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Jobs surge reshapes Fed odds, widening US-Canada gap

The US economy added far more jobs than expected in May, all but ending hopes of interest-rate cuts. The strong report pushed the Federal Reserve closer to raising rates instead. That sharpens the split with Canada, where the central bank is set to hold steady next week. New benefit payments to help with the cost of living also began landing in Canadian bank accounts today. Today’s USA & Canada Intelligence Brief covers domestic finance, markets, economy, and politics. We pulled it together from English and

French Canadian sources, with no war stories. United States — A Jobs Blowout Far More Than Expected The US economy added 172,000 jobs in May, more than double the 80,000 or so that economists had expected. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.3% for a third month running. Earlier months were revised up too, adding a combined 93,000 jobs for March and April. One economist summed it up simply: the hiring slowdown is over. The Door to Rate Cuts Closes For the Federal Reserve, a

report this strong removes any reason to cut interest rates soon. Wages also rose a steady 3.4% over the year. If anything, it pushes the central bank closer to raising rates instead. A hot jobs market makes it harder to bring inflation down. United States — Where the Jobs Came From A Services Story The headline number was strong, but the details tell a quieter story. Most of the gains came from services, not factories or broad industry. Leisure and hospitality led with 70,000 new

jobs, mostly in restaurants and bars. Local government added 55,000 and health care 35,000. Industry Stays Flat Manufacturing, by contrast, barely grew, adding just 7,000 jobs. That is a sign that America’s industrial base is not really expanding. So the strength is real but narrow. The economy is being carried by people spending on services, not by a factory revival. USA and Canada — Pulling Apart Opposite Directions The strong US report sharpens a growing split between the two neighbours. The US looks ready to

raise rates, while Canada is set to hold steady next week. Canada’s central bank meets on June 10 and is widely expected to keep its rate at 2.25%. Its economy is growing only slowly, at around 1.25%. Why It Matters When two neighbours move in different directions, their currencies feel it first. A wider gap in interest rates tends to weaken the Canadian dollar. For Canada, a softer currency makes imports and US travel more expensive. For now, the contrast between the two economies is

only growing clearer. Canada — Help With the Bills Arrives Payments Land Today Canadians began receiving a new cost-of-living payment today. It is a one-time top-up worth a 50% boost to the quarterly sales-tax credit. The new Groceries and Essentials Benefit is part of the government’s affordability push. More than 12 million Canadians are set to receive it. Real Money for Families For a family of four, the support could be worth up to $1,890 this year. It is meant to ease the squeeze from

higher prices on everyday goods. The timing is helpful, with inflation having crept above 2% in recent months. Direct payments like this put money straight into people’s pockets. Canada — A Jobs Paradox Strong Hiring, Soft Economy Canada has a curious puzzle in its labour market. It added nearly three times as many jobs per person as the US did last year. Yet its unemployment rate is still around 6.5%, far higher than America’s. A fast-growing population means more jobs are needed just to keep

pace. A Two-Speed Economy The strain is concentrated in industries hit by US tariffs, like cars and exports. Those sectors have shed jobs and pulled back on investment. Meanwhile, demand at home has held up better than many feared. The result is an economy moving at two very different speeds. Canada — A Big Industrial Bet Building for the Long Run Beyond the short-term help, the government is making a large long-term bet. Its new defence-industry plan aims to unlock about half a trillion dollars

of investment. The goal is to create over 125,000 jobs and rebuild Canadian industry. A separate housing program aims to get more homes built faster. The Logic Behind It The idea is to lean on home-grown investment as US trade turns less friendly. Building things at home is meant to reduce reliance on exports. It is a slow-burning plan that will take years to judge. But it marks a clear shift toward rebuilding the country’s industrial base. United States — The Fed Goes Quiet The

Last Big Clue This jobs report is one of the last major pieces of news before the Federal Reserve’s next meeting. After this, officials enter a quiet period and stop commenting. That makes the strong number even more important. It is the picture the central bank will carry into its decision. Markets React The US dollar firmed and government bond yields jumped on the news. Both moves reflect bets that interest rates will stay high or rise. It leaves the new central bank chief, Kevin

Warsh, with a hot economy to manage. His early decisions will be watched very closely. Markets — Good News Is Bad News An Awkward Reaction In an odd twist, US stock futures slipped after the strong jobs report. A hot economy means higher interest rates, which can weigh on share prices. It is a classic case of good news being treated as bad news. What is good for workers can be awkward for markets. What to Watch Next Attention now turns to the Fed’s meeting

and Canada‘s decision on June 10. Together they will set the tone for North America. The big question is how far the two economies keep pulling apart. For now, the US runs hot while Canada runs cool. What to Watch Today · US adds 172,000 jobs, more than double expectations Today · Hopes of US interest-rate cuts all but disappear Today · Canada’s new cost-of-living payments begin landing Wed Jun 10 · Bank of Canada rate decision (a hold expected) This month · The US

central bank’s first meeting under Kevin Warsh Ongoing · A firm US dollar against a softer Canadian dollar Ongoing · Canada’s two-speed economy and tariff-hit sectors Ongoing · Canada’s half-trillion-dollar industrial bet

US jobs May 2026, Federal Reserve rate cuts, Kevin Warsh, Canada Bank of Canada June 10, unemployment rate 4.3%, Canada cost-of-living payment, Groceries and Essentials Benefit, 2.25% policy rate, 172,000 jobs, Canadian dollar

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