Launch Pad

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

January 22, 2026
  
Click here to sign up for the Launch Pad
  
  

Today

European and Asian equity markets rebounded, with futures pointing higher this morning after Trump stepped back from tariff threats against European countries that opposed the proposed U.S. takeover of Greenland and ruled out the use of force (more on that below). Gold prices pulled back after hitting record highs earlier this week, reflecting some easing in U.S.–Europe tensions. Media reports have floated the possibility of a compromise involving limited U.S. sovereignty over land in Greenland, though Denmark’s prime minister pushed back, stating that sovereignty is not open to negotiation. EU leaders are set to continue discussions today in Brussels. On the corporate front, earnings season continues, with companies including General Electric and Procter & Gamble reporting before the open, and Intel reporting after the close. 

Data dump. Markets are digesting a slew of U.S. economic data out this morning starting with Q3 annualized GDP (q/q) that came in slightly better than expected at 4.4% vs 4.3% forecast. This report replaces the third estimate originally scheduled for December 19, 2025, which was delayed due to the government shutdown. Q3 real GDP was revised up 0.1% from the initial estimate, primarily reflecting upward revisions to exports and investment that were partly offset by a downward revision to consumer spending. Overall, the expansion in the quarter was supported by consumer spending, exports, and government spending. On the job front, applications for U.S. unemployment benefits were little changed last week, steadying at low levels after a volatile holiday season. Initial claims increased by 1,000 to 200k compared to the forecast of 209k. Continuing claims fell to 1.85 million in the previous week to the lowest since November. Other data points out this morning include personal income and spending, personal consumption and PCE.  

TACO. Trump backed away from plans to impose tariffs on European countries over Greenland, saying he had agreed to a “framework” of a future deal after meeting the NATO chief at the World Economic Forum, a sudden reversal that seemed to calm markets after days of volatility driven by fears of a transatlantic trade war. Trump said the tariffs scheduled for Feb. 1 would not go ahead and framed the move as progress toward broader discussions on Arctic security and that Golden Dome he keeps on mentioning, though he offered no concrete details and Denmark again rejected any negotiations over ceding Greenland. The ease followed market losses earlier in the week and capped a familiar pattern in which big threats were softened once financial and diplomatic pressure grew, with senior U.S. officials in Davos urging allies to remain calm and signalling the dispute would eventually end. 

We’re not grateful? A pointed exchange between Canada and the U.S. surfaced publicly after Trump accused Mark Carney of ingratitude, responding to Carney’s remarks at the World Economic Forum where Carney contended that the rules-based international order was effectively dead and urged “middle powers” to band together. In response, Trump said Canada “lives because of the United States,” pointing to U.S. military protection and suggesting his proposed Golden Dome missile shield would also defend Canadian airspace. While Carney did not name Trump directly in his speech, he cited tactics associated with U.S. policy, including tariffs, financial leverage, and weaponized supply chains, and warned that countries not acting collectively risk being marginalized. The exchange highlights a strategic shift under Carney, who campaigned on reducing Canada’s reliance on the U.S., while increasing defence spending, including significant investments in Norad modernization and Arctic security. Even so, Canada and the U.S. remain tightly linked on defence through Norad and NATO, with Carney reaffirming support for Denmark’s sovereignty over Greenland alongside Mark Rutte as Trump continues to press U.S. claims in the Arctic. 

It’s good to be prepared, I guess. Canada’s military has quietly modeled how it would respond to a hypothetical U.S. invasion, reflecting how quickly relations have deteriorated since Trump began talking about Canada as a potential 51st state. While officials have stressed that an invasion remains highly unlikely, the planning reportedly assumes American forces could overwhelm Canadian defenses within days. The discussions come as Trump adopts a more aggressive stance towards Greenland and broader Arctic security, prompting Canada to accelerate defense spending, expand its northern military presence, and consider joining NATO exercises in the region. 

Any buyers out there? New condo sales in Toronto have effectively stalled, with purchases falling 60% last year to just 1,599 units, the lowest level since 1991, according to Urbanation. That marks a 95% decline from the 2021 peak and reflects the sharp retreat of investors who had fuelled the city’s multi decade condo boom. The slowdown has rippled through development activity, with fourth quarter sales hitting their weakest level since 1990 and developers cancelling a record 28 projects totalling more than 7,000 units in 2024, largely because weak pre-construction sales have cut off financing. Urbanation warns that the downturn now entering its fifth year raises serious concerns about future supply, noting that by the end of the decade there are likely to be virtually no new condo completions coming to market. 

Who’s ready to talk baseball again? As the Toronto Blue Jays get set to celebrate their 50th anniversary since Toronto landed an MLB franchise in 1976, the club is leaning into both nostalgia and excitement from last year’s memorable and heartwarming run. Fans heading to Rogers Centre this season will notice a refreshed game-day experience, with new 100 Level concourse displays honouring franchise icons and championship years, a dedicated Season Ticket Member entrance, a forthcoming Level of Excellence memorabilia showcase, and a new 50th anniversary logo woven throughout the stadium. The upgrades come at a time when optimism is already elevated after last year’s World Series run and some added pitching depth, adding to the sense that this season could be a fun one to be part of, on and off the field. Single-game tickets go on sale today (season-ticket holders presale was yesterday), with the home opener set for March 27. The game will feature a pregame ceremony honouring the AL Championship where, according to the team, fans can “relive special moments from the deep postseason run,” a reminder of how close this group came and why there is real excitement about what year 50 could deliver. Let’s go Blue Jays. 

Diversion: Cutest thing…..ever
 
The
Tactical model 
(% equity weight)

To learn more, please click here
 
The latest
Market Ethos 

Size matters​ – NEW
Swimming in oil 
2026 Outlook: Questions on the year ahead
Ethos rewind: the year’s biggest themes 

Sign up for the Market Ethos mailing list.
 

Company news

Procter & Gamble beat earnings estimates but growth in a key sales metric slowed in the latest quarter while volume slipped, showing that U.S. consumers spent cautiously in the final months of the year. P&G reported flat organic sales, which exclude the impact of currency volatility and acquisitions, in the latest quarter, the slowest pace in a decade and slightly below the average estimate of analysts. CFO Andre Schulten said sales will look to rebound during the next six months, since the latest quarter faced a tough comparison to a year earlier, when US consumers stockpiled on essentials such as toilet paper and detergent ahead of port strikes. P&G still expects to meet its guidance for organic sales growth in the current fiscal year, which runs through mid-2026. That’s in part because the company is already seeing strong growth in Europe and Latin America, where organic sales rose 8% in the most recent quarter.  

General Electric (GE Aerospace) shares are getting a boost after forecasting a full-year profit that beat expectations, signalling it expects demand for air travel will help it shake off lingering economic concerns. The forecast shows how GE continues to cash in on strong demand for spare parts and services tied to global air travel. CEO Culp has urged Trump to lower trade barriers in aerospace, emphasizing that free trade has helped produce a surplus for the domestic industry. GE Aerospace has also been building its defense business. Defense contractors have come into the spotlight after Trump signed an executive order that aims to tie executive compensation to metrics including delivery and production, rather than free cash flow or earnings per share growth. 

Hey Siri, it’s time for a revamp. Apple Inc. is planning to change Siri later this year by turning the digital assistant into the company’s first AI chatbot, as it tries to compete in the generative AI race dominated by OpenAI and Google. The chatbot named “Campos” will be integrated into the iPhone, iPad and Mac operating systems and replace the current Siri interface. Campos’ new functionality will feature a chat-like feel and the back-and-forth conversational abilities of OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini. Apple is aiming to launch the chatbot technology in June at its Worldwide Developers Conference and release it in September.  

TikTok will be able to continue operating its subsidiary in Canada for now, with the government’s blessing, after a judge stopped a previous order for it to wind down. On November 2024, under former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Canada ordered ByteDance Ltd. to close its subsidiary TikTok Technology Canada Inc. Yesterday, that order was set aside by the Federal Court, after a motion made by Canada’s government in TikTok’s appeal. The judge sent the matter back to Canada’s Industry Minister Melanie Joly. Canada’s Innovation, Science and Economic Development department confirmed its consent, along with TikTok’s, to the decision in an emailed statement and said it would now start a “new national security review” under the Investment Canada Act, declining to comment further. 


Commodities

Oil prices are lower as traders’ focus turned to the outlook for rising inventories in the U.S. and elsewhere, while Greenland tensions have subsided for now. The American Petroleum Institute reported U.S. crude stockpiles rose by 3 million barrels last week, with official data on inventory levels due out later today. Also on the supply side, Kazakhstan is showing some relief from weeks of export constraints as repairs at a key Black Sea oil-loading facility approach completion. A backlog of cargoes at the Caspian Pipeline Consortium terminal is easing. Venezuelan shipments are returning to the global market, while Indian refiner Reliance Industries Ltd. has once again purchased Russian crude, with deliveries in February and March. In its recent monthly report, the International Energy Agency slightly increased its estimate for oil demand growth, but maintained its view for a major glut this year.  

It’s cold out there. U.S. natural gas futures have jumped nearly 70% in the past three days, putting futures on track for their biggest weekly gain in more than three decades, as dangerously cold temperatures are set to take hold of a massive portion of the U.S. A massive storm will descend on the U.S. starting Friday, plunging Texas into a deep freeze before threating to dump snow on New York City and Boston. The conditions bring the threat of disruptions to gas production as water freezes inside pipelines, a situation that proved disastrous for Texas in 2021, when gas supply outages during extreme cold contributed to a collapse of the state’s power grid. Hedge funds turned more bearish on gas at the end of last week, leaving the market poised for a rally as traders rushed to close out those positions after weather forecasts were revised. Surging gas prices will be trouble for U.S. consumers struggling with rising energy bills. Cold weather is also causing energy prices to surge across the globe. Japan’s power price rose to a three-month high on Wednesday and European gas futures have also soared. Markets are monitoring for a potential weakening of polar vortex winds, which keep extreme cold bottled up in the Arctic, that could bring more freezing temperatures.



Fixed income and economics


Surprisingly, it only took $280 million of trading of ultra-long maturity bonds to push Japan’s $7.2 trillion government bond market into meltdown earlier this week. This caused a $41 billion wipeout across the Japanese curve and sent shockwaves through global markets on Tuesday. The disconnect between the size of the drawdown and the amount that actually traded shows how Japan’s sometimes illiquid bond market has become a weak spot in the global financial system. Subdued for years by the Bank of Japan’s massive stimulus, the world’s third-largest pile of government debt is now increasingly vulnerable to shocks after the central bank and domestic life insurers pulled back. This all comes as the Bank of Japan is expected to keep rates unchanged later today after Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi roiled financial markets by pledging to expand fiscal spending. Some analysts warn that the yen could take another hit if Governor Ueda refrains from clearly navigating forthcoming hikes in order to avoid political backlash ahead of a national election on Feb. 8. The rate announcement comes a month after the BOJ raised the rate to the highest in three decades. The decision typically comes around noon and is followed by Ueda’s press briefing at 3:30 p.m. 

Chart of the day


 

Markets


Quote of the day

 

If opportunity doesn’t knock, build a door.
Milton Berle

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

Size matters

19 January 2026. Market Ethos. When it comes to large cap vs small cap it sure feels like big always wins. But the start of…

1 minute read

Market Ethos

Swimming in oil

12 January 2026. Market Ethos. The world knows that we have too much oil – the market knows this, the forward energy curve knows this,…

1 minute read

Insights

2026 Outlook: Questions on the year ahead

January 2026. Investor Strategy. We reflect on what happened in 2025, and dive into the questions on investors' minds for 2026.

1 minute read