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February 11, 2026
  
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Today


Equity futures are moving higher as investors react to the release of the delayed January jobs report. Job growth in the U.S. came in stronger than expected in January, with nonfarm payrolls rising by 130,000 (almost double forecasts), while the unemployment rate unexpectedly dipped to 4.3%, signaling continued labour-market stabilization at the start of the year. Wage growth also remained firm, with average hourly earnings climbing 0.4% month over month, slightly above estimates. However, an annual benchmark revision showed the labour market was weaker than previously thought, with nearly 900,000 fewer jobs created over the prior year than initially reported, tempering the headline strength. Adding to this, the January NFIB Small Business survey signaled broad-based softness among small firms with the optimism index slipping to 99.3 and both hiring and capital spending plans declining for a second straight month. Overall, the reports suggests a still-resilient but cooling job market that may influence the Fed’s timing on future rate cuts. 

What’s old is new again. The recent volatility in tech stocks has pushed investors to rethink heavy exposure to the AI trade and rotate into “old economy” sectors, helping drive a broader market rally outside Silicon Valley. While the Nasdaq has struggled with volatility and crowded positioning, non-tech names have rallied, lifting sectors like energy, materials, industrials, and consumer staples. Years of dominance by mega-cap tech have left portfolios concentrated, making smaller and value-oriented stocks more attractive as earnings growth broadens across the market. Data show the average non-tech stock is under-owned by funds, while the Mag Seven tech giants remain more vulnerable to pullbacks. Although the market isn’t abandoning tech altogether, it seems that many investors are trimming overweight positions and diversifying, which can be seen in the Dow Jones which has continued to move higher. 

Evolving playbook. Portfolio hedging strategies built on old assumptions that bonds rally in risk-off periods, safe havens stay stable, and diversification works automatically, have been challenged in recent years. Inflation risk, fiscal strain, geopolitics, and rapid technological change have disrupted traditional correlations. Bonds did not protect portfolios during the latest bout of inflation, while assets like gold, once considered stable havens, have grown more volatile due to speculative flows. Because of this, investors are shifting from broad, directional hedges toward more targeted statistical hedges that are designed to offset specific risks such as exposure to Chinese equities or select commodities, based on observed correlations. Because correlations can change quickly, diversification in this framework requires ongoing reassessment rather than set-and-forget allocations, meaning protection must be intentionally designed around evolving risks rather than assumed from traditional asset labels alone. 

U.S. delinquencies climbed to their highest level in nearly a decade, pointing to growing strain among lower-income and younger borrowers. Data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York showed 4.8% of all outstanding household loans were in some stage of delinquency in Q4 of last year, the most since 2017, as missed payments increased across mortgages, credit cards, auto loans and student debt. Mortgage troubles were concentrated in lower-income regions, while student-loan delinquencies rose after pandemic-era payment pauses ended. Credit-card balances also rose, with 12.7% of accounts at least 90 days late, the highest since 2011, and auto-loan delinquencies are now nearing post-financial-crisis peaks. Total household still debt rose 1% to $18.8 trillion, suggesting borrowing continues even as repayment capacity for some weakens, reinforcing the idea of a K-shaped economy, where wealthier households remain resilient while financially vulnerable groups struggle. 

As investors gradually return to China, policymakers are trying to create a steadier, more sustainable investment environment, pairing market-friendly reforms with tighter oversight to curb excess. Regulators have cracked down on leverage, pump-and-dump schemes, high-frequency trading, and margin financing. Officials in China are trying to boost longer-term investor confidence through policies that limit equity fundraising, encourage dividends and buybacks, and support a gradually stronger yuan, aligning with Xi Jinping’s goal of building a sturdier financial system and boosting the currency’s global role. Strategists are calling this a slow bull, which they see as a way to increase household wealth, fund tech development, and attract foreign inflows as investors diversify away from the U.S. These efforts seem to be helping so far, with Chinese shares up about 18% this year, outperforming the S&P 500, with foreign ownership climbing to multi-year highs, possibly signaling renewed confidence. 

Short track speed skating is a heart racing sport for spectators and viewers at home, just imagine the athletes. Canada’s mixed team delivered exactly that in Milan, earning silver in a thrilling final yesterday. The Montreal-based team of Kim Boutin, Pascal Dion, Steven Dubois, William Dandjinou and Florence Brunelle came in with gold ambitions, but the silver medal did not disappoint, especially given the alternative. The Canadian team started in third, a less than ideal spot, and dropped to fourth during the race. With only a few laps remaining, Boutin delivered a decisive push to Dion, who found the smallest opening and slipped past two competitors in a split-second move to secure the country’s first silver of the Games. Blink and you would have missed the exchange. The finish captures everything that makes short track so compelling, and if you missed it, the clip is worth the watch. Go Canada! 


Diversion: I’ll take that, to go 
 
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Company news


Shopify shares jumped in premarket trading after the company delivered a strong Q4 revenue beat, powered by strong holiday shopping and higher merchant activity. Revenue rose 31% year over year to $3.7 billion, topping expectations of about $3.6 billion, while gross merchandise volume reached nearly $124 billion, also ahead of forecasts and signaling healthy demand across its platform. Black Friday through Cyber Monday sales hit a record $14.6 billion, up 27% from last year, underscoring Shopify’s growing scale with both consumers and sellers. Looking ahead, management expects Q1 revenue growth in the low-30% range, though operating expenses are expected to remain elevated at roughly 37% to 38% of revenue. 

It’s been tough for automakers, but Ford Motor Co. expects profit to jump in 2026 even after a surprise $900 mln tariff bill at the end of last year dented the carmaker’s earnings. The Trump administration informed Ford on Dec. 23 that the company could only apply a measure to trim tariffs paid on imported auto parts dating back to November, rather than May. The change effectively doubled Ford’s tariff toll to $2 bln in 2025, a level the company expects to face again this year. The updated tariff outlook highlights how Ford continues to face elevated costs from President Trump’s trade policies even as it expects demand for high-margin pickups and sport-utility vehicles to help push adjusted earnings before interest and taxes to as much as $10 bln in 2026, reversing a decline last year.  For the full year, Ford’s EV business lost $4.8 bln, compared to a $5.1 bln deficit in 2024. The company still plans to introduce a new line of affordable EVs starting in 2027.  

Bombardier Inc. announced a 40-plane order for its Challenger 3500 aircraft from Vista Global Holding Ltd., one of the world’s biggest operators of business jets, amid growing global demand for private aviation. Vista’s purchase agreement is worth about $1.2 bln at list price, Bombardier  delivering the planes over the next 10 years. Vista said it also has purchase options for a further 120 planes.  Vista’s aircraft order comes as Bryan Bedford, the head of the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, said Tuesday that he expects Canada’s aviation regulator to approve Gulfstream jets soon. President Trump had threatened to impose a 50% tariff on Canadian aircraft sold in the U.S. and to strip safety permits from new planes made in Canada, directly targeting Bombardier, over what he described as slow certification of jets made by Gulfstream, a unit of Virginia-based General Dynamics Corp.  


Commodities


Oil prices are higher as tensions in the Middle East outweighed concerns of a supply glut building in the market. Headlines are surfacing that the U.S. was considering seizing tankers with Iranian crude, and that another aircraft carrier strike group could be sent to the region should talks over Tehran’s nuclear program fail. Traders are also waiting to see if official U.S. inventory data later today will confirm what would amount to the biggest surge in stockpiles since November 2023 in barrel terms. Yesterday, the American Petroleum Institute reported inventories swelled by 13.4 mln barrels last week.  Crude benchmarks have advanced almost 15% this year as geopolitical tensions added a risk premium to prices, following a slump of -18% in 2025 on concern supplies will outpace demand. Iran is the fourth-largest OPEC producer, pumping an estimated 3.3 mln bpd in January. Crude and condensate shipments totaled about 1.63 mln bpd last month. In addition to risks to Iran’s own production and exports from a possible U.S. attack, traders are concerned about potential retaliation that could target shipping or output from other nations in a region that supplies about a fifth of the world’s oil. Traders are also watching for monthly reports from OPEC today and from the International Energy Agency tomorrow.  

Nickel is extending gains for a fourth day after Indonesia signaled a sharp cut to output this year, curbing supply from the world’s biggest mine in a bid to bump up and revive prices. Nickel, used in batteries and stainless steel, has surged more than 25% since mid-December, joining a broader rally in metals, from copper to gold and silver, fueled by speculative buying and heightened geopolitical concerns. Indonesia has been taking drastic steps to boost prices of its biggest export commodity, largely through scaling back volumes that key miners are allowed to produce. Before the latest round of cutbacks, supply from the country had risen to about two-thirds of global production, creating a surplus. The country will issue production quotas of between 260-270 mln tons of nickel ore this year, Director General of Minerals and Coal Tri Winarno said. That’s slightly above a previous estimate of 250-260 mln tons, but well below the 379 mln tons targeted in 2025.  


Fixed income and economics


Treasuries jumped and yields slid yesterday after soft retail sales data reinforced the view that the economy is losing steam, strengthening expectations that the Fed may have to cut interest rates multiple times this year. National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett said lower U.S. jobs numbers can be expected in the months ahead.  Benchmark yields across the curve fell by at least 4 bps, with the 10-year dropping to about 4.13%, its lowest level in roughly a month, as traders covered short positions ahead of a delayed jobs report and other key releases. Money markets now have a roughly 30% chance of three quarter-point cuts in 2026, with two already fully priced in, reflecting growing concern that slower spending and weaker hiring could pressure policymakers to ease sooner. 

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Treasure your relationships, not your possessions.

Anthony J. D’Angelo

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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