Launch Pad

Stay on top of market movements with the Launch Pad. Updated daily.

March 25, 2026
  
Click here to sign up for the Launch Pad
     

Today


Futures are paring gains this morning after Iran rejected a ceasefire and said it is not logical to enter such a process with parties that violate agreements. This comes after the U.S. tabled a 15-point plan which covers sanctions relief, civilian nuclear cooperation, a rollback of Iran’s nuclear program, missile limits and access for shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. Yesterday, the prospect of de-escalation pushed oil prices down roughly -5%, easing inflation fears. Emerging market assets rose on signs of potential de-escalation, with equities and currencies gaining following the latest developments. The MSCI EM index rose 1.7%, led by strength in South Korea and China, while currencies also advanced modestly, including moves in the Mexican peso and Brazilian real. As one can see from the action this morning, markets remain highly sensitive to geopolitical headlines, and promises of peace talks, with volatility expected to persist. The broader backdrop remains challenging as higher energy prices continue to pressure growth and inflation, particularly in energy-importing economies, where rising fuel costs weigh on activity, prompting responses from central banks and governments.

PMI oh my. The Iran war is beginning to show up in global data, with business surveys showing weakening growth and rising inflation across major economies. March PMIs from Europe, Asia, and Australia all point to slowing activity or contraction, while input costs are quickly rising, including the fastest increases in years in places like Germany and the UK. The pressure is being driven by disrupted energy supplies and higher oil prices, which are squeezing businesses, weakening demand, and denting confidence, putting the earlier global recovery at risk. Central banks are shifting more hawkish, with rate hikes back on the table despite slowing growth, as policymakers grapple with balancing inflation risks against recession threats. Overall, the data suggests the war is already impacting the global economy, with the uncertainties now centered on how long energy disruptions last and how aggressively central banks will respond. 

A new kind of toll. Iran has begun informally charging some commercial ships up to $2 mln per voyage to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, creating an unofficial transit fee on one of the world’s most critical energy chokepoints, through which roughly 20% of global oil and gas flows. The payments are inconsistent and not very clear, with only a limited number of vessels transiting (often close to Iran’s coastline) and some reportedly complying to secure safe passage amid heightened conflict risks. This highlights Iran’s growing leverage over the strait, adding friction, uncertainty, and legal tension as countries like India push back on freedom of navigation grounds. Longer term, the risk is these fees stick, setting a precedent for monetizing global trade routes and adding complexity to energy markets and supply chains. 

Not just an oil issue. The Iran war is now spilling into agriculture, triggering a scramble for fertilizer that risks escalating into a global food crisis, as the shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz halts shipments from a region that supplies a major share of the world’s fertilizers. Prices for key inputs like urea and phosphates are rising, threatening to push food costs higher just as inflation was easing. Governments across the globe are intervening, subsidizing farmers, securing emergency supplies, easing trade barriers, while major buyers like India rush to obtain fertilizer and producers like China and Russia restrict exports, intensifying competition. The shock underscores the tight link between energy and food, since natural gas is critical for fertilizer production, meaning higher energy prices directly raise farming costs and squeeze margins. If disruptions continue into mid-year, the impact could lead to reduced crop yields, higher global food prices, and worsening food insecurity. 

Liquid markets take the lead. Public equities have been the primary driver of returns for Canada’s largest pension funds, with stocks materially outperforming private equity across major plans. In 2025, Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System (OMERS) posted 12.3% from public equities versus -2.5% in private equity, Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan saw 15.0% versus -5.3%, while Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan (HOOPP) and Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec delivered 22.2% and 17.7% in public equities compared to modest positive returns of 3.6% and 2.3% in private equity, respectively. This divergence reflects stronger performance in liquid markets alongside headwinds in private assets from higher rates, slower deal activity, and limited exits, challenging the consistency of the illiquidity premium. While some funds, such as Teachers’, have modestly increased public market exposure, the shift remains incremental, with the broader takeaway pointing to a cyclical phase where liquidity has led returns and private markets remain constrained. 

March madness meets AI.  OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google, are being put to the ultimate test, with their AI models entering into a March Madness bracket pool. While all three are outperforming most human participants after the first weekend, Claude is emerging as a top contender thanks to a slightly contrarian strategy (picking Illinois to win) while still leaning heavily on favourites. The models approached the task analytically, balancing probability with differentiation, by choosing upsets with strong justification (like injuries or off-court issues) rather than chasing unlikely Cinderella outcomes and largely avoiding crowded picks. Despite early hiccups, all three produced viable entries, with intact Final Fours and realistic winning paths, highlighting that while AI still struggles with certain tasks, it can rival human decision-making in probabilistic, strategy-driven environments like betting. 


DiversionPit stop 
The
Tactical model 
(% equity weight)

Our tactical fund is designed to complement your existing holdings to minimize portfolio volatility. To learn more, please click here.
 
 
The latest
Market Ethos 

Waiting at the train station​ – NEW
Great Canadian bank run 
Diversification gone awry​ 
Mostly smooth sailing 

Sign up for the Market Ethos mailing list.

 

Company news


Investigators are examining multiple contributing factors in the fatal Air Canada crash at New York’s LaGuardia Airport, where a passenger jet collided with a fire truck, killing both pilots and injuring dozens. Early findings point to potential issues including the absence of a transponder on the fire vehicle, unclear radio communications, and heavy workloads for overnight air traffic controllers managing multiple responsibilities. The incident, classified as a runway incursion, highlights ongoing safety concerns as such events have risen in recent years despite advances in technology, reinforcing the need for improved visibility systems and operational protocols.

Arm Holdings Plc, which made its name licensing technology to semiconductor makers, will begin selling its own chips for the first time, aiming to claim a bigger piece of the massive spending on AI gear. Meta Platforms Inc. will be the first major customer for the UK-based company’s chip, called an AGI CPU. The product will have as many as 136 cores (a measure of processing power) and draw 300 watts of electricity. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. will produce the chips. Arm has shifted from its roots as a provider of smartphone technology and taken a greater role in the data center market. The change is meant to help the business get more of the money generated by what is often complex and expensive work. The shift also helps Arm benefit from bigger-ticket purchases. Even the most expensive smartphone chips cost tens of dollars. The highest-end data center semiconductors can run in the tens of thousands. 

Ask Siri. Apple is testing a standalone app for its Siri voice assistant alongside a new “Ask Siri” feature that will work across the its software, part of a broader AI overhaul. Apple also is modernizing Siri by giving it a fresh look and chatbot-like experience. The new Siri is slated to be unveiled June 8 at the iPhone maker’s Worldwide Developers Conference as part of the iOS 27 and macOS 27 operating systems. Apple has been working to rebuild the AI platform around the new version of Siri and the goal is to transform the technology from a traditional voice assistant into a systemwide AI agent with deep integration across applications. The updated Siri, code-named Campo, is designed to better control features within iPhones and Macs and tap into personal data, like messages, notes and emails, to fulfill requests. It also will be able to complete tasks within apps, access news content, and search the open web using Apple-built interfaces and models.  

Merck & Co. has agreed to buy Terns Pharmaceuticals Inc. in a deal valuing the drugmaker at $6.7 bln, bolstering the multinational company’s pipeline ahead of a key cancer treatments patents expiring. Merck has been searching for new growth drivers as it prepares for generic competition and lower prices for its blockbuster cancer drug Keytruda, the pharmaceutical company’s best-seller. The drug’s patents are expected to start expiring in 2028, and it could face government-mandated price negotiations as soon as next year.  Terns was the talk of the American Society of Hematology annual meeting last year after a trial showed that more than half of patients treated with its investigative therapy for a type of blood cancer that didn’t respond well to previous treatments had a strong improvement in their cancer within 24 weeks. 


Commodities


Oil prices are lower with Brent hovering near $100 as a diplomatic push by the US to end the war with Iran was rejected. The U.S. drafted a 15-point plan to help bring the conflict to a close, and the proposal was delivered to Iran via Pakistan. However, President Trump’s administration also ordered the 82nd Airborne Division to deploy about 2,000 soldiers to the region, as the White House weighed options to ease Iran’s hold on the strait, the vital waterway that’s a focus of the conflict. Despite the decline, crude benchmarks remain on track for a substantial monthly surge after a volatile run of trading as investors tracked the fallout from the war, which is now in its fourth week. Some positive news from the Strait, a Thai refiner said that a crude oil tanker carrying a cargo from the Middle East safely transited Hormuz recently. A trickle of ships have been making their way out in recent days, though not all of them carrying oil. Iran has said foreign ships are allowed to pass through the waterway, as long as they aren’t supporting acts of aggression against the country and follow regulations put in place by Tehran. The comments came in a letter circulated to members of the International Maritime Organization on Tuesday. In a recent sign of the oil shortage shock triggered by the fighting, Chevron warned that California is nearing an energy crisis, and that the company may quit refining in the state unless officials rolled back regulations. The state is particularly exposed as it imports about 20% of refined fuels from Asia and diesel prices are at a record above $7 a gallon. 

Nickel monopoly. Nickel prices jumped after the world’s largest producer Indonesia agreed to tax outbound shipments of the battery metal. Futures climbed as much as 2.7% on the LME after Finance Minister Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa said President Prabowo Subianto had approved tariffs for coal and nickel exports earlier this morning. Discussions were still underway on specific tax rates, according to the minister. Indonesia, which accounts for over half the world’s nickel production, has been mulling a windfall tax on commodities as it faces rising budgetary strain from higher oil prices due to the Iran war. As a net crude and fuels importer, Indonesia is also vulnerable to potential inflationary and growth pressures from the conflict’s disruptions to energy flows. The country has long held ambitions to move up the resource value chain by stopping all exports of raw materials and pushing companies to invest in metals processing. Talks of taxing nickel exports specifically can be traced back to a 2022 consideration by then-President Joko Widodo, who wanted to attract investment from battery and EV makers using the metal.   


Fixed income and economics


As the Middle East conflict continues, bond markets are looking to unwind U.S. futures positions amid the initial selloff triggered by the Middle East conflict running its course, setting the stage for new trades that will determine whether the rout reverses or deepens. This comes as bond market volatility is near the highest point in almost a year. Before the war broke out at the end of February, markets were positioning for the Fed to lower rates, in part reflecting concerns about the outlook for growth. Those worries were quickly replaced by inflation fears as the war sparked a surge in oil prices, prompting traders who were caught off guard to exit their positions, in turn pushing yields higher and accelerating the market decline. In terms of where the biggest unwinds have occurred, the largest amount since March 2 were seen in 10-year note futures, where open interest has dropped in 12 of the past 16 sessions for a combined 550,000 contracts, equivalent to about $36 mln per basis point in risk. In cash terms, this is about $45 bln’s worth of the current 10-year note. According to Morgan Stanley, these types of position-driven dislocations tend to fade within 10 to 15 days. Today is the 17th trading session since the war broke out, with U.S. yields trading near their highest in months, though retracing some losses late in the day on a report from Israel’s Channel 12 that the U.S. is seeking a one-month ceasefire with Iran. A recent survey released from JPMorgan Treasury showed a substantial rise in neutral positioning, signaling high uncertainty about the future path of Treasury yields from here.  

Chart of the day


Markets


Quote of the day

 

Strive not to be a success, but rather to be of value.

Albert Einstein

Contributors: A. Innis, A. Nguyen, P. Kwon

Charts are sourced to Bloomberg unless otherwise noted.

The opinions expressed in this report are the opinions of the author and readers should not assume they reflect the opinions or recommendations of Richardson Wealth Limited or its affiliates. Assumptions, opinions and estimates constitute the author’s judgment as of the date of this material and are subject to change without notice. We do not warrant the completeness or accuracy of this material, and it should not be relied upon as such. Before acting on any recommendation, you should consider whether it is suitable for your particular circumstances and, if necessary, seek professional advice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Richardson Wealth Limited is a subsidiary of iA Financial Corporation Inc. and is not affiliated with James Richardson & Sons, Limited. Richardson Wealth is a trade-mark of James Richardson & Sons, Limited and Richardson Wealth Limited is a licensed user of the mark. Richardson Wealth Limited, Member Canadian Investor Protection Fund.

Related articles

Market Ethos

Waiting at the train station

23 March 2026. Market Ethos. As hostilities broke out in the Middle East, markets were initially rather resilient. But after three weeks, that resilience is…

27 minute read

Women & wealth

Women, wealth and the power of strategic giving

Charitable giving has always been a meaningful way to support the causes that matter most. It’s also an increasingly powerful estate and tax planning tool…

27 minute read

Market Ethos

Great Canadian bank run

12 March 2026. Market Ethos.

27 minute read