentions weakened to below the historical average.
Inflation Expectations Remain Sticky
Both businesses and consumers expect inflation to remain above the Bank of Canada’s 2% target. One-year-ahead inflation expectations sit in the 3–3.5% range, driven by elevated oil and energy prices, the Middle East war, and U.S. tariffs.
Nearly three-quarters of firms reported cost increases due to the Middle East conflict. Of those affected, approximately 40% are not passing costs to customers, 25% are partially passing them through, and 33% are fully passing them through.
The positive signal is that near-term inflation expectations peaked in April and have trended down since the U.S.–Iran interim agreement in mid-June. Five-year expectations remained broadly unchanged.
What It Means for the July 15 Rate Decision
The Bank of Canada held its policy rate at 2.25% on June 10, marking the fifth consecutive hold. The next rate decision comes Wednesday, July 15, alongside the Monetary Policy Report.
Bond markets currently price a high probability of no change on July 15, with only approximately 9% probability of a 25 basis point hike priced in. The C.D. Howe Institute Monetary Policy Council unanimously recommended holding at 2.25%.
The survey data supports the case for a hold. While inflation expectations remain elevated, the deterioration in business sentiment and weakening employment intentions suggest the central bank has little room to tighten further without tipping the economy into the recession that 17% of firms are already planning for.
Sector Implications for Investors
The mixed signals in the surveys create diverging outlooks across sectors.
Energy and commodity producers are positioned constructively. With oil producers revising capital expenditures upward and export demand for commodities running above historical averages, energy stocks may benefit from sustained commodity strength despite broader economic uncertainty.
Consumer discretionary faces headwinds. Consumer spending intentions edged down in Q2 2026, with higher gasoline prices constraining discretionary spending on travel, dining, and major purchases. This pressure may persist as long as inflation expectations remain above 3%.
Bank stocks present a mixed picture. If the recession that 17% of firms are budgeting for materializes, lenders would feel the slowdown in loan demand first. But if the Bank of Canada holds rates and the economy avoids contraction, loan growth could remain resilient.
Dividend stocks in defensive sectors — utilities, telecoms, and consumer staples with stable cash flows — may attract more attention if recession concerns continue to build.
What Investors Should Watch
The July 15 decision is just days away. We think Canadian investors should focus on three things.
First, the language in the Monetary Policy Report will matter more than the rate decision itself. If the Bank of Canada signals growing concern about growth risks, it strengthens the case for defensive positioning. If it emphasizes persistent inflation, rate-sensitive sectors may face continued pressure.
Second, watch how employment data evolves over the summer. The surveys show employment intentions have weakened to below historical averages. If labour market softness accelerates, the central bank will have more room to cut rates later in 2026.
Third, monitor commodity price stability. Oil at US$101 per barrel during the survey period supported strong energy sector sentiment. A sharp move in either direction from current levels could shift the investment landscape quickly.
Uncertain economic outlook means active portfolio positioning matters more than ever. Open a Questrade account today and get $50 in free trades to rebalance your holdings ahead of the Bank of Canada’s July 15 rate decision.
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Written By
Nick Raffoul
Nick Raffoul is the Founder and Lead Analyst at Best Canadian Stocks. He holds a degree in Business Administration and has over a decade of writing experience. Nick began investing just before the COVID-19 market crash in March 2020, growing his personal portfolio 153% by 2024. In 2022, he founded Best Canadian Stocks to make data-driven investing accessible to all Canadians. His goal is to help all of his readers achieve financial freedom, maximize their spending power, and reach their financial goals. Whether you're maximizing your TFSA, building an RRSP to save for retirement, or looking to buy your first stock, Nick has your back. His work covers Canadian equities, dividend investing, tax-advantaged accounts, and personal finance.
