Back

Canada: Mixed jobs report in July – ING

James Knightley, chief international economist at ING, notes that the Canada’s July Canadian jobs report is a really mixed bag with employment falling for the second month in a row (-24,200), the unemployment rate rising to 5.7%, yet wage growth surges to its fastest rates since 2009.

Key Quotes

“In terms of jobs, unfortunately, it is a big miss with the market looking for a 15,000 rise. There were falls in both full time (-12,600) and part-time (-11,600) jobs and this has dragged the 6-month moving average to +26,000, which is the weakest it has been since October.”

“We didn’t have a lot to go on in the build-up to today’s report, but the business surveys have been ok. The IVEY PMI has recently performed well with employment surging to a 12-month high in July so there is something of a contradiction here, especially when you consider the jobs report has private sector corporate employment falling 69,300.”

“The unemployment rate was also worse than predicted at 5.7% versus expectations it would hold at 5.5%. This is the second consecutive rise although we have to acknowledge it is coming off a four decade low of 5.4% seen in May. Given that fact we are not overly concerned, especially given the wage numbers are fantastically strong. Pay of permanent workers rose 4.5%YoY, which is the fastest rate since 2009. This suggests that the competition for workers in a tight jobs market is starting to really drive up pay, which is great news for consumer confidence and spending over the next few months.”

Fed back to zero – Rabobank

Rabobank analysts suggest that in light of the recent escalation of the US-China trade conflict they now expect the Fed to make two additional insuran
Devamını oku Previous

Wall Street opens modestly lower as technology shares underperform

Wall Street's main indexes started the day lower on Friday as investors continue to stay away from risk. The disappointing economic growth data from t
Devamını oku Next