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June 25, 2026
  
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Today


It’s back on. Strong earnings from Micron after yesterday’s market close have reignited investor enthusiasm for AI-related stocks. The company comfortably exceeded expectations across all key financial metrics and, perhaps more importantly, said it expects the supply-demand imbalance in high-bandwidth memory chips to persist beyond 2027, highlighting that demand continues to exceed supply for its most advanced memory products (more details in Co. News below). The market reaction has been swift. Micron shares are up ~17% in premarket trading, with gains spreading across the semiconductor sector and helping lift Nasdaq and S&P 500 futures. TSX futures are also pointing higher after the index closed yesterday at a 13-day low. Overseas, markets are broadly stronger, led by AI-heavy indexes such as Japan’s Nikkei and South Korea’s Kospi, which gained 4.6% and 5.4%, respectively. Investors are also absorbing more economic data this morning including the just released May PCE Index, the Fed’s preferred inflation gage, and personal income data.

The U.S. economy grew faster than previously thought in Q1, with annualized GDP revised up to 2.1% from 1.6%, well above economists’ expectations of no change. The upward revision was driven by stronger business investment, government spending, and inventory accumulation, even as consumer spending reported lower than expectations at 0.5%, indicating households remained cautious. Inflation numbers also released this morning, did however, show U.S. inflation accelerating to a three-year high in May, with the Fed’s preferred PCE price index rising 4.1% year over year, while core PCE increased 3.4%, both matching expectations. Despite higher prices, inflation-adjusted consumer spending rose 0.3% from April, indicating households remain resilient even after the recent Iran-related energy shock. Together, the reports reinforce the view that inflation remains too elevated for the Fed to ease policy anytime soon, supporting expectations that interest rates will stay higher for longer, or potentially rise further if price pressures continue. 

The debasement trade, of buying gold, Bitcoin and other inflation hedges while avoiding the dollar, is losing momentum, mostly because investors now view Fed Chair Kevin Warsh as hawkish. Since Warsh was nominated, markets have priced in higher interest rates, a stronger dollar, and a more aggressive commitment to price stability, reversing many of the trends that fuelled gold and crypto gains over the last few years. Real Treasury yields have risen, the dollar has strengthened, and investors have pulled money from gold ETFs as expectations shift from monetary easing toward potential rate hikes. While long-term concerns about government debt, fiscal deficits, and currency debasement still linger, investors are now focused on tighter monetary policy and higher real yields. This has resulted in a rotation away from inflation hedges and back towards the dollar, with strategists saying that Warsh’s commitment to restoring the Fed’s inflation-fighting credibility has become the dominant force driving markets. 

The BoC confirmed that Canada’s economy is weak but noted that it is not in a recession despite GDP contracting for two consecutive quarters. Policymakers noted that a true recession requires a deep, broad, and sustained decline across the economy, whereas current weakness reflects excess capacity, a soft labour market, and one-off factors like lower government defense spending. The Bank expects growth to pick up in Q2 which is why it kept its policy rate at 2.25% but cited the difficult balance between supporting a sluggish economy and preventing broader inflation. Officials emphasized that underlying inflation remains contained, with core inflation measures close to the 2% target and limited evidence that higher energy costs are spreading throughout the economy. Following the recent easing of tensions in the Middle East, Tiff Macklem said upside inflation risks have lessened, giving the Bank more flexibility while it continues to monitor growth and inflation. 

Fire sale. The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz following the U.S.-Iran agreement has shifted global oil markets from fears of shortage to signs of oversupply. A rise of crude exports from the Persian Gulf, combined with weaker-than-expected Chinese demand and earlier strategic inventory releases, has flooded buyers with available cargoes, driving prices lower. Brent crude has fallen below $75 a barrel, Middle Eastern oil is trading in a bearish contango structure, and Angolan crude is selling at its steepest discounts in more than a decade. Although low global inventories still leave the market vulnerable to future disruptions, the immediate focus has shifted towards excess supply, with analysts warning that demand is currently insufficient to absorb the flood of oil coming out of the Gulf. 

Paying it forward. The largest U.S. banks are rewarding shareholders after passing the Fed’s annual stress tests, announcing higher dividends and, in some cases, major share buyback programs. JPMorgan raised its quarterly dividend 10% to $1.65 per share and authorized a $50 billion stock repurchase program, while Goldman Sachs increased its dividend to $5.00, Morgan Stanley to $1.15, and Wells Fargo to $0.50 per share. This year’s stress tests proved that all major banks have sufficient capital to withstand a severe economic downturn, but the results have less regulatory impact than usual because the Fed has frozen stress capital buffer requirements until 2027 while it revises the testing framework. In any case, the announcements highlight the strong financial position of the largest U.S. banks and signal continued confidence in returning excess capital to shareholders through dividends and buybacks. 

Historic run continues. Canada’s 2 to 1 loss to Switzerland was a disappointing end to the group stage, not because advancing was ever guaranteed, but because expectations have risen so dramatically. Despite the defeat, Canada reached the men’s World Cup knockout stage for the first time in its history, a feat that would have seemed ambitious only a few years ago. Finishing second in the group means the team must unfortunately leave Vancouver and its passionate fan base to face South Africa in LA, rather than playing a Round of 32 match on home soil. Injuries to Alphonso Davies and Ismaël Koné undoubtedly hurt Canada’s chances against an experienced Swiss side, but the team remains alive with an opportunity to continue its historic run. Canada returns to action against South Africa on Sunday at 3:00 p.m. Let’s go Canada! 


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Company news


Micron delivered a defining moment for AI yesterday, posting Q3 revenue of $41.5 bln and EPS  of $25.11 against consensus of $35.7 bln and $20.49, then guiding Q4 revenue to $50 bln, a figure that left Wall Street’s $43.2 bln looking almost outdated. The results landed at a charged moment, with chipmaker stocks under pressure on fears that the AI boom spending was fading, making Micron’s confidence a strong indicator for the sector. CEO Sanjay Mehrotra said there is “no line of sight” to when supply catches up with demand, with 16 customer agreements with three years average in length suggests Micron has created a form of pricing stability that could potentially break the industry’s historic boom and bust cycle, which sent shares up ~17% in premarket trading on a stock that has already more than tripled year-to-date.

Jamieson Wellness is working with several dealers to explore a sale, reaching out to prospective bidders, including private equity firms and corporate suitors. The company said it’s received an unsolicited proposal, and there’s no assurance any talks will result in a deal. “If it does not, the Board of Directors remains committed to, and confident in, its current strategic plan.” Jamieson reported first-quarter revenue growth of more than 16% year over year and has expanded beyond its core Canadian business in recent years through acquisitions and international growth initiatives, including a push into China and the 2022 acquisition of U.S. supplement brand Youtheory. 

Canadian engineering company AtkinsRéalis filed a Notice of Intent with the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission this week to begin certification of its Enhanced CANDU 6 reactor, marking the company’s formal entry into the U.S. market at a point where AI-driven power demand and a government target to quadruple nuclear capacity by 2050 are creating a rare opening for new reactor technology. CEO Ian Edwards confirmed active talks are already underway with U.S. utilities and  hyperscalers who view nuclear power as a viable solution for powering data centers.  


Commodities


Oil prices are slightly lower with benchmarks having erased all of its wartime gains as flows through the Strait of Hormuz ramped up following progress on a US-Iran peace deal. Brent is down for a fourth consecutive session, dropping below $72.50, while WTI is sitting below $70. Key parts of the market are suddenly in abundance of supply, with buyers inundated by offers from the Middle East, a dramatic reversal that’s led to widespread price weakness. Saudi Arabian ships are heading for the key Ras Tanura oil terminal, a sign that the kingdom is set to restart exports from inside the Persian Gulf for the first time since March. The rising availability of oil has pushed down the price of physical barrels from Angola to the UAE as Brent’s prompt spread flipped into a bearish contango structure on Wednesday for the first time since the war started. The latest decline, following the reopening of Hormuz, is helping ease inflationary fears and help bring down prices at the pump. The focus now turns to how soon supplies can return to prewar levels, and whether the surplus that was expected to dominate 2026 will return. In a sign that some key producers are eager to pump more, Iraq warned Thursday it may leave OPEC if it doesn’t get a higher output quota, similar to the path of the UAE.

Copper edged higher, after touching a seven-week low yesterday, as a weakening U.S. dollar and an AI stock rally buoyed sentiment for the metal used in electrification. The upward move came a day after a -2.1% slump on the LME when the prospect of higher interest rates sapped risk appetite.  Industrial metals were under pressure earlier in the week when a rising dollar weighed on  commodities priced in the currency as Federal Reserve policymakers signaled growing support for higher borrowing costs. 


Fixed income and economics


Bonds are continuing to rally as oil prices dropped to pre-war levels, tempering inflation expectations and Fed interest-rate hikes. Treasury yields fell as much as 10 basis points yesterday, led by the longest maturities, which stand to lose the most from elevated inflation over time. The 30-year touched 4.85%, the lowest level since April 8 while the two-year yields, more closely tied to Fed policy, eased for a second day to about 4.14%, pulling back from the 16-month high of 4.23% hit Monday. The bond rally is causing traders to reassess the Fed’s likely interest-rate path, a week after piling into bets it could hike as soon as next month following Chairman Kevin Warsh’s first meeting leading the bank. Those rate hike expectations could fade quickly if the oil price continues to drop and eases inflation pressures or the job market weakens. Inflation-protected Treasury debt lagged as oil’s retreat curbed demand for hedges against rising consumer prices. The spread between the five-year TIPs,  and the conventional five-year yield, which represents the expected average inflation rate to maturity, shrank to 2.21%, the low end of its range since October 2024. While breakeven inflation rates for 10- and 30-year TIPS also declined to their lowest levels in more than a year. The Treasury rally also trimmed the yield for an auction of five-year Treasury notes which posted a 4.200% yield, despite trading at yields as high as 4.29% since the sale was announced last Thursday. It was still the highest-yielding five-year auction since January 2025.  

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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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