Skip to main content

How the US Federal Reserve Impacts Canadian Mortgage Rates

Updated

You might think the US Federal Reserve has nothing to do with your Canadian mortgage. You’d be wrong. The Fed is one of the most powerful indirect forces shaping what you pay on your mortgage — through bond markets, currency effects, and the constraint it places on Bank of Canada policy.

Three channels of influence

The US Federal Reserve affects Canadian mortgage rates through three distinct channels:

ChannelHow It WorksAffects
1. Bond marketUS Treasury yields pull Canadian bond yields in the same directionFixed mortgage rates
2. CurrencyRate gap between BoC and Fed affects the loonie → inflationBoth fixed and variable rates
3. Economic spilloverUS economy affects Canadian exports, jobs, and growthBoC policy → variable rates

Channel 1: US bonds pull Canadian bonds

Canadian and US bond markets are deeply connected. When US Treasury yields move, Canadian Government of Canada bond yields typically follow.

Why this happens

  1. Capital mobility — Investors can buy Canadian or US bonds. If US 5-year Treasuries yield 4.0% and Canadian 5-year bonds yield 3.0%, investors shift money to the US
  2. Canadian bond yield rises — To attract buyers back, Canadian bonds must offer competitive yields
  3. Fixed mortgage rates rise — Because fixed rates are priced off Canadian bond yields

The correlation in practice

PeriodUS 5-yr TreasuryCanada 5-yr BondCorrelation
2019 (pre-COVID)1.5%–2.5%1.3%–1.8%Strong — moved together
2020 (COVID)0.2%–0.5%0.3%–0.5%Very strong — both collapsed
2022 (inflation)2.5%–4.5%2.5%–3.8%Strong — both surged
2023 (peak)4.0%–5.0%3.2%–4.2%Strong — both elevated
2025–20263.5%–4.0%2.5%–3.0%Moderate — Canada decoupling slightly

The correlation isn’t perfect — Canadian economic conditions can cause partial decoupling — but US bond yields exert a persistent gravitational pull on Canadian fixed rates.

What this means for your fixed rate

ScenarioUS Treasury Yield MoveCanadian Bond YieldYour Fixed Rate
Fed holds rates, US economy strongUS yields stay highCanadian yields stay elevatedFixed rates remain higher
Fed cuts, US economy softeningUS yields declineCanadian yields likely declineFixed rates may drop
US fiscal concerns push yields upUS yields spikeCanadian yields pulled higherFixed rates rise
Global flight to safetyUS yields drop sharplyCanadian yields dropFixed rates may decline

Channel 2: The interest rate gap and the loonie

The gap between Canadian and US interest rates directly affects the value of the Canadian dollar. This is arguably the most important constraint on Bank of Canada policy.

How the rate gap affects the dollar

BoC RateFed RateGapEffect on CAD
2.75%4.50%Canada −1.75%CAD weakens vs USD
3.50%4.50%Canada −1.00%Moderate CAD weakness
4.50%4.50%EqualCAD stable
4.50%3.50%Canada +1.00%CAD strengthens

When Canadian rates are significantly below US rates, the Canadian dollar weakens because:

  1. Investors prefer higher US yields — money flows out of Canada
  2. Carry trade — borrowing in cheap CAD to invest in higher-yielding USD
  3. Portfolio rebalancing — pension funds and institutions rotate toward US assets

Why a weak loonie matters for your mortgage

Weak Loonie EffectMortgage Impact
Imports cost more (30%+ of CPI basket)Inflation rises → BoC may hold or raise rates
Gas prices rise (oil priced in USD)Higher CPI → pressure to keep rates higher
Travel more expensiveConsumer spending shifts, affecting CPI
Reduced BoC flexibilityBoC can’t cut as far as it might want to
Foreign investment in real estateMay increase demand + prices in some markets

Real-world example: 2024–2025

In 2024, the Bank of Canada began cutting the overnight rate (from 5.00%) while the Fed held rates at 5.25%–5.50%. The rate gap widened to over 2%, and the Canadian dollar fell below USD 0.70. This created a dilemma:

  • The BoC wanted to support the weakening Canadian economy with lower rates
  • But cutting too fast would weaken the loonie further, importing inflation
  • The BoC had to pace its cuts partly based on Fed timing

This is why Canadian mortgage holders need to watch the Fed, not just the BoC.

Channel 3: US economic spillover

The US is Canada’s largest trading partner (~75% of exports). What happens in the US economy directly affects Canadian economic conditions.

US Economic EventImpact on CanadaMortgage Rate Effect
US recessionLess demand for Canadian exports, job lossesBoC cuts rates → variable falls, fixed may fall
US growth boomCanadian exports surge, jobs growBoC may hold/raise → rates stable or higher
US tariffs on CanadaReduced exports, economic disruptionComplex — BoC may cut to support growth despite inflation risk
US housing bustLess US demand, global risk aversionBond yields fall → fixed rates decline
US inflation surgeImported via trade and energyBoC restrained from cutting → rates higher

How to monitor the Fed’s impact on your mortgage

Key indicators to watch

IndicatorWhere to Find ItWhat It Tells You
Fed funds rateFederal Reserve websiteCurrent US policy rate
Fed dot plotReleased quarterly (FOMC meetings)Where Fed members expect rates to go
US 5-year Treasury yieldFinancial news, CNBCDirection for Canadian bond yields/fixed rates
USD/CAD exchange rateBank of Canada, GoogleWhether the rate gap is straining the loonie
CME FedWatch toolcmegroup.comMarket probability of next Fed move
US CPI and jobs dataBureau of Labor StatisticsWhether the Fed will cut, hold, or raise

How to use this in your mortgage decisions

ScenarioWhat It Means for Canadian RatesStrategy
Fed cutting, BoC cuttingBoth bond yields and BoC rate decliningVariable and fixed rates both falling — good time for either
Fed on hold, BoC cuttingCAD weakening, BoC limitedVariable may not drop as fast as expected — consider fixed
Fed cutting, BoC on holdCAD strengthening, Canadian bond yields decliningFixed rates may drop — watch for opportunities
Fed hiking, BoC holdingCanadian bond yields pushed higher, CAD weakeningFixed rates under upward pressure — lock in if rates are good

The bottom line for Canadian borrowers

  1. The Fed constrains the BoC — Canada can’t diverge too far from US rates without currency consequences
  2. US bond yields drag Canadian bonds — even if the Canadian economy weakens, strong US yields keep Canadian fixed rates elevated
  3. Watch the rate gap — a widening gap (Canada « US) means limited BoC flexibility and potential upward pressure on rates
  4. Trade disruptions add complexity — tariffs, trade wars, or North American supply chain shifts create additional uncertainty

🏠

Get the best mortgage rate in Canada — in minutes

Homewise negotiates with 30+ banks and lenders for you. Free, 5 minutes, no credit check.

Get Started →