OTTAWA, Dec 23 (Reuters) – The Canadian economy shrank by a greater-than-expected 0.3% in October, the largest drop in almost ​three years, on weakness in both the goods and ‌services sectors, official data showed on Tuesday.

Analysts had forecast growth would dip by ‌0.2% from September as the economy continues to adjust to U.S. trade measures. Statscan said initial data indicated that GDP would grow by 0.1% in November.

The month-on-month fall was the largest since the ⁠0.3% decline seen in ‌December 2022. The goods sector fell 0.7% in October while services contracted by 0.2%.

The figures are unlikely ‍to overly concern the Bank of Canada. Governor Tiff Macklem said on December 10 that he expected GDP growth to be weak in the ​fourth quarter.

The manufacturing sector dropped by 1.5%, partly reflecting a ‌6.9% plunge in machinery output. Wood product manufacturing dropped by 7.3%, the largest decline since April 2020, following additional U.S. tariffs that came into force on October 14.

Services-producing industries were hit by a nationwide work stoppage by Canada Post workers and a teachers’ ⁠strike in the province of Alberta.

The Bank ​of Canada held its key policy ​rate steady at 2.25% on December 10. Macklem, noting the economy was proving resilient overall to U.S. tariffs, ‍said the rate ⁠was at the right level to keep inflation close to the bank’s 2% target.

Before the GDP data were released, money ⁠markets were predicting that the Bank’s next move would be a 25 ‌basis point hike, most likely in July 2026.

(Reporting by David ‌Ljunggren, editing by Dale Smith)