Sample Category Title

Canada’s Unemployment Rate Jumps as Labour Force Expands to Close 2025

TD Bank Financial Group

Canada's economy added 8k jobs in December (+0.0% month/month), 10k more than consensus expectations for a 2.5k decline. The details were healthier, with full-time positions rising 50k, while part time decline 42k. In the twelve months to December part-time work advanced 2.6% (+99k) while full-time work rose 0.7% (+128k).

The unemployment rate rose to 6.8% from 6.5% in November (consensus expectations were for a rise to 6.7%) and is 0.1 percentage points (ppts) above the 6.7% last December. The unemployment rate was lifted by 81k entrants into the labour force. This boosted the labour force participation rate by 0.3 ppts – its highest level since July and in line with December 2024.

Job gains were once again concentrated in health care and social assistance (+21k), with other services (+15k) and construction (+11k) also being notable contributors. The biggest losses were in professional, scientific and technical services (-18k), and accommodation and food services (-12k).

Wage growth slowed in December, with average hourly wages up 3.4% versus a year ago (3.6% in November).

Key Implications

After a string of upside surprises, the Canadian labour market gave back some of its gains in December, with job growth effectively petering out, and the unemployment rate ticking higher as more people started looking for work. In a noisy data series, this is not all that surprising and remains in line with our view that the labour market is not yet out of the woods.

This report is unlikely to move the needle for the Bank of Canada. There is still slack in the labour market, but uncertainty about the supply side of the economy and the risk to inflation means they are unlikely to tip the policy rate into accommodative territory.

USD/JPY Mid-Day Outlook

Daily Pivots: (S1) 156.54; (P) 156.80; (R1) 157.15; More...

Intraday bias in USD/JPY is mildly on the upside with breach of 157.88 resistance. Rise from 139.87 is trying to resume. Firm break of 158.85 key structural resistance will be an important medium term bullish sign. Next target will be 161.94 high. In any case, outlook will continue to stay bullish as long as 156.10 support holds.

In the bigger picture, corrective pattern from 161.94 (2024 high) could have completed with three waves at 139.87. Larger up trend from 102.58 (2021 low) could be ready to resume through 161.94 high. Decisive break of 158.85 structural resistance will solidify this bullish case and target 161.94 for confirmation. On the downside, break of 154.33 support will dampen this bullish view and extend the corrective range pattern with another falling leg.

USD/CHF Mid-Day Outlook

Daily Pivots: (S1) 0.7966; (P) 0.7983; (R1) 0.8005; More….

Intraday bias in USD/CHF stays on the upside for the moment. As noted before, the corrective pattern from 0.7828 is in another rising leg. Further rise would be seen to 0.8123 resistance next. On the downside, below 0.7943 minor support will flip bias back to the downside for 0.7860 instead.

In the bigger picture, outlook will stay bearish as long as 0.8332 support turned resistance holds (2023 low). Long term down trend from 1.0342 (2017 high) is still in progress. Next target is 100% projection of 1.0146 (2022 high) to 0.8332 from 0.9200 at 0.7382.

GBP/USD Mid-Day Outlook

Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.3416; (P) 1.3440; (R1) 1.3465; More...

GBP/USD is still holding on to 1.3401 support and intraday bias remains neutral. Further rise is mildly in favor. On the upside, break of 1.3567 will resume the rise from 1.3008 to retest 1.3787 high. However, firm break of 1.3401 will confirm short term topping, and bring deeper fall back to 55 D EMA (now at 1.3367). Sustained break of 55 D EMA will argue that corrective pattern from 1.3787 is already extending with another falling leg, and target 1.3008.

In the bigger picture, current development suggests that fall from 1.3787 is merely a corrective move, and larger rise from 1.0351 (2022 low) is still in progress. Firm break of 1.3787 will target 1.4248 (2021 high) key structural resistance. This will remain the favored case as long as target 38.2% retracement of 1.0351 to 1.3787 at 1.2474 holds, in case of another fall.

US Non-Farm Payrolls at + 50K (small) miss, Market Reactions – Get ready for Supreme Court Tariffs Decision!

US Non-Farm Payrolls release at +50K – A slight miss to the +60K Expectations

This takes the Unemployment Rate, most favored data since the Bureau of Labor Statistics shutdown affected data, to 4.4%, lower than the 4.5% expectations and lower than the past month.

Unrounded numbers show 4.375% vs 4.564% prior. Participation Rate is also slightly lower.

Average Hourly Earnings at 0.3% M/M and 3.8% Y/Y, a bit higher than expectations on the Y/Y number.

The report provides even less reasons for the Fed to cut rates in end-January.

You can get full access to the report right here.

Don't Forget that Markets will await the Supreme Court Tariffs Decision at 10:00 A.M.

It seems that traders are reacting counterintuitively to a not-so-dovish number with the Dollar falling, Gold rallying.

Keep an eye at the end of the hour and the 9:30 Market Open to see if such reactions fade.

Check out Market reactions:

US Dollar (Dollar Index DXY)

DXY 15 min Chart – January 9, 2026. Source: TradingView

Gold (XAU/USD)

Gold (XAU/USD) 15 min Chart – January 9, 2026. Source: TradingView

Pre-open Dow Jones (Futures and CFD)

Dow Jones 15 min Chart – January 9, 2026. Source: TradingView

EUR/USD Mid-Day Outlook

Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.1642; (P) 1.1663; (R1) 1.1682; More….

EUR/USD recovers mildly after NFP but overall outlook is unchanged. Intraday bias stays on the downside for the moment. Prior break of 55 D EMA (now at 1.1671) suggests that rebound from 1.1467 has already completed. Overall development indicates that corrective pattern from 1.1917 is already in the third leg. Further decline should be seen to 1.1467 support, and below. On the upside, though, break of 1.1742 will turn bias back to the upside for 1.1807 resistance instead.

In the bigger picture, as long as 55 W EMA (now at 1.1408) holds, up trend from 0.9534 (2022 low) is still in favor to continue. Decisive break of 1.2 key psychological level will carry larger bullish implication. However, sustained trading below 55 W EMA will argue that rise from 0.9534 has completed as a three wave corrective bounce, and keep long term outlook bearish.

Dollar Eases Slightly as NFP Fails to Deliver Upside Surprise

Dollar softened modestly in early US trading after the release of mixed December labor market data. The headline payroll gain undershot expectations, but the miss did little to challenge the broader narrative of a labor market that is slowing gradually rather than deteriorating abruptly.

More importantly, for monetary policy, the fall in the unemployment rate alongside still-solid wage growth points to lingering tightness beneath the surface. Labor demand may be cooling, but conditions remain firm enough to prevent a decisive shift in policy expectations.

As such, the report offered little that is materially decisive for the Fed’s easing plans. It neither strengthens the case for aggressive cuts nor signals an urgent need to respond to labor market weakness.

Dollar’s mild pullback appears more like a positioning adjustment than a change in conviction. Some traders had built long USD exposure ahead of the release, anticipating an upside surprise that ultimately failed to materialize.

With that risk removed, it is clear that US 10-year yield lacks the momentum needed to break decisively above 4.2% resistance zone, a development that could cap any renewed Dollar rally attempt. Meanwhile, US equity futures firmed as payrolls uncertainty passed. While there is no strong upside momentum in stocks yet, the clearance of event risk is offering some near-term relief, with DOW likely to have a serious test of the 50,000 level later in the month.

On weekly FX performance, Dollar still leads overall, followed by Aussie and Sterling. Loonie remains the weakest, with Swiss Franc and Euro also underperforming. Yen and Kiwi trade in the middle of the pack.

US NFP misses by rising 50k in December, but unemployment rate falls to 4.4%

US non-farm payrolls rose by 50k in December, undershooting expectations of 66k. Downward revisions to prior months added to the softer tone, with October employment revised lower by -68k to -173k, and November trimmed by -8k to 56k.

However, the unemployment rate fell unexpectedly from 4.6% to 4.4%, beating expectations and suggesting labor market conditions remain tight despite slower job growth. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% mom, in line with forecasts, keeping annual wage growth elevated at 3.8% .

Payroll growth in 2025 totaled just 584k, sharply lower than the 2.0 million increase in 2024.

Canada jobs beat with 8.2k growth, masks rising unemployment

Canada’s labor market delivered a modest upside surprise in December, with employment rising 8.2k, defying expectations for -5k decline. The gain, however, marked a sharp slowdown after three strong months that added a combined 181k jobs through November, signaling that momentum is cooling into year-end.

Beneath the headline, job composition was mixed. Full-time employment surged by 50k, while part-time jobs fell by -42k, pointing to improving job quality even as overall growth slowed.

At the same time, the unemployment rate jumped to 6.8% from 6.5%, above forecasts, reflecting a notable increase in labor supply. Indeed, the participation rate rose 0.3ppt to 65.4%, while the employment rate held steady at 60.9%, suggesting new entrants are outpacing hiring.

Wage growth eased slightly to 3.4% yoy, down from 3.6% in November.

Eurozone retail sales rise 0.2% mom in November, as non-food demand improves

Eurozone retail sales volumes rose 0.2% mom in November, slightly above expectations of 0.1% increase. The improvement was driven primarily by non-food products, where sales increased 0.4% mom, offsetting weakness elsewhere. Sales of food, drinks and tobacco slipped -0.2%, while automotive fuel volumes fell -0.1%.

Across the broader EU, retail sales also rose 0.2% mom, but national divergences were stark. Luxembourg posted a sharp 5.8% surge, followed by Portugal (2.2%) and Denmark (1.9%). Croatia (-2.2%), Belgium (-1.6%) and Slovakia (-1.5%) recorded notable declines.

China CPI surprises to upside at 0.8%, but full-year picture weak

China’s consumer inflation accelerated in December, with CPI rising from 0.7% to 0.8% yoy, above expectations of 0.6% and marking a 34-month high. The increase was driven mainly by food prices, as fresh vegetables surged 18.2% and beef prices rose 6.9%, supported by pre-New Year holiday demand.

However, price pressures remained uneven. Pork prices continued to fall sharply, down -14.6% yoy, while prices of gold jewelry jumped 68.5%, reflecting strong investment and gifting demand rather than broad-based consumption. According to National Bureau of Statistics, holiday shopping and supportive policies helped lift prices, but the improvement remains selective.

Looking beyond December, the broader deflationary challenge persists. Full-year CPI growth in 2025 was flat, the weakest in 16 years and well below policymakers’ “around 2%” target.

At the producer level, deflation moderated only slightly. PPI improved to -1.9% yoy in December from -2.2%, aided by rising non-ferrous metal prices and capacity discipline in key industries. Still, PPI fell 2.6% for the full year.

EUR/USD Mid-Day Outlook

Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.1642; (P) 1.1663; (R1) 1.1682; More….

EUR/USD recovers mildly after NFP but overall outlook is unchanged. Intraday bias stays on the downside for the moment. Prior break of 55 D EMA (now at 1.1671) suggests that rebound from 1.1467 has already completed. Overall development indicates that corrective pattern from 1.1917 is already in the third leg. Further decline should be seen to 1.1467 support, and below. On the upside, though, break of 1.1742 will turn bias back to the upside for 1.1807 resistance instead.

In the bigger picture, as long as 55 W EMA (now at 1.1408) holds, up trend from 0.9534 (2022 low) is still in favor to continue. Decisive break of 1.2 key psychological level will carry larger bullish implication. However, sustained trading below 55 W EMA will argue that rise from 0.9534 has completed as a three wave corrective bounce, and keep long term outlook bearish.


Economic Indicators Update

GMT CCY EVENTS ACT F/C PP REV
23:30 JPY Household Spending Y/Y Nov 2.90% -1% -3%
01:30 CNY CPI Y/Y Dec 0.80% 0.60% 0.70%
01:30 CNY PPI Y/Y Dec -1.90% -2.20% -2.20%
05:00 JPY Leading Index Nov P 110.5 110.5 109.8
07:00 EUR Germany Industrial Production M/M Nov 0.80% 0.00% 1.80% 2.00%
07:00 EUR Germany Trade Balance (EUR) Nov 13.1B 16.3B 16.9B 17.2B
07:45 EUR France Industrial Output M/M Nov -0.10% 0.00% 0.20%
08:00 CHF Foreign Currency Reserves Dec 725B 727B
08:00 CHF Unemployment Rate Dec 3.00% 3.00% 3.00%
10:00 EUR Eurozone Retail Sales M/M Nov 0.20% 0.10% 0.00%
13:30 CAD Net Change in Employment Dec 8.2K -5.0K 53.6K
13:30 CAD Unemployment Rate Dec 6.80% 6.70% 6.50%
13:30 USD Nonfarm Payrolls Dec 50K 66K 64K 56K
13:30 USD Unemployment Rate Dec 4.40% 4.50% 4.60%
13:30 USD Average Hourly Earnings M/M Dec 0.30% 0.30% 0.10%
15:00 USD UoM Consumer Sentiment Jan P 53.5 52.9
15:00 USD UoM 1-Yr Inflation Expectations Jan P 4.20%

 

Canada jobs beat with 8.2k growth, masks rising unemployment

Canada’s labor market delivered a modest upside surprise in December, with employment rising 8.2k, defying expectations for -5k decline. The gain, however, marked a sharp slowdown after three strong months that added a combined 181k jobs through November, signaling that momentum is cooling into year-end.

Beneath the headline, job composition was mixed. Full-time employment surged by 50k, while part-time jobs fell by -42k, pointing to improving job quality even as overall growth slowed.

At the same time, the unemployment rate jumped to 6.8% from 6.5%, above forecasts, reflecting a notable increase in labor supply. Indeed, the participation rate rose 0.3ppt to 65.4%, while the employment rate held steady at 60.9%, suggesting new entrants are outpacing hiring.

Wage growth eased slightly to 3.4% yoy, down from 3.6% in November.

Full Canada employment release here.

US NFP misses by rising 50k in December, but unemployment rate falls to 4.4%

US non-farm payrolls rose by 50k in December, undershooting expectations of 66k. Downward revisions to prior months added to the softer tone, with October employment revised lower by -68k to -173k, and November trimmed by -8k to 56k.

However, the unemployment rate fell unexpectedly from 4.6% to 4.4%, beating expectations and suggesting labor market conditions remain tight despite slower job growth. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% mom, in line with forecasts, keeping annual wage growth elevated at 3.8% .

Payroll growth in 2025 totaled just 584k, sharply lower than the 2.0 million increase in 2024.

Full US non-farm payroll release here.

Chart Alert: Silver (XAG/USD) Intraday Rally is Fast Approaching Key Resistance

Key takeaways

Rebound looks corrective, not impulsive: Silver’s ~6% intraday bounce from US$73.84 appears to be a countertrend rebound after a sharp 10.7% sell-off, with technical patterns suggesting a “dead cat bounce” rather than a trend resumption.

Key resistance and downside risk: The US$79.86 level is a critical inflection point. Failure there, followed by a break below US$74.07, would likely open another corrective leg toward US$70.52 and potentially the 50-day moving average zone.

Bullish structure intact but delayed: While the long-term secular uptrend remains intact, near-term momentum is fading, and a deeper mean-reversion decline may be needed before the next sustainable bullish impulsive move.

The earlier 10.7% drop in Silver (XAG/USD) from its 7 January 2026 high of US$82.77 to yesterday, Thursday, 8 January 2026 low of US$73.84 has started to evolve to see an intraday rally of 6% (low to high) to trade higher at US$78.05 at the time of writing ahead of today’s key risk event; the release of US non-farm payrolls and unemployment rate for December 2025.

However, technical analysis suggests that the short-term corrective decline structure of Silver (XAG/USD) may not have ended, with more potential weakness ahead to shape a mean reversion decline towards its 50-day moving average (around US$62.75/61.91 zone) before the start of a new bullish impulsive up move sequence within its long-term secular uptrend phase that remains intact since the 18 March 2020 low.

Short-term trend bias (1 to 3 days): Reaching the inflection point for another potential down leg

Fig. 1: Silver (XAG/USD) minor trend as of 9 Jan 2026 (Source: TradingView)

Watch the US$79.86 key short-term pivotal resistance on Silver (XAG/USD). A break below US$74.07 increases the odds of another corrective down leg towards the next intermediate support at US$70.52 (also the 20-day moving average) in the first step.

Key elements to support the bearish bias

  • Today’s rally from Thursday, 8 January 2026, low of US$73.84 has taken the form of a minor bearish “Ascending Wedge” configuration, which suggests a potential “dead cat bounce”.
  • The hourly Stochastic oscillator has flashed out an impending bearish divergence condition at its overbought region, which implies that the upside momentum of the rebound may be fading.
  • The US$79.86 key short-term resistance (potential inflection level to end the rebound) is defined by the pull-back resistance of the former ascending support from 1 January 2026 low and close to the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement of the prior decline from 7 January 2026 high to 8 January 2026 low.

Alternative trend bias (1 to 3 days)

A clearance with an hourly close above US$79.86 key short-term resistance invalidates the bearish tone for a squeeze up to retest the US$84.03 key medium-term pivotal resistance (current all-time high of 29 December 2025).