Key Takeaways
- Canada added 42,000 jobs in June, nearly double the 22,000 consensus estimate.
- Unemployment fell to 5.8% from 5.9% in May the lowest since October 2025.
- Full-time employment drove the beat, rising 38,500 versus part-time’s modest 3,500.
- Average hourly wages rose 3.8% year-over-year, above the BoC’s 3.0% comfort zone.
Canada’s labour market delivered a significant upside surprise in June. Statistics Canada reported 42,000 net new jobs, nearly double the 22,000 consensus estimate, with the unemployment rate ticking down to 5.8% its lowest reading since October 2025.
What Drove the Beat
The quality of the jobs was encouraging. Full-time positions accounted for 38,500 of the total gain, while part-time employment added just 3,500. Sector-wise, professional services led with 14,200 new jobs, followed by construction at 9,800 and healthcare at 7,600. Goods-producing industries showed modest gains of 6,200, suggesting manufacturing has stabilized despite tariff uncertainty.
| Indicator | June 2026 | May 2026 | Consensus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Net Jobs Added | +42,000 | +18,400 | +22,000 |
| Unemployment Rate | 5.8% | 5.9% | 5.9% |
| Full-Time Jobs | +38,500 | +12,100 | |
| Avg Hourly Wage (YoY) | +3.8% | +3.6% | +3.5% |
| Participation Rate | 65.6% | 65.5% | 65.5% |
Implications for the BoC
The hot jobs report complicates the Bank of Canada’s deliberations. Governor Macklem has consistently cited labour market softness as a key condition for further easing. With unemployment now at 5.8% still above the 5.0–5.2% range considered full employment the BoC retains optionality, but Thursday’s rate hold now looks well-justified in hindsight.
Wage growth is the stickier concern. At 3.8% year-over-year, earnings growth remains above the BoC’s implicit 3.0% comfort zone consistent with 2% inflation. If June’s CPI print (due July 22) shows similar upside, a September cut could be taken fully off the table.
Money markets moved quickly: the implied probability of a September 17 rate cut dropped from 28% to 14% following the release, with traders now pricing just 45 basis points of total cuts through year-end 2026.