Canada Private Sector Activity Contracts for 5th Month

2026-04-06 13:36 By Felipe Alarcon 1 min. read

The S&P Global Canada Composite PMI recorded 47.6 in March 2026, up from 47.1 in February and remaining below the 50.0 no-change mark for a fifth straight month.

Manufacturing fell to 50.0 from 51.0 in March, while services rose to 47.2 from 46.5, with the latter being the main driver of the downturn.

New business volumes declined for a sixteenth consecutive month and continued to weigh on output.

Backlogs of work decreased markedly again as firms were easily able to keep on top of workloads.

Employment contracted for a seventh successive month, albeit modestly, as firms pared staff or chose not to replace leavers.

Business confidence edged up since February and reached its highest level since last September.

On the price front input cost inflation accelerated to its highest level since last June, while output charge inflation rose solidly and reached its greatest degree since July 2025.



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Canada Private Sector Activity Contracts for 5th Month
The S&P Global Canada Composite PMI recorded 47.6 in March 2026, up from 47.1 in February and remaining below the 50.0 no-change mark for a fifth straight month. Manufacturing fell to 50.0 from 51.0 in March, while services rose to 47.2 from 46.5, with the latter being the main driver of the downturn. New business volumes declined for a sixteenth consecutive month and continued to weigh on output. Backlogs of work decreased markedly again as firms were easily able to keep on top of workloads. Employment contracted for a seventh successive month, albeit modestly, as firms pared staff or chose not to replace leavers. Business confidence edged up since February and reached its highest level since last September. On the price front input cost inflation accelerated to its highest level since last June, while output charge inflation rose solidly and reached its greatest degree since July 2025.
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The S&P Global Canada Composite PMI recorded 46.4 in January 2026, down from 46.7 in December and remaining below the 50.0 no-change mark for a third straight month. Manufacturing stabilised in January, while services fell to 45.8 from 46.5, with the latter the main driver of the downturn. New business volumes declined for a fourteenth consecutive month and continued to weigh on output. Backlogs of work decreased markedly again as firms were easily able to keep on top of workloads. Employment contracted for a fifth successive month, albeit modestly, as firms pared staff or chose not to replace leavers. Business confidence softened since December and remained well below trend. On the price front input cost inflation softened to its softest rise since November 2024, while output charge inflation remained solid and little-changed compared with December.
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