The headline gain is the surprise, but the composition is what made markets move. According to Statistics Canada's Labour Force Survey release, May's hiring was concentrated in full-time work and spread broadly across industries. Construction added roughly 27,000 positions. Gains were also recorded in information, culture and recreation, transportation and warehousing, and accommodation and food services. Wholesale and retail trade was the notable offset, shedding around 35,000 jobs. The May increase also marked the first significant employment jump since November, after a net loss of about 112,000 jobs over the first four months of 2026 — making the print a turning point rather than a continuation of an existing run.
Youth employment moved with the same signal. The Labour Force Survey shows youth aged 15 to 24 gained about 99,000 full-time jobs in May, and the youth unemployment rate fell 0.9 percentage points to 13.4 percent — its first decline since January, though still above the 10.8 percent pre-pandemic average. Average hourly wages were up 3.0 percent year over year, down from 4.5 percent in April. That moderation matters, but 3.0 percent wage growth remains above the Bank of Canada's 2 percent inflation target and continues to support consumer demand.
Economist reactions reinforced the read. As summarized by a CityNews report, BMO's Benjamin Reitzes said the solid numbers "should silence the recession crowd," and RBC's Nathan Janzen noted broader signs of labour-market improvement despite monthly volatility. The C.D. Howe Institute's Business Cycle Council had previously declined to declare a formal recession based on the soft Q1 GDP data alone — and May's labour print weakens the recession case further.
The Numbers That Moved Markets
The chart below summarizes the components that markets priced into the June 10 outlook within hours of the release.