Bottom Line
With a combination of emerging weakness and US President Donald Trump’s on-again, off-again tariff approach still casting a cloud of uncertainty over the Canadian economy and its ability to trade with its biggest customer, the Bank of Canada is expected to cut its policy rate for the seventh straight meeting on March 12.
The loonie briefly dipped to the day’s low against the US dollar and traded at $1.4337 as of 8:35 a.m. in Ottawa after the concurrent release of similarly soft US jobs figures. Canada’s two-year yield slipped around three basis points to 2.60%, tracking a broader move lower in developed market yields.
Today’s reports for Canada and the UF are the latest evidence that North American labour markets are softening, with more people permanently out of work, fewer workers on federal government payrolls and a jump in those working part-time for economic reasons. The number of Americans holding multiple jobs climbed to nearly 8.9 million.
That sets a weak backdrop just as President Donald Trump’s policies raise concerns about the broader economy. Inflation has proven sticky in the US in recent months and consumers are starting to pull back on spending, which, if sustained, may lead businesses to rethink their hiring plans.
Following the releases, overnight swaps traders increased their bets that the Bank of Canada would trim borrowing costs by another 25 basis points next week, boosting the odds to 85% from about three-quarters previously.
This is the first jobs report that fully reflects Trump’s second term, and the administration’s actions to shrink the government workforce have already contributed to the most job-cut announcements since early in the pandemic, according to separate data out Thursday. Some economists say the US could lose over half a million jobs by the end of the year because of the federal job cuts and their spillover effects to the broader economy.
Trump is also deploying tariffs to bring manufacturing jobs back to the US, and that’s already incentivizing some companies like Apple and HP to consider investing more domestically. Conversely, aluminum producer Alcoa Corp. has warned that the levies could result in 100,000 job losses.
Canada and the US are restricting immigration or sending migrants home, which will constrain a significant source of job growth in recent years. |