Jobs
Unemployment rate drops to 6.5% in Canada as jobs data beat expectations
Canada’s labour market defied expectations in September, adding a net 46,700 jobs, with the unemployment rate dropping to 6.5 per cent, according to Statistics Canada data released on Friday. Consensus ahead of the announcement was that 31,500 jobs would be added in September, according to BMO Economics. BMO’s own call was for a more modest 20,000 jobs added.
The 0.1 percentage point drop in unemployment was the first decline since January. Economists largely, but not unanimously, viewed the data as an indicator of labor market strength that could temper expectations for a 50-basis-point interest rate cut by the Bank of Canada (BoC) on October 23.
But most also pointed to signs of weakness within the data, while noting the notorious volatility of the Labour Force Survey in general meant that other data points — including today’s BoC business outlook and consumer expectation surveys and next week’s release of the Consumer Price Index for September — are needed for a clearer portrait of the economy.
The Business Outlook Survey suggests demand remains weak and sales growth slow, but sentiment gradually is improving. The consumer survey also shows an incremental improvement in mood, with expectations for inflation less pronounced and fewer people reporting reducing their spending.
Strong jobs numbers, ‘weaker details’
“September’s jobs report does not change the picture of a labour market that has cooled notably since the Bank of Canada started raising interest rates,” TD Economics senior economist Leslie Preston wrote in a note following the labour data release. “Data rarely moves in a straight line, and we would need to see a few more months of strength before we declare an improving trend.”
RBC maintained its base case for 50 basis-point cuts in both October and December, though economist Nathan Janzen wrote that “details behind the September job numbers were far more mixed than the headline employment and unemployment rate readings alone would imply.”
CIBC economist Katherine Judge wrote that the strong jobs figures “masked some weaker details.” Canada’s employment rate also dropped 0.1 percentage points in September because population growth still outpaced growth in jobs. Hours worked dropped 0.4 per cent, and weaker unemployment “was helped by a further decline in the participation rate,” Judge said.
The participation rate, or the proportion of working-age people actively working or seeking work, fell 0.2 percentage points to 64.9 per cent in September. It was the third decline in four months, and that downward trajectory “trims some of the potential enthusiasm from today’s jobs data,” Geoff Phipps, a trading strategist and portfolio manager at Picton Mahoney Asset Management wrote in a note.
“Overall, the mixed report isn’t enough to make a 50 basis point cut a sure thing in October,” Judge wrote, referring to the Bank of Canada’s (BoC) next interest rate decision. However, the tone of the BoC’s Business Outlook Survey, set for release later this morning, along with next week’s release of the Consumer Price Index for September “could still make that outcome possible if they look soft enough,” she wrote.
The case for an even more aggressive BoC just took a big step back.Douglas Porter, chief economist, BMO
BMO chief economist Douglas Porter said despite the labour force data’s notorious volatility, signs of strength dominated and could decrease chances of a larger rate cut. “One of the strongest arguments in favour a bigger rate move was the previously steady softening in the job market,” he wrote. “With jobs delivering at least a one-month wonder of strength—and offering a tantalizing glimmer of hope that the economy may be pulling out of its funk—the case for an even more aggressive BoC just took a big step back.”
Phipps wrote that odds of a 50 basis point cut dropped from about 50 per cent to 25 per cent with this morning’s data.
“As evidenced by the volatility across economic data in the US, policymakers should be cautious in overly relying on one or two data prints to form near-term policy. Data has been volatile and subject to large revisions for a variety of factors.”
Full-time employment had its largest gain since May 2022, Statistics Canada says, rising 0.7 per cent with 112,000 full time positions added in September. That was offset by a loss of 65,000 part-time jobs, a 1.7 per cent drop from the previous month.
The release of the data followed an underwhelming August result in which a net 22,100 jobs were added, largely in part-time work. The unemployment rate rose 0.2 percentage points in August, to 6.6 per cent. Consensus prior to today’s announcement was for the unemployment rate to rise to 6.7 per cent.
John MacFarlane is a senior reporter at Yahoo Finance Canada. Follow him on Twitter @jmacf.
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