table of contents week in review · 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 u.s.: job openings...

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May 11, 2018 Table of Contents What we’ll be watching ............. p. 4 Calendar of upcoming releases .... p. 5 Annex – Economic tables ............ A1 Week in review CANADA: Canadian employment fell 1.1K in April according to the Labour Force Survey, disappointing consensus which was expecting an increase. However, thanks to a one-tick drop in the participation rate to 65.4%, the unemployment rate managed to remain unchanged at 5.8%. Job increases in the private sector (+28K) were offset by declines in both the public sector (-13.6K) and self-employment (-15.6K). Employment in the goods sector fell 16K as declines in construction, manufacturing and resources more than offset gains in agriculture and utilities. Services-producing industries increased employment by 15K courtesy of gains in professional services, accommodation which dwarfed losses in finance, trade, health care, education. Full-time employment jumped 29K, offsetting declines of 30K for part- timers. Total employees average hourly earnings were up 3.6% year-on-year, the highest since 2012. Looking at provinces, Ontario created the most jobs in April (+9K) and continues to lead the nation on a 12-month average basis. The April employment report is not as bad as it looks. True, the jobs decline was disappointing, particularly losses in cyclical sectors such as manufacturing and construction. The weakness was also largely due to declines in self-employment and the public sector. But more importantly, private sector employment rose by the biggest amount since November of last year. The tilt towards full-time jobs is also encouraging and largely explains the uptrend in wage inflation. Also positive is the further increase in employment of prime-age Canadians (age 25- 54) which provides support for consumption spending and the housing market. On a 12-month average basis, total employment creation is running at a healthy 23K jobs/month, with more than half of that tally coming from the private sector. In April, dipped to an annualized rate of 214.4K units. Urban starts retreated 9.8K to 198.1K as ground- breaking slowed in both the multi-unit segment (-3.9K to 141.0K) and the single-unit category (-5.8K to 57.1K). Rural starts, for their part, sagged 1.3K to 16.3K. The modest drop at the national level was the result of a great deal of variation across the provinces. Indeed, starts fell 16.7% in British Columbia (to 41.1K), 6.6% in Ontario (to 70.0K), and 82% in Newfoundland (to 1.1K) while increasing 8.1% in Quebec (to 57.4K), 10.1% in Alberta (to 29.7K), and 21.4% in Nova Scotia (to 3.5K). Starts wilted in the month but remained relatively strong on a historical basis. Toronto saw a fairly major swing as starts plunged 29% in the single-family segment. Elsewhere, ground-breaking seemed to pick up. The sharp rise in Quebec was somewhat surprising as it came on the back of two previous upswings and occurred despite mounting interest rates and stricter mortgage requirements. The increase was due essentially to a 73% surge in multis (to 30.6K) in Montreal. On a quarterly basis, housing starts countrywide declined an annualized 8.4% in 2018Q1 and were on track to drop 16.8% in Q2 (assuming no change in May and June). After adding to growth in the second half of 2017, residential investment is gearing to detract from it in the first half of 2018. -100 -80 -60 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 5.6 5.8 6.0 6.2 6.4 6.6 6.8 7.0 7.2 7.4 Jan 16 Apr 16 Jul 16 Oct 16 Jan 17 Apr 17 Jul 17 Oct 17 Jan 18 Apr 18 Unemployment Rate (R) Employment (L) Canada: Employment fell slightly in April Employment and unemployment rate % m/m chg. in thousands NBF Economics and Strategy (data via Statistics Canada) Employment, 12- month average (L) 100 120 140 160 180 200 220 240 260 280 300 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Canada: 214.4K dwelling units started in April Housing starts Thousands, saar NBF Economics and Strategy (data via CMHC) 6-m. mov. average Housing starts

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Page 1: Table of Contents Week in review · 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 U.S.: Job openings surge to all-time high but hires fail to keep up Job openings and hires. Last observation:

 

May 11, 2018

Table of Contents What we’ll be watching ............. p. 4 Calendar of upcoming releases .... p. 5 Annex – Economic tables ............ A1

Week in review CANADA: Canadian employment fell 1.1K in April according to the Labour Force Survey, disappointing consensus which was expecting an increase. However, thanks to a one-tick drop in the participation rate to 65.4%, the unemployment rate managed to remain unchanged at 5.8%. Job increases in the private sector (+28K) were offset by declines in both the public sector (-13.6K) and self-employment (-15.6K). Employment in the goods sector fell 16K as declines in construction, manufacturing and resources more than offset gains in agriculture and utilities. Services-producing industries increased employment by 15K courtesy of gains in professional services, accommodation which dwarfed losses in finance, trade, health care, education. Full-time employment jumped 29K, offsetting declines of 30K for part-timers. Total employees average hourly earnings were up 3.6% year-on-year, the highest since 2012. Looking at provinces, Ontario created the most jobs in April (+9K) and continues to lead the nation on a 12-month average basis.

The April employment report is not as bad as it looks. True, the jobs decline was disappointing, particularly losses in cyclical sectors such as manufacturing and construction. The weakness was also largely due to declines in self-employment

and the public sector. But more importantly, private sector employment rose by the biggest amount since November of last year. The tilt towards full-time jobs is also encouraging and largely explains the uptrend in wage inflation. Also positive is the further increase in employment of prime-age Canadians (age 25- 54) which provides support for consumption spending and the housing market. On a 12-month average basis, total employment creation is running at a healthy 23K jobs/month, with more than half of that tally coming from the private sector.

In April, dipped to an annualized rate of 214.4K units. Urban starts retreated 9.8K to 198.1K as ground-breaking slowed in both the multi-unit segment (-3.9K to 141.0K) and the single-unit category (-5.8K to 57.1K). Rural starts, for their part, sagged 1.3K to 16.3K. The modest drop at the national level was the result of a great deal of variation across the provinces. Indeed, starts fell 16.7% in British Columbia (to 41.1K), 6.6% in Ontario (to 70.0K), and 82% in Newfoundland (to 1.1K) while increasing 8.1% in Quebec (to 57.4K), 10.1% in Alberta (to 29.7K), and 21.4% in Nova Scotia (to 3.5K). Starts wilted in the month but remained relatively strong on a historical basis. Toronto saw a fairly major swing as starts plunged 29% in the single-family segment. Elsewhere, ground-breaking seemed to pick up. The sharp rise in Quebec was somewhat surprising as it came on the back of two previous upswings and occurred despite mounting interest rates and stricter mortgage requirements. The increase was due essentially to a 73% surge in multis (to 30.6K) in Montreal. On a quarterly basis, housing starts countrywide declined an annualized 8.4% in 2018Q1 and were on track to drop 16.8% in Q2 (assuming no change in May and June). After adding to growth in the second half of 2017, residential investment is gearing to detract from it in the first half of 2018.

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Canada: 214.4K dwelling units started in AprilHousing starts

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Page 2: Table of Contents Week in review · 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 U.S.: Job openings surge to all-time high but hires fail to keep up Job openings and hires. Last observation:

Weekly Economic Watch

2

In March, the value of applications grew 3.1% m/m to C$8.4 billion in seasonally adjusted terms. Construction intentions rose in both the residential segment (2.3%) and the non-residential segment (4.5%). On a 12-month basis, the value of permit applications climbed 10.8% in Canada as a whole.

UNITED STATES: In April, the rose 0.2% as energy prices shot up 1.4% and food prices climbed 0.3%. Excluding food and energy, the CPI was up just 0.1% as higher prices for housing (owners’ equivalent rent in particular), apparel, medical care, and tobacco were offset by lower prices for autos, recreation and personal computers. On a year-on-year basis, the headline inflation rate ticked up to 2.5%, its highest level since February last year, while the core rate stayed put at 2.1%. The CPI data was less hot than anticipated as the core rate came in just below consensus. Excluding owners’ equivalent rent, the core CPI was even milder at about 1.6% year on year (see next chart).

According to the (JOLTS), positions waiting to be filled in the United States surged to an all-time high of 6,550K in March. As a result, the ratio of job openings to unemployed persons climbed to 0.99, also a record high (by comparison, the ratio’s pre-recession peak was only 0.70). Despite the high number of vacancies, hires slid from 5,511K to 5,425K in the month. As a result, the gap between job openings and hires widened even further, which suggests a mismatch between strong demand for labour among employers and the skill set of available workers. The report also showed that the quit rate (quits as a percentage of total employment) eked up to a cyclical high of 2.3% as 3,344K Americans decided to leave their jobs in the month, the highest number since early 2001. The recent increase in quits suggests that workers are growing more confident about their job prospects. Given that job switchers tend to see their salaries rise at a faster pace than job stayers do, the uptrend in quits could translate into faster wage growth.

In April, the stayed roughly unchanged at 104.8. The net percentage of polled firms that expected the economic situation to improve slid to 32% (compared with 48% in November). The report continued to evidence widespread labour shortages, with a cyclical-high 35% of firms reporting positions they could not fill. Failing to find suitable candidates to fill open positions, firms had to make sure to retain their existing employees, which prompted many to raise salaries to this end. Indeed, no less than 33% of firms indicated that they had enhanced worker compensation in the past three to six months, a percentage last seen in November 2000.

In April, the (PPI) for final demand surprised slightly on the downside, climbing a seasonally adjusted 0.1% m/m. The increase reflected flat prices for goods (+0.0%) and higher prices for services (+0.1%). Excluding the volatile items of energy and food, wholesale prices advanced 0.3%. On a 12-month basis, the headline and core PPI came in at 2.6% and 2.3%, respectively.

In March, expanded just $11.6 billion to an annualized $3,874.9 billion. Non-revolving credit grew $14.2 billion to $2847.9 billion. Meanwhile, revolving credit, which

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Page 3: Table of Contents Week in review · 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 U.S.: Job openings surge to all-time high but hires fail to keep up Job openings and hires. Last observation:

Weekly Economic Watch

3

consists mainly of credit card loans, shrank $2.6 billion to $1,027.0 billion, for a second consecutive decline.

The (IPI) was up 0.3% in April. The overall figure was positively affected by a 1.6% rise in the price of petroleum imports in the month. Excluding this category, prices inched up 0.1% m/m. On a 12-month basis, the headline IPI remained flat at 3.3% while the less volatile ex-petroleum gauge dropped two ticks to 1.7%.

Kyle Dahms et al.

Page 4: Table of Contents Week in review · 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 U.S.: Job openings surge to all-time high but hires fail to keep up Job openings and hires. Last observation:

Weekly Economic Watch What We’ll Be Watching

4

In Canada, a lot of attention will be on the release of April’s . The headline gauge may have risen 0.4% m/m (not seasonally adjusted), buoyed by above-seasonal gasoline price increases. Despite this rise, the year-on-year rate may have stayed put at 2.3% due to a

negative base effect. Core prices, for their part, should have continued rising at a decent pace, reflecting an economy running above potential and the healthy state of the labour market. However, the annual rate of CPI-common should remain unchanged at 1.9%. In other news, both headline and ex-auto likely expanded for a third month in a row in March, helped by a strong upswing in gasoline prices which probably boosted gasoline station receipts. Also in March,

may have posted another decent advance based on a healthy increase in exports of factory goods during the month.

In the U.S, we’ll get information about economic activity in early Q2 thanks to April data. To start with, may have risen moderately in the month, echoing a slight expansion of output in the manufacturing sector. A positive contribution is also expected from mining, in line

with a jump in the number of rigs operating in the country. Also in April, may have grown for a second consecutive month, but the expansion may have been limited by the stagnation of auto sales during the month. Excluding the latter category, sales could have advanced at a more convincing pace. We’ll also get housing data for April, with small increases expected for both and

. The first clues on the state of the manufacturing sector in May will be available with the publication of the

and manufacturing surveys.

Elsewhere in the world, numbers will be available for both the Eurozone and Japan. Still in Japan, we’ll get April’s

. Several indicators for the month of April will also be released in China, including and .

Previous NBF forecastsCPI (April, y/y chg.) 2.3% 2.3%Core common CPI (April, y/y chg.) 1.9% 1.9%

Retail sales (March, m/m chg.) 0.4% 0.4%

ex-autos Retail sales (March, m/m chg.) 0.0% 0.9%

Manufacturing sales (March, m/m chg.) 1.9% 1.5%

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Retail sales (April, m/m chg.) 0.6% 0.2%Ex-autos retail sales (April, m/m chg.) 0.2% 0.5%

Housing starts (April, saar) 1319K 1325K

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U.S: Third straight month of expansion for the industrial sector? Industrial production

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Weekly Economic Watch Economic Calendar – Canada & U.S.

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Page 6: Table of Contents Week in review · 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 U.S.: Job openings surge to all-time high but hires fail to keep up Job openings and hires. Last observation:

Weekly Economic Watch Annex – Economic Tables

A1

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Weekly Economic Watch Annex – Economic Tables

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Weekly Economic Watch Annex – Economic Tables

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Weekly Economic Watch Annex – Economic Tables

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Weekly Economic Watch Annex – Economic Tables

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Weekly Economic Watch Annex – Economic Tables

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Weekly Economic Watch Annex – Economic Tables

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Weekly Economic Watch Annex – Economic Tables

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Page 14: Table of Contents Week in review · 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 U.S.: Job openings surge to all-time high but hires fail to keep up Job openings and hires. Last observation:

Weekly Economic Watch

 

Economics and Strategy

Montreal Office Toronto Office

514-879-2529 416-869-8598

Stéfane Marion Marc Pinsonneault Kyle Dahms Warren Lovely Chief Economist and Strategist Senior Economist Economist MD & Head of Public Sector Strategy [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected]

Paul-André Pinsonnault Matthieu Arseneau Jocelyn Paquet Senior Fixed Income Economist Senior Economist Economist [email protected] [email protected] [email protected]

Krishen Rangasamy Angelo Katsoras Senior Economist Geopolitical Analyst [email protected] [email protected]

General

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Weekly Economic Watch

 

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