Economy May 29, 2026 08:45 AM

Canada Posts Second Consecutive Annualized GDP Decline as Q1 Stalls Quarter-to-Quarter

Annualized output slips 0.1% in Q1 while monthly data point to a stronger start to Q2

By Nina Shah
Share
Twitter Reddit Facebook LinkedIn

Statistics Canada reported that real gross domestic product fell at an annualized rate of 0.1% in the first quarter, marking two straight quarters of annualized contraction after a downwardly revised 1.0% fall in the fourth quarter. On a quarter-on-quarter basis, GDP was unchanged, avoiding a sequential contraction. The data show weak business investment, elevated imports and inventory accumulation were key features, while household outlays rose. Monthly figures include a 0.1% decline in March but an advance estimate showed 0.4% growth in April.

Canada Posts Second Consecutive Annualized GDP Decline as Q1 Stalls Quarter-to-Quarter
Summarize with
ChatGPT Perplexity Claude Grok Gemini

Key Points

  • GDP fell at an annualized rate of 0.1% in Q1 after a 1.0% annualized drop in Q4 (revised), creating two consecutive quarters of annualized contraction.
  • Quarter-over-quarter GDP was unchanged in Q1, avoiding a sequential decline; household spending rose, while business capital investment fell 0.7%, its fifth straight quarterly drop.
  • High imports subtracted from growth but were largely offset by strong inventory accumulation; March GDP declined 0.1% month-on-month while April is provisionally estimated to have risen 0.4%.

Statistics Canada reported that real gross domestic product contracted at an annualized pace of 0.1% in the first quarter, continuing a run of annualized declines after the fourth quarter's downward revision to a 1.0% drop. The sequence of two consecutive quarters of annualized contraction meets the technical definition of a recession by that metric, though on a quarter-over-quarter basis the economy was flat in Q1, narrowly avoiding a back-to-back quarterly decline.

Economists surveyed by Reuters and the Bank of Canada had been looking for substantially stronger annualized growth of roughly 1.5% for the quarter, making the outturn weaker than expectations. The statistical agency noted that the fourth quarter of last year was downwardly revised to a 1.0% annualized contraction, underlining the recent softness in headline output.

Sector dynamics in the first quarter were mixed. Household consumption increased, driven notably by spending on financial services and food, which supported GDP. Those gains were largely offset by falls in business and government investment. In particular, business capital spending fell 0.7% in the first quarter of 2026, marking its fifth consecutive quarterly decline, according to the agency.

Net trade and inventories played an important role in the quarterly profile. A high level of imports in Q1 detracted from growth, but a substantial accumulation of inventories largely offset that drag from trade. On the monthly front, GDP declined by 0.1% in March, below consensus expectations that had forecast flat growth. By contrast, an advance estimate from Statistics Canada indicated that output likely rose 0.4% in April, signaling a stronger start to the second quarter.

Policy and external factors were also referenced by the statistics agency as headwinds to demand. The economy has endured over a year of trade uncertainty and tariff pressures, which the agency said have weighed on investment, hiring and spending while contributing to upward pressure on prices. The upcoming review of the North American free trade agreement and a crude oil price shock tied to the Middle East conflict were identified as additional sources of uncertainty that could affect growth prospects.

The Bank of Canada has previously signaled a slower growth outlook for the year, projecting 1.2% growth compared with 1.7% last year, and plans to refresh its projections in July. The data released for Q1 underscore those downside pressures, particularly the persistent weakening in business capital expenditures and the offsetting roles of imports and inventory accumulation.


Clear summary

Canada's economy recorded a 0.1% annualized contraction in Q1, the second straight quarter of annualized decline, while quarter-on-quarter output was unchanged. Household spending helped offset declines in business and government investment. High imports reduced GDP but were offset by inventory build-up. March fell 0.1% month-on-month, while an advance estimate points to 0.4% growth in April.

Risks

  • Trade and tariff uncertainty - ongoing tariffs and an upcoming review of the North American free trade agreement could continue to depress investment, hiring and spending, affecting trade-exposed sectors.
  • Commodity price shocks - a crude oil price shock linked to the Middle East conflict adds volatility to growth prospects and could influence energy sector revenues and investment decisions.
  • Weak business capital spending - the fifth consecutive quarterly decline in business investment poses downside risks to potential output and productivity across corporate sectors, including manufacturing and non-financial services.

More from Economy

Deutsche Bank Identifies Sectors and Stocks Poised to Gain from 2026 World Cup Jun 7, 2026 SpaceX IPO Poised to Pressure a Tech-Led U.S. Rally as Inflation Data and Earnings Loom Jun 7, 2026 Deutsche Bank Sees Euro Area Growth Slowing Sharply in 2026 After Energy Shock Jun 7, 2026 Heat Pumps May Be a Quiet but Significant Driver of Power Demand in Europe Jun 7, 2026 Swiss companies channel $27 billion into U.S. projects after tariff accord, NZZ am Sonntag reports Jun 7, 2026