“I won’t be going to the US anytime soon,” one respondent told the bank. “I don’t feel good about spending my money there.”
“I won’t be going to the US anytime soon,” one respondent told the bank. “I don’t feel good about spending my money there.”
*June sales likely +1.6% m/m
*May sales -1.1% and April +0.4%
*2Q sales estimate +0.4% q/q, the weakest quarterly pace in a year
*June sales likely +1.6% m/m
*May sales -1.1% and April +0.4%
*2Q sales estimate +0.4% q/q, the weakest quarterly pace in a year
*CPI +1.9% y/y in June, up from 1.7% in May
*The index +0.1% m/m last month
*Core rates +3.05%, up from 3%
*CPI +1.9% y/y in June, up from 1.7% in May
*The index +0.1% m/m last month
*Core rates +3.05%, up from 3%
*Employment +83,100 in June
*Jobless rate fell 0.1 pp to 6.9%
*Part-time work made up 84% of job gains
*Private +47,000; public +23,000
*Employment +83,100 in June
*Jobless rate fell 0.1 pp to 6.9%
*Part-time work made up 84% of job gains
*Private +47,000; public +23,000
Love this quote from @karl-schamotta.bsky.social: “There was hope that there was light at the end of the tunnel — unfortunately it appears that light is a train.”
Love this quote from @karl-schamotta.bsky.social: “There was hope that there was light at the end of the tunnel — unfortunately it appears that light is a train.”
*Canadians returned from 8m trips in 1H, vs. 11m in 2024
*Canadian return trips by car from the US -33% y/y in June
*And by air -22% y/y
*Canadians returned from 8m trips in 1H, vs. 11m in 2024
*Canadian return trips by car from the US -33% y/y in June
*And by air -22% y/y
*Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle crossing saw asylum claims jumped by more than 400% y/y, first six days of July
*Claims +128% in June; +82% so far this year
*Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle crossing saw asylum claims jumped by more than 400% y/y, first six days of July
*Claims +128% in June; +82% so far this year
*April GDP -0.1% m/m
*May GDP also -0.1% m/m
*Assuming no growth in June, 2Q likely -0.3% q/q annualized, vs economist estimates of -0.5% and BOC forecast of 0% to -1.3%
*April GDP -0.1% m/m
*May GDP also -0.1% m/m
*Assuming no growth in June, 2Q likely -0.3% q/q annualized, vs economist estimates of -0.5% and BOC forecast of 0% to -1.3%
As of May, one in seven Canadian youth can’t find work, and they’re more than twice as likely as other age groups to be unemployed.
As of May, one in seven Canadian youth can’t find work, and they’re more than twice as likely as other age groups to be unemployed.
*CPI rose 1.7% y/y in May, matching April's pace
*Core +3%, down from 3.1% in April
*CPI rose 1.7% y/y in May, matching April's pace
*Core +3%, down from 3.1% in April
*Canada added just 20,107 people in 1Q
*That's 0% quarterly population growth vs. 1Q average of 0.3% over the past decade
*It's the slowest quarterly rate since records began in 1946, tied with 4Q of 2014
*Canada added just 20,107 people in 1Q
*That's 0% quarterly population growth vs. 1Q average of 0.3% over the past decade
*It's the slowest quarterly rate since records began in 1946, tied with 4Q of 2014
*Canadian-resident return trips by automobile from the US -38.1% y/y
*Canadians’ return trips by air from US -24.2%, versus +9.8% from other countries
*US car trips to Canada -8.4%
*Canadian-resident return trips by automobile from the US -38.1% y/y
*Canadians’ return trips by air from US -24.2%, versus +9.8% from other countries
*US car trips to Canada -8.4%
*Manufacturing sales fell 2.8% in April, the largest monthly drop since October 2023 and the lowest level since early 2022
*Wholesale sales dropped 2.3%
*Manufacturing sales fell 2.8% in April, the largest monthly drop since October 2023 and the lowest level since early 2022
*Wholesale sales dropped 2.3%
*Employment grew by 8,800 positions in May
*Jobless rate rose 0.1 ppt to 7%
*Number of unemployed people +13.8% y/y
*Employment grew by 8,800 positions in May
*Jobless rate rose 0.1 ppt to 7%
*Number of unemployed people +13.8% y/y
*Canada's trade deficit reached C$7.1 billion in April
*Total exports fell 10.8%; imports were down 3.5%
*Exports to the US plunged 15.7%
*Canada's trade deficit reached C$7.1 billion in April
*Total exports fell 10.8%; imports were down 3.5%
*Exports to the US plunged 15.7%
BMO and RBC now expect no changes in rates next week, contrary to the cut they saw before.
BMO and RBC now expect no changes in rates next week, contrary to the cut they saw before.
*1Q GDP +2.2% annualized, up from 2.1% in 4Q
*Monthly GDP +0.1% in March and likely +0.1% in April
*Traders pared expectations for a June 4 rate cut
*1Q GDP +2.2% annualized, up from 2.1% in 4Q
*Monthly GDP +0.1% in March and likely +0.1% in April
*Traders pared expectations for a June 4 rate cut