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The Weekly Bottom Line

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

Date Published: December 19, 2025

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Note: The next issue of the Weekly Bottom Line will be published on January 2.

Highlights

  • Employment growth slowed in the first two months of the fourth quarter, owing to the impact of deferred resignations on federal government employment.
  • Inflation fell sharply in November, but the degree of the descent and the condensed nature of the data collection period warrants caution in interpreting the data.
  • Federal Reserve officials continued to voice a spectrum of opinions on the outlook for monetary policy that on aggregate spoke to a cautious approach moving forward.

Data with A Grain of Salt


Chart 1 shows the 3 month moving average of the month-to-month change in non-farm payrolls from January 2025 to November 2025, broken down between the private sector and the public sector. Monthly public sector job growth has been flat since the second quarter but fell sharply into negative territory in October. Private sector job growth decelerated throughout the year before rebounding modestly in the September.

This was arguably the biggest week for U.S. economic data in several months, as highly anticipated employment and inflation data delayed by the government shutdown was finally released. Financial markets largely took the data in stride, with U.S. Treasury yields falling slightly on the week, while equity markets were roughly unchanged as of the time of writing. 

On the data front, the employment report showed that the economy continued to add jobs in the fourth quarter. However, headline job growth was weighed down by a large decrease in federal government jobs in October (Chart 1) - a byproduct of the deferred resignation offers sent out earlier in the year. Despite the near-term distortions, job growth has decelerated through the second half of the year, which has led to an uptick in the unemployment rate and motivated the 75 basis-point reduction in interest rates implemented by the Federal Reserve since September.

The pace of monetary policy easing has been deliberately gradual though, as inflation risks have been rising at the same time. However, November CPI data showed that there may have been a break in this trend in recent months, with the annual percentage change in core inflation falling to 2.6% - the lowest level since March 2021. Given the shorter collection period for this data owing to the government shutdown and the sharp drops recorded in several index categories (Chart 2), this data should be taken with a grain of salt. Market pricing for the Federal Reserve’s January meeting was largely unchanged, with only a 25% chance for a fourth consecutive cut.

Chart 2 shows the contributions to the 3 month annualized percentage change in core CPI from January 2024 to November 2025. Core inflation fell from 4-5% in early 2024 to 2-3% by the end of the year, where it has since fluctuated. Core services accounted for nearly all inflation up until core goods inflation began to rise in the second half of 2025 to account for roughly a fifth of total core inflation. In November, both core services and core goods inflation was virtually halved.

The handful of Federal Reserve officials we heard from this week offered notably different assessments on the policy rate outlook. Miran made the case for aggressive rate cuts, positing that inflation metrics were anomalously high, while Waller also took a dovish tone but noted a gradual pace of rate cuts would be warranted going forward. On the other end of the spectrum was Bostic, who voiced greater concern for inflation risks and stated he did not currently see the need for rate cuts in 2026. Other speakers, including Vice Chair Williams, echoed Powell’s comments from his press conference last month that monetary policy was in a good place heading into 2026. Despite growing dissent among FOMC members, the balance of opinion is one of relative caution heading into the new year. Market pricing has followed suit, with another rate cut not expected until the Fed’s meeting in late April next year at the earliest.

Looking ahead to next week, there will be few items on the economic agenda during the holiday shortened week, but the preliminary estimate for third quarter GDP on Tuesday will be a highlight. A strong reading for annualized growth of roughly 3% is expected, which will likely be followed by a deceleration in the fourth quarter owing to the government shutdown. Nevertheless, we expect the economy to grow by 2.2% in 2026, aided by fiscal and monetary policy support.

Andrew Foran, Economist | 416-350-8927

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