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Markets Rally as Canada’s Weak Jobs Data Fuels Rate Cut Speculation
Canada’s labour market took a sharp downturn in August, shedding 65,500 jobs and pushing the unemployment rate up to 7.1%—the highest level since 2016 outside of the pandemic years. The data reflects mounting strain across multiple sectors, with analysts pointing to a cooling in both construction and retail, as well as slowing momentum in service industries that had been propping up employment earlier in the year.
The bleak jobs numbers immediately shifted market expectations toward imminent action by the Bank of Canada. Investors are now betting heavily on a rate cut at the central bank’s next policy meeting, arguing that looser monetary policy is necessary to cushion households and businesses from mounting financial pressures. Reflecting this sentiment, TSX futures rose sharply on September 8, with financials and consumer-sensitive stocks leading the rally.
While a rate cut could provide short-term relief for borrowers, economists caution that it won’t reverse structural challenges such as sluggish productivity growth, high housing costs, and a fragile export market. For policymakers, the balancing act will be to stimulate a slowing economy without reigniting inflationary pressures—an outcome that remains uncertain as Canada enters a turbulent fall session.