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.
- BMO: “Amid the many moving parts in this report, the big bounce in headline Q3 growth is probably the most important, and should quash recession chatter for now. Even the marked upward revisions to prior years sends a clear signal that the underlying economy has been more resilient than commonly appreciated. Even so, we are not significantly changing our forward look on the economy, and will stick to an expected growth rate of 1.4% for next year (the federal budget assumed 1.2%). For the Bank of Canada, there are many mixed messages here, but the overall read is better than expected, thus more firmly putting them on the sidelines for next month's meeting.”
- CIBC: “The Canadian economy is set to swing back in the opposite direction in Q4. Even assuming a rebound in November GDP due to temporary strike impacts holding back the prior month's reading, growth is likely to stall. While we still see the BoC as on hold in December, the trend in final domestic demand isn't encouraging and exports showed little sign of recovering from the tariff-induced Q2 hit. Our forecast assumes that we see definitive progress on renewing CUSMA and a recovery in business confidence improving quarterly growth rates in 2026.”
- Desjardins: “While the headline Q3 GDP surprise will keep the Bank of Canada on the sidelines next month, the economy is clearly still in a very fragile state. Central bankers will need to remain on high alert early next year, with fiscal policy not expected to be a major contributor until at least the middle of 2026. Market participants are correctly looking through the headline Q3 increase in GDP, with yields back down to levels seen before the data release.”
- RBC: “Details behind the surprisingly large 2.6% (annualized rate) increase in Canadian Q3 GDP were mixed, with further signs of stabilization in heavily trade exposed sectors but some signs of faltering domestic demand. […] Slowing population growth will increasingly limit consumer demand and labour supply in the year ahead, but we expect per-capita GDP growth to improve and the unemployment rate to drift broadly lower next year -- and, against that backdrop, do not expect further interest rate reductions from the BoC as a base-case.”
- Scotia: “Could there be a messier set of GDP numbers? Not really. They made for fun trying to do instant coverage on the fly in chat rooms. I’m not sure that markets really understood what went on beneath the hood but they serendipitously wound up at the right conclusion regardless. CAD appreciated and Canadian bond yields moved higher across the board. The broad set of numbers needs further work but the conclusion is that they’ll keep the BoC sidelined.”
- TD: “For the Bank of Canada, the focus will be to look through the noise on trade. The 2.6% advance for the quarter may be well ahead of its 0.5% projection, but the underlying details remain disappointing. The story continues to be – slow domestic demand growth, labour market slack, and inflation that should gradually moderate in the coming months. From where we sit, these three factors should leave the Bank of Canada on the sidelines, and the policy rate at 2.25%.”