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Market Wire, North America

US Inflation Subsides and Canadian Economy Flatlines

The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation measure continued its moderation in August and personal spending missed expectations, helping bolster bets on a second consecutive oversized rate cut at the central bank’s November meeting. Data released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis this morning showed the core personal consumption expenditures index rising 0.1 percent from the prior month, undershooting market forecasts for a 0.2 percent increase. On a year-over-year basis, core price growth rose to 2.7 percent, aligning with economist estimates as base effects shifted comparisons. The overall personal consumption expenditures index also rose 0.1 percent relative to the prior month, and...

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US Retail Sales Climb, Canadian Inflation Slows More Than Expected

US retail spending climbed last month, suggesting that underlying consumer demand continues to play a supportive role in powering growth – but gains were somewhat mixed below the headline level, suggesting that Federal Reserve officials are likely to downplay its accuracy in depicting underlying fundamentals ahead of tomorrow’s decision. According to figures published by the Census Bureau this morning, so-called “control group” retail sales sales – with gasoline, cars, food services, and building materials excluded – rose 0.3 percent in August, matching forecasts set at 0.3 percent. Total receipts at retail stores, online sellers and restaurants rose 0.1 percent on...

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Dollar Jumps on Hotter-Than-Anticipated Core Inflation Print

Consumer price growth accelerated slightly in the United States last month, threatening to derail a more aggressive kickoff to the Federal Reserve’s imminent easing cycle. According to data published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics this morning, the core consumer price index – with highly-volatile food and energy prices excluded – rose 0.3 percent in August from the same period last year, and climbed 3.2 percent on a month-over-month basis. This was slightly above the monthly consensus estimates among economists polled by the major data providers ahead of the release, which had been set at 0.2 percent. On a headline...

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Dollar Tumbles as US Labour Market Slows

US labour markets softened more than expected for a second month in August, bolstering odds on a more decisive easing response from central bankers this autumn. According to data released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 142,000 jobs were added in the month, missing the 165,000 consensus forecast, and revisions to prior months saw overall gains lowered by a total 86,000 positions.  Wage gains accelerated, pointing to a stabilisation in worker bargaining power. Average hourly earnings climbed 0.4 percent month-over-month, doubling from 0.2 percent in the prior month, and were up 3.8 percent year-over-year.  The unemployment rate fell to 4.2...

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Bank of Canada Cuts, Softens Dovish Stance

As had been widely expected, the Bank of Canada delivered a third consecutive rate cut this morning, and language in the accompanying communications helped prepare the ground for further easing in the coming months – but officials stopped short of pulling the fire alarm, suggesting that cuts will proceed at a gradual pace. In the official statement setting out the decision, policymakers acknowledged a continued easing in price pressures, with the Bank’s preferred measures of core inflation slowing further, and shelter cost increases beginning to decelerate. Overall, “excess supply in the economy continues to put downward pressure on inflation, while...

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