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If there was any remaining doubt about a Bank of Canada rate hike at its next meeting in March, that quickly evaporated with the release of inflation data on Wednesday.

The country’s Consumer Price Index measure of inflation was 5.1% in January, its highest level since 1991.

The Bank of Canada’s three preferred measures of core inflation, which strip out more volatile components, averaged 3.2%, straying outside the Bank’s inflation target range of 1% to 3%.

“That broadening in inflation pressure—although not yet as dramatic as seen in the United States to-date—is expected to persist, driven by strong demand and limited ability for businesses to respond quickly with increased supply,” noted RBC economist Claire Fan.

The impact of home prices on inflation

The data from Statistics Canada showed the owned accommodation index, which is comprised of multiple sub-components including home prices and mortgage interest cost, was up 6.1% from a year ago.

Home prices make up 4.8% of the overall CPI inflation calculation and were up 13.5% over the past year, while the “other owned accommodation expenses” sub-category, which includes things like home sale commissions, rose 14%.

As of January, the average home price in Canada rose to a new high of $748,450, up 21% from a year earlier.

With housing inventory in short supply and demand remaining high, observers expect upward pressure on home prices to continue, at least until interest rates start to rise.

“We have a fundamentally strong housing market that has been allowed to overheat…” wrote BMO economist Robert Kavcic. “It’s going to take higher interest rates to alter the market psychology, cool excess demand and price growth. That day is fast approaching.”

The role of interest rates

Interest rates, which have remained near record low levels for much of the past two years, have been a mitigating factor on housing inflation. In January, mortgage interest cost was down 6.8% compared to a year ago.

But that’s expected to change over the course of the year once the Bank of Canada starts hiking interest rates.

Most observers agree the Bank of Canada is all but guaranteed to start lifting rates at its next meeting in March, despite the loss of 200,000 jobs last month and an uptick in the unemployment rate.

“The heated housing market and rising energy prices that have driven price growth to date are expected to remain elevated, at least in the near term,” Fan wrote. “Against that backdrop, the Bank of Canada is widely expected to begin hiking interest rates in March, and we could see a follow-up hike as soon as April.”

For variable-rate holders concerned about impending rate hikes, call me and we can go through your options.