The numerical decision is straightforward. The policy rate stays at 2.25%, the Bank Rate at 2.50%, the deposit rate at 2.20%. Those companion rates aren't arbitrary. The Bank operates a floor system in which the deposit rate sits five basis points below the target and the Bank Rate sits 25 basis points above. When the headline number doesn't move, neither do the bookends around it.
What did change is the framing. The Bank's own June 10, 2026 press release describes the decision as a deliberate balance between two pressures: U.S. trade policy uncertainty pulling growth down, and the Middle East conflict — now in its fourth month — keeping energy prices and supply-chain costs elevated. Governing Council said it would "look through" the war's near-term impact on headline inflation, but would not allow higher energy prices to become persistent inflation, and stood ready to respond as the outlook evolves.
That is materially different from the early-2026 holds, where the implicit story was that the Bank was waiting for confirmation before cutting again. The June decision reads as a genuine pause between two opposing risks, not a delay in a one-way easing cycle.
Why "Fifth Consecutive" Matters
The 2.25% rate has now been in place at every fixed decision since the October 29, 2025 cut. December 10, 2025; January 28; March 18; April 29; June 10 — five holds, no movement, extending the same hold pattern through the third meeting of the cycle that the Iran war first put under the microscope.
For variable-rate borrowers, the length of the hold is the story. Each meeting that the policy rate doesn't move is another six-to-eight weeks of carrying the same prime-linked payment. The Bank's own definition of its policy instrument confirms that changes to the overnight rate target usually affect mortgage rates and commercial prime; the inverse is just as true. When the policy rate is flat, prime is flat, and variable mortgage and HELOC payments are flat at whatever level they reset to after the last move.
Holds aren't neutral for borrowers — they extend whatever payment pressure already exists. A 2025 CMHC survey reported that 62% of mortgage consumers said they had already been affected by rising mortgage interest rates, with another 15% expecting to be soon.