Economic news

Canada GDP Rebounds with 0.5% Growth in Apr on Monthly Basis

OTTAWA, June 30 (Reuters) - Canada's economy rebounded more than expected in April, data showed on Tuesday, following a slight contraction in the previous month, allaying concerns ​that a tariff-led slowdown was getting more entrenched.

The Gross Domestic Product ‌in April grew by 0.5% on a month on month basis, Statistics Canada said, adding the growth was the largest monthly expansion in nine months.

* Analysts polled by Reuters had ​estimated the GDP in April to grow by 0.4% on a monthly ​basis, after the GDP contracted by 0.1% in March.

* Canada's economy ⁠had entered a technical recession at the end of the fourth quarter but ​the Bank of Canada and most economists had dismissed it as a one-off.

* ​Canada's economy has faced a range of tariffs from the United States administration since last year on some crucial sectors but its impact has largely stayed contained within the affected sectors.

* ​The uncertainty from tariffs and the fate of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada free trade deal ​which is up for a review on Wednesday has held back investments and job growth.

* StatsCan ‌said ⁠that 14 of the 20 industrial sectors grew in

April.

* The goods-producing sector, which contributes up to a quarter of the economy, posted a growth of 1.2%, StatsCan said, adding that mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction sector rose 2.9% ​in April, its largest ​monthly growth rate ⁠in more than two years.

* The construction sector registered a growth of 0.7%, its first growth in five months, while ​the manufacturing sector posted a growth of 0.6%.

* Services-producing industries, ​which accounts ⁠for three-quarters of the GDP with sectors such as real estate, transportation, wholesale trade among others, grew by 0.3% in April, date showed.

* Transportation and warehousing rose 0.9% ⁠in ​April, up for the second time in three ​months.

* An advance estimate for May showed that the economy is likely to grow by 0.1% on ​a monthly basis, the statistics agency said.

Reporting by Promit Mukherjee; Editing by Dale Smith

Source: Reuters


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