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December 3, 2025
  
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Today


Futures are higher this morning, including the TSX, which slipped yesterday as weakness in commodities pulled the materials sector lower. Canadian bank earnings continue today, with Royal Bank and National reporting before the bell and EQB due after the close. In the U.S., a batch of delayed economic releases will continue to be released over the next few days following the government shutdown, alongside real-time data. Today brings postponed import and export price indexes, weekly jobless claims arrive tomorrow, and the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, PCE, comes Friday.

Corporations feeling the pressure? Private-sector hiring in the U.S. weakened in November, with companies cutting 32,000 jobs, the largest drop since early 2023. ADP data released this morning signals softening in the labour market just days before the Fed’s final policy meeting of the year. With the official jobs report delayed by the government shutdown, this ADP release carries a lot more weight than unusual for policymakers, who remain split on whether to deliver a third consecutive rate cut amid slowing employment and still-elevated inflation. Experts have noted that hiring has turned choppy as businesses face cautious consumers and economic uncertainty, with small firms leading November’s pullback. 

More pauses in sight. Inflation in the euro-area rose to 2.2% in November from 2.1%, with core inflation holding at 2.4% and services prices rising slightly, reinforcing the ECB’s view that there’s little justification for further rate cuts. With inflation hovering near the ECB’s 2% target for nine months (although it still varies across member countries), most expect the deposit rate to remain at 2% through 2026 after this year’s series of cuts from a 4% peak. ECB President Christine Lagarde has emphasized confidence in current policy settings, while upcoming projections may show a temporary dip in inflation due to delayed EU carbon-pricing rules. Despite lingering wage-driven pressures in services, wage growth is moderating, supporting a continued downward inflation trend. In any case, the central bank appears ready to adjust policy if geopolitical or economic conditions change. 

Changing of the guard? The S&P 500 has rebounded over the last week and is now once again in striking distance of record highs. What’s interesting about the recent run up is that unlike earlier rallies, Big Tech is lagging while healthcare and industrial stocks such as Eli Lilly, Cardinal Health, and Biogen lead performance. Since the index’s last peak in October, the S&P 500 tech sector has fallen 4.2%, with major AI-driven names like Nvidia, Microsoft, and Meta declining as investors question high valuations and whether heavy AI infrastructure spending will actually translate into profits. The recent rotation into other sectors suggests broader confidence in the U.S. economy amid expectations of continued Fed rate cuts, though continued performance leadership outside tech would require stronger earnings growth from those non-tech industries. 

With a finish line now in sight for Jerome Powell’s term, we all knew he wasn’t going to last forever, but at least it appears he won’t be fired.  Powell, who was originally Trump’s choice to replace Janet Yellen as Fed chair, is set to see out his term. Trump said he will announce his choice for the next Fed chair in early 2026, matching the timeline suggested by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. Trump, who has repeatedly criticized  Powell as too slow to cut interest rates, is expected to select someone more aggressive in easing policy when Powell’s term ends in May. White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett is viewed as the leading contender, though other finalists include Fed Governors Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman, former Governor Kevin Warsh, and BlackRock’s Rick Rieder. While Trump says he has already made his decision, the nomination (which requires Senate confirmation) remains open to last-minute shifts given his tendency to pick personnel based off his mood that day. 

Even with the release of delayed reports, not all the shutdown-affected data will be recovered. The September Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) was cancelled outright after the shutdown forced the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) to halt survey operations, furlough staff, and miss its reference-month collection window. Several state employment and unemployment reports for September and October were dropped for the same reason. The gap left by these missing data points removes a key lens into labour demand, hiring momentum, and wage pressures. For analysts and markets, that means relying more on higher-frequency indicators, private surveys, and market pricing to assess economic direction. For the Fed, it may complicate the Fed’s near-term assessment of the economy at a time when policy decisions are particularly sensitive to the direction of job openings, wage pressures, and underlying demand. 

Automakers in the U.S. are beginning to feel the impact of losing federal EV tax credits, with Ford reporting a steep 61% drop in all-EV sales in November versus a year earlier, including significant declines for the Mustang Mach-E, E-Transit van and F-150 Lightning. This is playing out across the board, hitting other brands such as Hyundai and Kia, whose EV sales have more than halved. Meanwhile, hybrid sales are rising as consumers move towards cheaper, more practical alternatives amid high EV costs and the expired credit. Ford’s hybrid deliveries are up 19% year to date, and Hyundai posted a 42% jump in November. Automakers including Ford, Volkswagen, Toyota and Honda are now shifting strategy to emphasize hybrids, investing in expanded production and extended-range models to meet rising demand. 



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Company news


Royal Bank topped estimates on strong results in its capital-markets and wealth-management divisions, capping off a year that saw elevated trading activity and a return to dealmaking in the U.S. In wealth management, which includes LA-based subsidiary City National Bank, net income was $1.28 bln, more than the $1.02 bln average estimate. Royal Bank set aside slightly more than $1 bln in provisions for credit losses in the period, more than the $988 mln average analyst forecast. Royal Bank has delivered solid results for most of the year, apart from a surprise in the fiscal second quarter, when it set aside more money than expected for performing loans. It later released some of those provisions as the credit picture brightened. Royal also announced a dividend increase of 6%.

National Bank of Canada beat estimates on better-than-expected results at its capital-markets unit in the fiscal fourth quarter, a rebound for the division after it posted strong results earlier in the year but missed forecasts in the previous quarter. Companywide, provisions for loan losses totaled $244 mln, more than the $215 mln average estimate. National Bank is set to take over Laurentian Bank of Canada’s retail and small-business deposit and loan books with a three-way transaction announced yesterday. The agreement will see Canada’s Fairstone Bank acquire all of Laurentian’s shares for $1.9 billion and refocus the firm on commercial lending. National expects $200-250 mln in revenue synergies from that transaction. National also announced a dividend increase of 5%.  

Telus Corp. announced it’s putting future dividend increases on hold, responding to pressure from investors about its debt. Shares of Telus have tumbled 19% over the past three months and its dividend yield has shot up to more than 9% as analysts questioned its lack of growth and its investment strategy. Telus said it will hold its quarterly dividend at 41.84 Canadian cents per share “until such time as our share price and associated dividend yield better reflects the considerable growth prospects of Telus.” It’s aiming to cut its leverage ratio to 3.3 times earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization by the end of next year, from 3.5 times as of the end of September. It’s not just Telus having dividend issues, rival BCE Inc. has cut its dividend by more than half earlier this year. 

Macy’s Inc. beat earnings estimates and raised its guidance for the rest of the fiscal year, showing that consumers are still spending despite their economic concerns. Despite the outperformance, Macy’s stock declined after several positive reports from retailers had raised expectations. Macy’s shares had also gained 34% this year, including big gains over the past week or so. The stronger sales resulted in better-than-expected profit in the most recent quarter, with tariff mitigation efforts and cost cutting also contributing. Macy’s guidance for the rest of the fiscal year show that executives expect consumers to maintain some of the spending momentum they’ve shown during the Black Friday and Cyber Monday shopping events.  Some analysts had lifted their forecasts for Macy’s after retailer Kohl’s Corp. raised its full-year outlook at the end of November. Best Buy Co. and Dick’s Sporting Goods Inc. also boosted their guidance late last month, which provided more signs that U.S. shoppers are still willing to spend at retailers that sell what they want at the right price.  


Commodities


Oil prices are higher as traders weighed talks between the U.S. and Russia that have so far failed to end the war in Ukraine, while attacks on Moscow’s energy assets continued. The Kremlin said President Vladimir Putin held “very useful” talks with U.S. envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, though the sides failed to reach agreement on a plan to end the conflict in Ukraine. Geopolitical tensions are keeping the market volatile and adding a risk premium to prices, partly countering concerns about a growing surplus. That includes U.S. rhetoric against Venezuela, with President Trump suggesting the Pentagon will soon start targeting drug cartels with strikes on land. On the supply side, the American Petroleum Institute is reporting nationwide U.S. crude stockpiles increased by about 2.5 mln barrels last week, while inventories of gasoline expanded.

Copper is hitting a record high as orders surged for metal on the LME compounded worries that potential U.S. tariffs will fuel a global supply squeeze. LME prices rallied as much as 2.6% to trade above $11,400 a ton, surpassing a peak struck on Monday, after data from the exchange showed a spike in orders for copper in LME depots. in Asia. Copper prices have been running higher in recent weeks as a growing number of analysts have warned that global inventories could soon be drained to critically low levels as huge volumes of metal are shipped to the U.S. in anticipation of tariffs. The LME’s global benchmark price is up more than 30% this year, but U.S. futures have rallied even further, with investors betting that President Trump will announce levies on primary forms of the metal. The decision has had huge ramifications in the physical copper market, with traders once again ramping up shipments to American ports as U.S. futures surge. Producers have also announced that they’ll charge record premiums to supply customers in Europe and Asia next year, with buyers in effect compensating them for the additional profits they could make selling to the U.S.  


Fixed income and economics


Traders are positioning for a more dovish Fed next year as Kevin Hassett emerges as the frontrunner to replace Powell, prompting heavy activity in short-term SOFR curve structures that price in additional rate cuts once a Trump-backed chair takes over in June. Futures volumes rallied after Trump reiterated he will announce his pick early next year, with traders betting on a faster pace of easing that could drive bear steepening if long-end yields rise while short-term rates fall. Swaps now imply an almost certain 25 bp cut in December and roughly 85 bps of easing by late 2026. While that will be good news to many, some are warning that having Trump as a “shadow Fed chair” could complicate policy decisions and disrupt markets. 

Chart of the day

 

Markets


Quote of the day

 

The best preparation for tomorrow is doing your best today.

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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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