Launch Pad

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June 26, 2026
  
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Today

Stock futures are pointing to another soft open, capping off what has been a bumpy week for equities. S&P 500, Nasdaq, and TSX futures are all trading lower this morning. Through Thursday, all three indexes were already on track to finish the week in negative territory, led by the tech-heavy Nasdaq, which was down -4.4% and on pace for its largest weekly decline since the period around Liberation Day. The TSX has held up relatively well, remaining roughly flat for the week as weakness in the materials sector, particularly gold against a backdrop of a stronger U.S. dollar, has largely been offset by gains in BlackBerry, up 21% this week after reporting stronger-than-expected first quarter earnings and raising revenue guidance, and Alimentation Couche-Tard. Overseas, chipmakers are once again leading the selloff, weighing on AI-heavy markets including Japan’s Nikkei, down -4.1%, and South Korea’s Kospi, down -5.8%. The Nikkei was pressured by a -12.5% drop in SoftBank after reports that OpenAI may delay its IPO until 2027, postponing a potential liquidity event for one of its largest investments. 

Dollar bulls are back. Speaking of the dollar, Wall Street has turned bullish on the USD, with major banks noting that Chair Kevin Warsh’s strong anti-inflation stance has revived confidence in the greenback. Strategists at JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America and others now expect further dollar gains as markets price in additional Fed rate hikes, helped by resilient U.S. economic growth, strong AI-driven investment, and continued capital inflows into U.S. assets. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index has risen about 2% in June, reversing last year’s de-dollarization narrative, while hedge funds have built their largest bullish dollar positions in years. Although much of the Fed’s tightening may already be priced in, the consensus is that the combination of a hawkish Fed, U.S. economic outperformance, and AI-related productivity gains should keep the dollar strong, particularly against lower-yielding and oil-importing currencies. 

Earnings edge. Canadian companies are expected to outpace their U.S. peers in earnings growth over the next two quarters, with the TSX expected to deliver profit growth of 36.4% in Q2 and 40% in Q3, compared with roughly 23% for the S&P 500. The rise is being driven primarily by energy and mining companies, though Canada’s tech sector is also expected to post strong gains. Improving business sentiment under Mark Carney, along with plans for major infrastructure, natural resource development, and defense spending, has help improve investor confidence and prompted some strategists to raise targets for Canadian equities. While lower oil prices could temper energy earnings later this year, many investors believe Canada is entering a broader economic recovery, making Canadian stocks more attractive. 

Testing the waters. Chinese automakers are expanding into Canada despite strict import quotas because they see us as a gateway to the much larger U.S. market. Companies including BYD, Chery, Lotus, and Changan are opening dealerships, testing vehicles, and building dealer networks even though Canada limits low-tariff imports to 49,000 vehicles annually, leaving little near-term profit potential. Experts say Canada’s similar regulations, consumer preferences, and dealership networks make it an ideal testing ground for an eventual U.S. launch if trade barriers are relaxed. While the federal government is cautiously opening the market as relations with the U.S. become more strained, U.S. automakers and policymakers remain concerned that Canada could become a backdoor for Chinese EVs into America. 

Joining the party. China’s domestic tech IPO market is rebounding as the country pushes to support chip, AI, robotics, and other strategic technology companies amid its rivalry with the U.S. Chinese tech firms have raised $3.1 billion from onshore listings so far this year, more than five times last year’s pace, with nearly 50 companies (worth close to $19 bln) also expected to IPO soon. The biggest potential deal is memory-chip maker ChangXin Memory Technologies’ planned $4.4 billion Shanghai listing, which could make 2026 the strongest year for Chinese tech IPOs since 2023. Regulators are easing rules for companies and encouraging Hong Kong-listed firms to seek mainland listings, giving startups and their venture-capital backers more exit opportunities. Strong demand for recent mainland tech IPOs suggests investors are eager for exposure to China’s AI and semiconductor push, though the boom is closely tied to government support and the broader global enthusiasm for AI. 

Recent fund flow data is showing that investors pulled money from U.S. equities for the first time in three months, with record withdrawals from tech funds signaling that the AI trade may be cooling. According to the report, U.S. equity funds shed $8.5 billion in the week through June 24, with technology funds leading the retreat, with a record $9.3 billion in outflows. This comes as technology and AI companies are front and centre with Apple experiencing a massive slide today, while Micron forecasted blowout sales earlier in the week. This week’s flows marks a reversal from the previous week, when tech funds had drawn an unprecedented $19.2 billion. The report also showed European funds continuing to be under pressure with an 11th straight week of outflows, money market funds shedding $25.5 billion, while investors shifted instead into fixed income funds which added $16.6 billion. 

No home field advantage. Despite co-hosting the World Cup and advancing to the knockout stage, Canada will head to Los Angeles to face South Africa at LA Stadium (better known as SoFi Stadium, but temporarily renamed under FIFA’s commercial naming rules), rather than playing a Round of 32 match on home soil. By finishing second in Group B, Canada fell into a predetermined part of the knockout bracket, while only the group winner (Switzerland) remained in Vancouver. Canada had been expected to face higher-ranked South Korea, but South Africa’s surprise 1 to 0 victory over the Koreans secured the matchup instead. Looking for a silver lining, South Africa, ranked 54th in the world, is viewed as a more favourable opponent. While the team will undoubtedly miss having a raucous home crowd behind them, the quieter setting in LA may provide an opportunity to recover, reset, and focus ahead of the biggest match in Canadian men’s football history. Canada kicks off against South Africa on Sunday at 3:00 pm ET. GO CA-NA-DA! 


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Company news

For those who were looking to own a piece of OpenAI may have to wait after the New York Times reported that OpenAI may hold off their IPO until next year. SoftBank Group, in particular, is taking it on the chin as they hold approximately a 13% stake in OpenAI with the stock falling the most since August 2024. Expectations of a big financial windfall from OpenAI’s public debut had buoyed SoftBank shares to record highs, helping the company’s market capitalization soar above Toyota Motor Corp.’s last month.

Apple raised prices across all Macs, iPads, home devices, and the Vision Pro today, by roughly 15-25%, citing an unprecedented shortage of memory and storage chips driven by surging AI data center demand, with hints of farther hikes potentially coming to iPhones. The market reacted negatively,  closing 6.1% lower at $279.40, its worst single-day decline since April 2025 and the biggest demand friction, Wedbush argued ecosystem loyalty would insulate Apple, and analysts noted the hikes should help offset gross margin pressure from rising memory costs. 

Blackberry delivered a surprising Q1 FY2027 yesterday, posting revenue of $152.9 mln and ad EPS of $0.04 against consensus of $136.8 mln and $0.03, while also recording its first cash positive quarter in nine years, a milestone that sent shares surging 23-24% to$10.62, their highest level since November 2021. The growth engine was QNX, up 26% in the quarter, with Blackberry positioning this platform as a “mission critical software layer in the AI stack” targeting AI-enabled systems. This narrative gave management the confidence to raise its FY2027 revenue guidance to $594-$621 mln and EPS to $0.16-$0.20. Analysts responded with price target increases, with buy ratings upwards of $12 targets, though most others maintained neutral ratings while still respecting this quarter as a clear turning point. 


Commodities

Oil prices are continuing lower and heading for the biggest weekly drop in a month with traffic through the Strait of Hormuz increasing, although an attack on a cargo ship renewed concerns about safe passage through the waterway. Ships have been openly transiting Hormuz following early progress toward a lasting agreement to end the U.S.-Iran war, adding millions of barrels to the global market and Persian Gulf exports are now at about 75% of prewar levels. In another positive sign of supply return, Saudi Arabia has begun loading tankers at its key Ras Tanura terminal inside the Persian Gulf. Two key exit laneways have emerged through the Strait as the normal middle lane is thought to have been mined. One is near Iran, while the other hugs Oman’s coastline and is protected by the US. Iran’s Persian Gulf Strait Authority said yesterday that any transit happening in routes outside its framework would not be protected by safe-passage guarantees.

Iron ore is heading for a seventh weekly loss, the worst run since 2022, as demand weakened seasonally and mill margins narrowed. The commodity has struggled in recent weeks on concerns over seasonally weaker demand, rising seaborne supplies, and still-elevated Chinese port inventories. In addition, lower fuel costs following the interim US-Iran peace deal in the Middle East have also kept the market under pressure. Chinese steelmakers are also facing renewed margin pressure. According to industry expert Mysteel, profitability among surveyed mills fell to about 51%, down 4.8% on-week and 8.2% from a year earlier. The squeeze follows a fatal coal-mining accident in Shanxi last month, which has pushed up coke prices and higher costs are encouraging mills to use more medium-high grade ore to improve efficiency.  


Fixed income and economics

Bond traders scaled back expectations for Fed rate hikes after May’s inflation data came in slightly softer than expected, easing concerns that price pressures were accelerating. The Fed’s PCE rose 0.4% in May versus forecasts of 0.5%, leaving markets to price in fewer rate increases and lowering short-term Treasury yields, although stronger GDP and labour market data continued to support a higher-for-longer interest-rate outlook. Falling oil prices since the easing of Middle East tensions have also helped reduce inflation expectations, boosting demand for Treasuries. While investors took the inflation report as a modest positive, many still believe the Fed is likely to maintain a hawkish stance unless inflation shows more convincing signs of returning toward its 2% target, likely to the chagrin of one person in particular. 

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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.

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