Today
Equity futures are moving lower this morning as markets begin to transition away from earnings- and AI-led optimism towards concerns around inflation, energy security, and geopolitics. April’s hot U.S. CPI print, combined with rising oil prices and supply-chain disruptions tied to the Iran conflict, have strengthened the case that central banks may need to maintain tighter policy for longer than previously anticipated. Headline inflation was up 0.6% in April and rose 3.8% year over year, higher than expected, while core prices also rose above estimates. The inflation print has put pressure on equities, bonds, and global currencies, suggesting markets are repricing toward a more stagflation-sensitive environment, where growth resilience alone may no longer be sufficient to offset inflation shocks.
AI tax? South Korea is debating implementing an “AI citizen dividend”, highlighting how the exceptional profits generated by the global AI boom are beginning to trigger broader political and social questions around wealth concentration and redistribution. As semiconductor champions like Samsung and SK Hynix continue to rally, policymakers are beginning to explore whether portions of these gains should more directly benefit the broader population, potentially creating a new model for balancing technological capitalism with social equity. While this is just a proposal at the moment, the market’s quick reaction this morning underscores investor’s sensitivity to even modest signs of regulatory or fiscal intervention in AI-driven sectors.
Think this has happened before. The recent equity market is becoming dependent on a small number of dominant AI and tech leaders, creating a level of concentration risk that extends well beyond U.S. mega-cap stocks into major international and EM. While this concentration has led to outsized returns, it also leaves passive investors and benchmark indices more vulnerable to sharp drawdowns if expectations for AI monetization, earnings growth, or capital efficiency disappoint. It’s worth noting, however, that concentration alone does not guarantee overvaluation, with many leading firms able to justify their weight through earnings power, but it does raise sensitivity to a narrower set of corporate outcomes.
Emerging markets experienced a significant rebound in April as global investors returned to risk assets following March’s Iran-war-driven panic, with debt markets leading the recovery far more than equities. This suggests investors are regaining confidence in EM yield opportunities, particularly outside China, but remain selective and cautious rather than fully restoring pre-crisis risk appetite. Regions such as Latin America, South Korea, and Taiwan continue to benefit from stronger macro positioning and AI-linked industrial exposure, while China remains comparatively weaker due to continued structural and capital flow concerns.
Global markets are showing signs of renewed risk appetite, with IPO issuance, M&A activity, and large-scale financing accelerating. This is especially notable given the high degree of geopolitical uncertainty and elevated inflation concerns investors face. The rise in public listings, particularly across AI, energy, defense, and technology sectors, suggests corporate issuers are aggressively capitalizing on strong equity valuations and investor enthusiasm before potential macro volatility or seasonal slowdowns arise. Experts expect to see more deals in the coming months as markets look through short-term geopolitical and macroeconomic risks.
Toronto’s condo market appears to be undergoing one of its longest corrections with oversupply, weak investor demand, softer population growth, and deteriorating affordability all contributing to a downturn that some experts say could continue for years. Unlike a short cyclical pullback, this correction resembles a market reset, where falling rents, declining investor participation, and elevated inventory continue to suppress pricing power. While detached housing has shown more resilience, the condo segment remains vulnerable due to its heavy reliance on investor-driven demand. This trend is also playing out in different markets across the country and will have implications for developers and investors for years to come.
Fuel squeeze. The Iran conflict is beginning to disrupt global air travel as reduced shipping through the Strait of Hormuz tightens jet fuel supplies and drives prices higher. Jet fuel in Europe has surged above 200 per barrel, forcing airlines to cut flights, raise fares, and reduce summer capacity by nearly 4%, or roughly 9.3 million seats globally. The impact is also being felt in Canada, with Air Canada and WestJet scaling back select routes and adjusting capacity as fuel and operating costs rise. While technology and AI spending continue to support broader equity markets, the fuel crunch highlights how the war is spilling into the real economy through higher transportation and consumer costs. Even if shipping routes reopen, higher airfares and supply disruptions could last through the peak summer travel season.
Diversion: Why?