Launch Pad

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September 17, 2025
  
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Today

Futures are mixed this morning while U.S. treasuries are holding onto gains, hovering around 4.01% as of the time of writing. It’s decision day for both the Bank of Canada and the Federal Reserve, with markets expecting quarter-point cuts from each. The BoC already eased twice this year in January and March, before holding steady through three meetings, while the Fed has remained on the sidelines, constrained by stickier U.S. inflation and earlier resilience in growth. A move from both today would signal a shift toward easier policy, which could create conditions for lower yields and a softer U.S. dollar, though the reaction will depend heavily on guidance (which may be complicated given succession plans for Powell) and incoming data, and the cuts also highlight concerns about slowing growth that may temper investor enthusiasm.  

In Canada, the latest inflation report added weight to expectations for further easing. Headline CPI rose 1.9% in August from a year earlier, up from 1.7% in July but slightly below forecasts. The increase was driven largely by gasoline, which fell less than the prior month, while most underlying measures continued to moderate. Shelter inflation eased to 2.6%, and CPI excluding food and energy also decelerated to 2.4%. The Bank of Canada’s two preferred core measures averaged 3.05% in August, down from 3.1% in July, while the three-month moving average still trending lower. On a monthly basis, CPI fell 0.1%. With the economy showing signs of slack, including two months of job losses and a 1.6% annualized GDP contraction in the second quarter, policymakers appear to have the data they need to resume easing. Markets will now be focused on how policymakers frame the outlook, which will shape whether today’s moves are seen as the start of a broader easing cycle or a more cautious step. 

Shoppers are still showing up. U.S. retail sales rose 0.6% in August, beating forecasts and marking a third straight monthly gain, with nine of 13 categories advancing on strength from online shopping, clothing, and sporting goods tied to back-to-school demand. Excluding autos, sales were up 0.7%, while the control group that feeds into GDP also climbed 0.7%. Because this measure strips out volatile components such as autos, gas, food services, and building materials, it offers a clearer read on core goods spending and points to a potentially solid third quarter. The data show consumers remain resilient despite tariffs, subdued sentiment, and a cooling labor market, helped by wages still outpacing inflation and wealth effects from rising stocks. The report highlights consumer resilience but also the Fed’s balancing act, with policymakers expected to cut rates today to cushion labor market weakness and broader growth risks. 

Staying with spending, U.S. consumer resilience is increasingly being carried by the top of the income distribution. Bloomberg reported the wealthiest 10% of Americans now account for nearly half of all consumer spending, the highest share on record, according to Moody’s Analytics. Their spending has helped underpin growth even as job creation slows, debt delinquencies climb, and inflation pressures lower- and middle-income households. Economists caution that such reliance on affluent consumers makes the expansion fragile, with stock market performance and asset values playing an outsized role in sustaining demand. A downturn in equities or a shift in sentiment among high-income households could therefore quickly ripple through the broader economy. 

Let’s get ready to rumble. Canada, the U.S. and Mexico are beginning formal consultations ahead of the 2026 review of NAFTA, USMCA, CUSMA. Over the coming months, the three governments will assess how the deal has performed since it took effect in 2020, covering nearly $2 trillion in annual trade. Canada is expected to hold industry consultations later this fall while Mexico will publish guidelines this week to solicit public comments, and the U.S. Trade Representative has launched its own consultation process. The evaluation will shape negotiations on whether to extend the pact beyond its initial term in 2026, a process that could be contentious given Trump’s push on beautiful tariffs and his administration’s more combative trade stance. For Canada and Mexico, CUSMA remains a critical anchor, shielding much of the two countries’ trade from Washington’s recent tariff actions even as tensions with the U.S. rise. 

Pomp and circumstance. The U.K. is rolling out an elaborate royal welcome for Trump over the next two days, with King Charles, the Prince and Princess of Wales (Harry and Meghan will not be present), and a thousand-plus soldiers hosting him at Windsor Castle in a show of pomp aimed at securing diplomatic goodwill. Trump, the first U.S. president to receive two full state visits, has expressed admiration for the royal family, and Prime Minister Keir Starmer hopes the pageantry will help ease any tensions on trade and security talks. The visit will feature a horse-drawn carriage procession, banquets, and meetings with senior royals, showing how Britain is not shy about leveraging its monarchy as soft power even as its global influence wanes. While the government seeks closer U.S. cooperation in tech, finance, and energy, potential flashpoints remain over foreign policy challenges such as the war in Ukraine, and polls suggest the lavish treatment of Trump is at odds with U.K. public opinion.  


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Company news

It’s all about the likes. After more than a year of negotiations, the U.S. and China have struck a framework to separate the U.S. operations of social media platform TikTok to a consortium that includes Oracle, Andreessen Horowitz and Silver Lake Management LLC, with ByteDance’s stake in TikTok needing to fall below 20%. If the deal is finalized, it would resolve a persistent issue in Beijing-Washington relations that has become entangled in broader negotiations over trade. Under a law signed last year by then-President Joe Biden — the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act — the app’s owner, Beijing-based ByteDance Ltd., was ordered to either sell off TikTok US or discontinue the service. The initial deadline was in January, but Trump extended this multiple times after reentering office, most recently pushing it to Dec. 16. Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are set to discuss the deal when the pair speak on Sept. 19. How the framework evolves will likely have ramifications for the broader U.S. social media landscape, too, where rivals including Meta Platforms Inc. and Alphabet Inc. are fighting for market share. 

In other U.S./China negotiation headlines, the Financial Times is reporting that China’s internet watchdog has instructed companies including Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and ByteDance Ltd. to terminate orders for Nvidia’s RTX Pro 6000D. The Cyberspace Administration of China told companies this week to stop testing the chip and cancel existing orders. Before the order, several companies indicated they would order tens of thousands of the product, which Nvidia introduced to get around restrictions on the shipment of advanced AI chips to China. Nvidia has found itself in the middle of delicate negotiations between Beijing and Washington this year, because of its central role in driving future technologies including artificial intelligence.  

General Mills Inc. reported profit that beat estimates, as consumers shift to eating more meals at home. The Minneapolis-based company, which makes Cheerios, Progresso soup, Lucky Charms cereal and Blue Buffalo pet food, said its first-quarter adjusted earnings per share were 86 cents, topping analysts’ expectations of 82 cents. General Mills said a rise in cooking at home among value-conscious consumers struggling with inflation has helped boost some of its staples, including rice and beans (it was wise they did not suggest cash-strapped consumers eat cereal for dinner to save money). Still, shoppers who are anxious about the economy have been cautious with their spending and turned to private-label options and smaller package sizes.  


Commodities

Oil prices are lower after a three-day advance as traders assess the fallout from Ukrainian attacks on Russian energy infrastructure and a Federal Reserve interest rate decision later today. The recent gains haven’t been enough to push oil out of the $5 band it has been in for most of the past month-and-a-half, guard-railed between geopolitical tensions and bearish fundamentals. The accelerated return of OPEC+ supply has boosted predictions that a glut will form later in the year, while surging oil tanker earnings are offering a sign of higher output. In terms of supply, an U.S. industry report showed crude inventories fell by 3.4 million barrels last week. That would be the biggest drop in a month if confirmed by official data later on Wednesday. Brent’s second-month implied volatility was subdued after it fell to the lowest in more than three weeks on Monday, as outright prices remain firmly stuck within the narrow range seen since early August. 

Aluminum is higher for an eight consecutive day bringing it to the highest level since February, as traders counted down to an expected rate cut from the Federal Reserve and tracked moves in the U.S. dollar. Industrial metals have racked up gains this month ahead of what would be the first rate cut since Trump returned to the White House, with the U.S. dollar approaching its lowest level since 2022. Lower rates are seen as a positive for commodities, both because of the implied boost for U.S. growth, as well as the downward pressure on the greenback. However, there have been growing signs of pinched supplies in some metals. Aluminum’s one-day spread on the LME spiked to end at the highest since August 2024 yesterday, while zinc inventories extended their decline to the lowest in more than two years. In copper, meanwhile, a major mine in Indonesia has suspended operations after a mudflow trapped workers.  


Fixed income and economics


U.S. Treasury continued rise ahead of the Fed rate announcement with the 10-year yield just above 4%. Treasuries rose after stronger-than-expected retail sales failed to decrease bets that the Federal Reserve is set to begin a series of interest-rate cuts to support the weakening labour market. Short maturities, which are most sensitive to changes in monetary policy, declined the most, while Seven- to 30-year yields were lower by at least a basis point after an auction of 20-year bonds drew good demand. The monthly auction of 20-year bonds yesterday afternoon was awarded at 4.613%, slightly lower than its yield in trading just before the bidding deadline, an indication investors were willing to settle for a lower-than-anticipated return and the lowest one for a 20-year auction this year. This is quite a different story in yields compared to several months ago when concerns inflation, which still exceeds the Fed’s 2% long-term average goal, delayed Fed rate cuts in response to signs of stress in the job market and kept upward pressure on longer-term Treasury yields. Twenty- and 30-year bond yields last month exceeded five-year note yields by the widest margins in years, even as they remained below their highest levels of the year, reached during the second quarter.  


Chart of the day


 


Markets


Quote of the day

 

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I could to the best of my ability.
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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, Member Canadian Investor Protection Fund. Richardson Wealth is a trademark of James Richardson & Sons, Limited used under license.

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