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The Weekly Bottom Line 

Our summary of recent economic events and what to expect in the weeks ahead.

Date Published: November 28, 2025

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Canadian Highlights

  • GDP growth rebounded sharply in Q3, but the composition points to soft domestic demand. Revisions back to 2022 indicate that the economy was stronger than previously thought.
  • Industry GDP posted a modest gain in September, but points to a contraction in October. Export-reliant sectors continue to lag.
  • Tangible benefits from the two new government announcements will take some time to materialize. For now, the economy is tracking in line with the BoC’s estimates, suggesting the policy rate will remain on hold.

U.S. Highlights

  • Market expectations for a Fed rate cut on December 10th are now north of 80%, as key Fed officials voice support for a further reduction.
  • Retail sales for September were a bit weaker than expected, suggesting less momentum heading into the fourth quarter. 
  • The Beige Book provided further anecdotal evidence that growth in the U.S. economy remains sluggish.

Canada – The Economy is Still Playing Andante

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Chart 1 shows the annualized quarter-on-quarter percent change in Canada's real GDP. Q2 2025 GDP contracted by 1.8%, while Q3 rebounded with 2.6% growth – well above both the Bank of Canada and TD Economics forecasts. Both project roughly 1% growth in Q4.

The third quarter GDP report spilled plenty of black ink, giving Black Friday week a literal twist. Markets reacted positively with the S&P/TSX building on previous gains, rising by 3.5% and long-term rates holding close to 3.1%. The loonie firmed by a full cent to $0.72

GDP growth rebounded sharply in Q3, rising by 2.6% quarter-on-quarter (q/q), annualized - far above the consensus call of 0.5% and our tracking of 0.9% (Chart 1). The upward surprise was tempered slightly by revisions. The second-quarter contraction was marked down from -1.6% to -1.8%, reflecting weaker personal consumption expenditures. 

The composition tells an interesting story. Exports were basically flat last quarter after falling sharply in Q2, while business investment continued to slide amid still elevated trade uncertainty. Meanwhile, the pillar that carried the economy earlier in the year – household spending and inventories – slowed considerably. This kept underlying domestic demand soft, even as government spending surged by an eye-catching 12.2% (annualized), driven almost entirely by a massive increase in spending on weapon systems. 

The GDP release also incorporated revisions from the Provincial and Territorial Economic Accounts. These updates showed stronger consumer spending and a substantial upgrade to non-residential investment. The latter added $135 billion to the level of GDP over the past two years, suggesting that Canada’s productivity performance – while still troubling – may not be as weak as previously thought. 

Chart 2 Canada's monthly industry GDP, indexed to December 2024. High export-reliant sectors - mining, oil and gas, manufacturing, transportation, and wholesale trade – rebounded in September to 100.4 but continue to lag the low-export reliant sectors, which rose to 100.7.

We also received figures on GDP by industry for September, which showed a modest pick-up in activity. It offered a clearer view on how the ongoing trade tensions are filtering through supply chains. Industries most affected by tariffs, such as manufacturing, rebounded but remain a laggard and still face a difficult path forward (Chart 2). But even outside of trade exposed sectors, the rest of the economy is not convincingly expanding either, with several sectors that had shown strength earlier in the year, now contracting. The advance estimate points to a decline in October.

On the musical spectrum, the economy is still playing andante: faster than adagio but far from allegro –a slow, steady walk rather than a spirited march. In this otherwise muted symphony, the federal government added two notable accents. First, a suite of measures aimed at protecting and transforming Canada’s industry by redirecting demand towards domestically-produced steel and lumber. Second, Ottawa and Alberta reached an agreement to advance a new pipeline connecting oil production to the West Coast, conditional on achieving a 75% reduction in emissions over the next decade. 

As with all major infrastructure projects, tangible economic impacts will take years to materialize. For now, the underlying rhythm of the economy remains broadly aligned with the Bank’s forecast for growth just above 1% through 2026, with existing slack already embedded in the outlook.  A future rate cut cannot be fully ruled out but would require a pace of growth far closer to largo – a more meaningful cooling relative to the already subdued outlook.

Maria Solovieva, CFA, Economist | 416-380-1195 

U.S. – Equity Markets Gobble Up Prospects for a December Rate Cut 

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Chart 1 shows the Fed futures pricing on the probability of a December rate cut – dating back to late-October. Following the Fed October announcement, pricing dropped from near certainty to 70% and drifted as low as 30% by November 18th. However, a speech by John Williams pushed the probability meaningfully higher and currently sits ~80%. Data is sourced from Bloomberg.

U.S. equity markets traded higher through the holiday shortened week, boosted by expectations for a December rate cut and renewed enthusiasm for the AI trade. Meanwhile, economic data out this week reinforced the narrative that some sluggishness has materialized in the U.S. economy. The S&P 500 is looking to end the week higher by over 3%, more than erasing last week’s losses and is now up 16% year-to-date. Treasury yields dipped by a few basis points on the week, with the 10-year currently hovering around 4%.

Fed futures have been on a wild ride recently. Just over a week ago, markets attached a roughly one-third probability to a December rate cut. But since then, two Fed officials who hew closely to Chair Powell, including NY Fed President John Williams and San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly (non-voting member) voiced support for a December rate cut. Pricing has since swung back to over 80% (Chart 1). The Fed doesn’t tend to fight the market and with the decision just over a week away, a further trimming in the policy rate looks to be a safe bet. Though if ADP employment data were to surprise to the upside next week, odds may yet shift again. 

Turning to this week’s economic data releases, retail figures for September showed that spending slowed at the end of the third quarter – putting Q4 on a shakier footing. The softening in September spending isn’t entirely surprising. Measures of consumer sentiment have nosedived recently, with the Conference Board’s November reading slipping to its lowest level since April and second lowest reading since the depths of the 2020 Global Pandemic (Chart 2). Survey details show that consumers’ assessment of job availability is particularly downbeat, as are prospects for making ‘larger purchases’ over the next six months. While shifts in consumer confidence metrics have proven to be a less reliable predictor of spending patterns post-pandemic, the steady downward trend across multiple measures suggests the direction of travel is likely to be lower over the near-term. 

Chart 2 shows the Conference Board and University of Michigan's measures of consumer confidence dating back to 2019. Both measures have trended lower in recent months and currently sit near cyclical lows. Data is sourced from the Conference Board and University of Michigan.

This was further confirmed in the Fed’s Beige Book, which noted that overall consumer spending had ‘declined further’ in recent months, even though higher-end retail spending remained resilient. The Fed’s contacts chalked some of the weakness up to the government shutdown, and a pullback in EV sales following the expiration of the federal tax credit. However, the softening labor market also likely had some influence, with the majority of Districts seeing a decline in hiring and about half noting weaker labor demand. Importantly, employers across most Districts reported limiting headcounts using hiring freezes, ‘replacement-only’ hiring and attrition rather than through layoffs. 

This reinforces the ‘low hire, low fire’ narrative’ (see report). But it’s a precarious balance, and one where the downside risks have the potential to materialize very quickly. While this supports the case for a bit more easing in the fed funds rate, still elevated inflation and a policy stance that is quickly closing in on neutral are important considerations that can’t be overlooked. Bringing the policy rate much lower runs the risk of putting the Fed out of position in the event the labor market were to firm in the months ahead.

Thomas Feltmate, Director & Senior Economist | 416-944-5730

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