The Ministry of Finance will boost overall expenditure to maintain the intensity of spending in 2026, so to serve the goals of stabilisng economic growth and boosting domestic demand, according to an editorial by 21st Century Business Herald. The ministry will keep allocating funds to support the consumer trade-in scheme, and expand subsidies to smart products, digital devices, green building materials and even some services consumption, the newspaper said. The scale of ultra-long-term special treasury bonds may be increased to match the long-term investment needs of national projects, primarily supporting cutting-edge technologies and advanced manufacturing, the Herald said.
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Next week would ordinarily have been geared towards a nonfarm payrolls report on Friday but that of course has been rescheduled for Dec 16 as the BLS continues to work its way through the shutdown-induced data backlog. Instead, expect the myriad of labor releases starting Wednesday along with ISM surveys and monthly PCE data to help finalize market expectations ahead of the Dec 9-10 FOMC meeting - we currently anticipate a hawkish cut.

Details are broadly acknowledged to be weaker than the surprisingly strong Q3 GDP figure suggested, but the general takeaway is that it helps the BoC remain on hold. BoC-dated OIS agrees although there has only been a small adjustment on the day in post-Thanksgiving thinned trade, with ~8bp of cuts priced to mid-2026 vs closer to 10bp beforehand.