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March 16, 2026
  
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Today

Stock futures rose this morning while oil prices pulled back slightly as hopes grew that shipping could resume through the Strait of Hormuz, easing some supply concerns tied to the Iran conflict. This comes as Trump pushes allies to help reopen the key oil route and signaled the U.S. was in talks with Iran, although Iran has indicated that this is not true. With this in mind, markets remain cautious as the ongoing disruption continues to threaten global growth and fuel inflation fears. Investors are also closely watching policy meetings this week from major central banks including the BoC, Fed, ECB, BOJ, and Bank of England for signals on how policymakers may respond to the oil shock and its potential impact on interest rates and the broader economy.

Canada’s annual inflation rate slowed more than expected to 1.8% in February from 2.3% in January, partly due to base effects from a temporary sales tax break introduced under Trudeau dropping out of year-over-year comparisons. Grocery price growth eased to 4.1% from 4.8%, led by slower increases in beef prices, while shelter costs rose just 1.5% annually, the slowest pace in five years. Gasoline prices continued to decline year over year but rose modestly on a monthly basis as oil prices increased ahead of the Middle East conflict. Core inflation measures also softened, with CPI excluding food and energy at 2% and the central bank’s trim and median measures both at 2.3%. The data reinforces expectations that the BoC will hold its policy rate at 2.25% at its upcoming meeting, though the outlook for rates will depend on how inflation evolves, particularly if rising oil prices from geopolitical tensions begin to push prices higher again. 

Is the end near? Officials in the U.S. say they expect the conflict with Iran to end within weeks and believe energy prices could fall once oil supplies recover, even as fighting continues and tensions remain high. Trump has threatened further strikes on Iran’s key oil export hub on Kharg Island and said the U.S. is not ready to negotiate a peace deal yet, while also pushing for a coalition of countries to escort tankers through the Strait of Hormuz. Iran, however, insists it is strong enough to continue the conflict and has rejected claims it is seeking negotiations, with officials stating the country is prepared to defend itself indefinitely. The war has effectively shut down most shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, disrupting energy markets, and keeping crude prices near $100. 

Pain at the pump. The U.S. Department of Energy has begun releasing 86 mln barrels of crude oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve as part of a larger coordinated effort with other countries to stabilize energy markets disrupted by the Iran war. The drawdown is the first stage of a planned 172 mln barrel U.S. release within a broader 400 mln barrel global plan to ease skyrocketing fuel prices. This comes as shipping through the Strait of Hormuz (responsible for about one-fifth of global oil flows) continues to be severely disrupted. Deliveries are expected to begin reaching the market within a week and will continue for roughly four months. There is a catch though, with companies that receive the oil responsible for returning it later with additional barrels as a premium. The move also comes amid political pressure on Trump to curb rising gasoline prices ahead of the upcoming midterm elections. 

Asian EM currencies have weakened amid the Iran war and rising oil prices, but regional central banks are beginning to intervene in an attempt to stabilize markets. Central banks, including the Bank Indonesia and the Reserve Bank of India have stepped into foreign-exchange markets to support their currencies, while China has signaled backing for the yuan by setting stronger daily reference rates. EM central banks have accumulated roughly $8 tln in foreign-exchange reserves, built up over years for periods of volatility, allowing them to counter capital outflows and defend exchange rates. Although currencies like the South Korean won, Indonesian rupiah, and Indian rupee have hit multi-year lows, analysts say the large reserve buffers may help limit further declines unless oil prices rise again, which would put additional pressure on energy-importing Asian economies and strengthen the U.S. dollar. 

Central banks aren’t only looking at their currencies. The war in Iran is forcing central banks around the world to reassess their policy outlook as rising oil prices threaten to reignite inflation and delay interest-rate cuts. Still, major institutions including the BoC, Fed, ECB, and BOE are expected to keep borrowing costs unchanged (for now at least) while they evaluate how higher energy prices will affect inflation and economic growth. Policymakers remain cautious because sustained disruptions to oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz could push prices even higher and create stagflation risks. The situation is expected to play out differently across the globe, with markets still expecting potential rate cuts in the U.S. while traders increasingly price in possible tightening in parts of Europe as well as Canada if inflation pressures continue. We’ll see what they have to say as it is a busy week for central banks. There will be rate announcements from the BoC and Fed on Wednesday, followed by the ECB, BOE, and BOJ on Thursday.  

At the Academy Awards last night, One Battle After Another dominated the evening, winning six Oscars including Best Picture and Best Director for Paul Thomas Anderson. The film also earned awards for Adapted Screenplay, Editing, Casting and Best Supporting Actor for Sean Penn (who was a notable no-show). Sinners won four awards, including Best Actor for Michael B. Jordan and Best Cinematography for Autumn Durald Arkapaw, who became the first woman and first Black cinematographer to win the category. Jessie Buckley won Best Actress for her role in Hamnet, becoming the first Irish actress to win the award, while Amy Madigan took Best Supporting Actress for her performance in the horror film Weapons. Golden got the gold as well, with the K-Pop Demon Hunter song becoming the first K-pop track to win Best Original Song. 


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Company news

Dollar Tree gave a mixed annual outlook, raising some doubts about its ability to keep winning over shoppers with low prices. Sales are projected to be as much as $20.7 bln this year, just missing projections. That equates to growth of about 7%, following a gain of 10% last fiscal year. The average analyst estimate for adjusted earnings came in at about the midpoint of the company’s forecast. Dollar Tree’s low-price model has been resonating with consumers facing economic stress. The retailer’s offerings have even helped it attract more higher higher-income customers. It’s also been helped by divesting its Family Dollar chain last year to focus on its better-performing namesake stores. For the fourth quarter, Dollar Tree reported a sales gain nearly in line with expectations, while an increase in transaction values boosted results.

CapEx keeps growing. Meta Platforms will pay as much as $27 bln over the next five years for access to AI infrastructure from cloud provider Nebius Group NV as it spends aggressively to compete with the industry’s top frontier models. Nebius, a so-called neocloud that operates data centers and has a strategic partnership with Nvidia Corp., will provide Meta $12 bln of dedicated capacity starting in early 2027. Meta also committed to buying as much as $15 bln in additional capacity that the cloud provider is building for third-party customers. The spend represents one of the biggest single contracts that Meta has signed, underscoring the Instagram and Facebook owner’s push for more computing capacity to power the development of AI products. Last year, it signed a separate $3 bln deal with Nebius. Meta and some of its largest tech peers are expected to spend some $650 bln in 2026 to build data centers and purchase other infrastructure in anticipation of an AI services explosion in the coming years. Meta has made AI the company’s top priority, and is investing heavily to compete with rivals like OpenAI and Google. It has also inked multi-billion dollar partnership agreements with Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. for AI infrastructure since the start of the year. And Meta is developing its own chips in-house.  

Alibaba Group Holding is setting up a business unit to bring its sprawling AI services and development endeavors under a single umbrella, signaling its determination to profit off AI. The company is moving the research team that develops its flagship Qwen models, the consumer-facing app division, as well as major AI-related products into a unit headed by CEO Eddie Wu. Simply called Alibaba Token Hub, the new division will also oversee Alibaba’s Slack-like DingTalk app and devices under the Quark brand such as smart glasses. The revamp comes as Alibaba grapples with questions about its AI strategy following the recent sudden departure of Qwen’s star research lead. The idea is to quicken interaction between the various teams that underpin Alibaba’s broader effort, from researchers to product development and design.  


Commodities

Oil prices are taking a bit of a breather as supply risks in the Middle East remained elevated following a second attack in three days on Fujairah, a vital port in the UAE that’s just outside the Strait of Hormuz. Crude benchmarks have surged more than 40% in the past two weeks since conflict escalation in the Middle East. The U.S. said late on Friday that it has struck military sites on Kharg Island, which handles the bulk of Iran’s oil shipments, although the Fars News Agency reported that exports from the island were continuing. In an interview with the Financial Times, Trump said he could delay his planned summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping if Beijing didn’t help unblock the waterway. He also warned in that interview that NATO would face a “very bad” future if member states failed to help in Hormuz. A trickle of vessels is beginning to find a way through Hormuz. Over the weekend a Greek shipowner sent a vessel with its signal switched off, while a Pakistani oil tanker also appears to have made the perilous journey. India is in talks with Iran to ensure safe passage for six tankers carrying LNG. In a sign of the squeeze on global crude supply, the IEA said Sunday that oil from an unprecedented stockpile release will be made available immediately in Asia. The agency’s statement came after it received implementation plans for the record 400 mln barrel reserve release announced last week.

Gold slipped below $5,000 earlier this morning, following two consecutive weeks of losses, as the conflict in the Middle East entered a third week and investors weighed the inflationary impact of higher oil prices. Rising oil prices and inflationary concerns arising from the US-Israel war with Iran have put the metal under pressure, raising the prospect of fewer Federal Reserve interest rate cuts. Uncertainty over how long the war will last makes it difficult to assess the impact on markets and the wider economy. An aide to President Trump said the conflict could last four to six weeks, while both sides have given mixed signals. As the war drags on, prospects for an interest-rate cut have dwindled. The latest U.S. consumer spending data, released Friday, showed spending barely rose in January due to weaker-than-expected economic growth, even before the war began. Meanwhile, U.S.  consumer sentiment declined to a three-month low as fears mounted in recent weeks about the impact on gasoline prices from the conflict. Rate markets now see virtually no chance of a rate cut at this week’s Fed meeting.  


Fixed income and economics

Bond investors are beginning to debate whether the rise in oil prices from the Iran conflict will shift markets from worrying about inflation to worrying about an economic slowdown. For now, the main concern is that higher energy prices could keep inflation elevated and delay interest-rate cuts by the Fed, pushing U.S. Treasury yields higher. However, some strategists argue that stubbornly pricey oil could eventually weaken consumer spending and economic growth, creating a growth shock that would ultimately push yields lower again as investors seek safer assets. Markets may be underestimating this downside growth risk, suggesting that Treasury bonds could become attractive if slowing activity forces the Fed to ease policy more than currently expected. 

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Optimism is the faith that leads to achievement. Nothing can be done without hope and confidence.

Helen Keller

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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