Polymarket traders price a 90.5% implied probability on "No" for Canada recording its highest unemployment rate since 2016 in 2024, reflecting strong consensus that August's 6.6% print—the highest since November 2016—falls short of the 7.0% peak hit that October, amid Bank of Canada rate cuts in June, July, and September to support labor markets amid slowing GDP growth. Recent Statistics Canada data showed 31,000 job losses last month, yet full-time gains and immigration-driven population growth temper deterioration signals. Consensus economist forecasts from outlets like TD Economics project stabilization around 6.7%, with next month's September release due October 4 potentially influencing late-year dynamics. Upside risks to "Yes" include a sharper recession from trade tensions or housing weakness pushing the rate above 7%.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedThe resolution source for this market is the Labor Force Survey, published by Statistics Canada every month at https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/dai-quo/cal1-eng.htm.
Any revisions to the data after the first qualifying release will not count toward this market's resolution; only the initial figure released for each month will qualify. This market will resolve immediately upon a qualifying release of data.
If no data for the specified month is released by the date the next month's data is scheduled to be released, this market will resolve based on data from the last available month.
Market Opened: Jan 29, 2026, 4:17 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...The resolution source for this market is the Labor Force Survey, published by Statistics Canada every month at https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/dai-quo/cal1-eng.htm.
Any revisions to the data after the first qualifying release will not count toward this market's resolution; only the initial figure released for each month will qualify. This market will resolve immediately upon a qualifying release of data.
If no data for the specified month is released by the date the next month's data is scheduled to be released, this market will resolve based on data from the last available month.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Polymarket traders price a 90.5% implied probability on "No" for Canada recording its highest unemployment rate since 2016 in 2024, reflecting strong consensus that August's 6.6% print—the highest since November 2016—falls short of the 7.0% peak hit that October, amid Bank of Canada rate cuts in June, July, and September to support labor markets amid slowing GDP growth. Recent Statistics Canada data showed 31,000 job losses last month, yet full-time gains and immigration-driven population growth temper deterioration signals. Consensus economist forecasts from outlets like TD Economics project stabilization around 6.7%, with next month's September release due October 4 potentially influencing late-year dynamics. Upside risks to "Yes" include a sharper recession from trade tensions or housing weakness pushing the rate above 7%.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



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