Macklem's take? The labor market's showing real signs of life. He called the recent improvements 'encouraging'—a subtle nod that things might be stabilizing after months of uncertainty. Not exactly fireworks, but in central banker speak, that's practically optimism. Worth watching how this plays into rate decisions down the line.
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MultiSigFailMaster
· 11h ago
I see through the central bank's subtle wording, "encouraging" is just a hint to stay steady, betting on how the next decision will move.
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OnchainSniper
· 12-11 13:43
Is the labor market recovering? Macklem's recent comments sound dull, but in the central bank's language, that's already "very optimistic." LOL
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GasFeeVictim
· 12-11 06:42
Is the labor market warming up? Central bankers say "encouraging" — they're just setting off fireworks. I know this spiel all too well.
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MEVvictim
· 12-10 16:12
The labor market is warming up, and the central bank's "encouragement" approach is indeed quite restrained, but those in the know understand what this really means... Do we sense that another interest rate cut might really be coming?
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FlashLoanKing
· 12-10 16:11
Is the labor market showing signs of improvement? The central bank's "encouraging" sounds to me like they're paving the way for a rate cut.
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notSatoshi1971
· 12-10 16:02
The labor market is warming up, and even the central bank governor's tone has changed. This is indeed quite interesting.
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screenshot_gains
· 12-10 16:00
Central bankers saying "encouraging" is just subtle hints about lowering interest rates, I've seen through it all along haha
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MoodFollowsPrice
· 12-10 15:53
The labor market is warming up, and the central bank's "encouragement" rhetoric is probably just reassuring the market. However, the real key depends on how the interest rate decisions unfold.
Macklem's take? The labor market's showing real signs of life. He called the recent improvements 'encouraging'—a subtle nod that things might be stabilizing after months of uncertainty. Not exactly fireworks, but in central banker speak, that's practically optimism. Worth watching how this plays into rate decisions down the line.