Launch Pad

Stay on top of market movements with the Launch Pad. Updated daily.

December 23, 2025
  
Click here to sign up for the Launch Pad
     

Today


This will be our final Launch Pad of 2025, and we want to start by thanking you for joining us each morning. Your engagement helps make this note what it is, and we look forward to bringing you more content in the new year that you will continue to find informative and insightful. It has been quite a year, marked by geopolitical tensions and sharp market ups and downs. Amid the occasional chaos, we also shared offbeat stories and daily “diversion” videos, which we hope added a bit of levity along the way. We wish you and your families a warm, restful holiday season and a happy new year. We look forward to being back with you on Monday, January 5. Until then, enjoy the break and we’ll see you in 2026!

Stocks are mixed this morning with U.S. futures lower, and TSX futures higher. Markets are digesting the final batch of key economic data for the year including delayed quarterly GDP data through September, pushed back by the U.S. government shutdown, and Conference Board consumer confidence numbers due later this morning. Christmas came early for the TSX yesterday, with Canadian equities hitting a new high helping the index close above 32,000 for the first time, led by a strong rally in materials as gold and silver also hit record highs. Stocks in the U.S. also started the week higher, led by a rebound in tech shares that lifted nearly all S&P 500 sectors and pushed the S&P 500 and Dow to within 1% of their recent record highs 

Economic growth accelerated in the U.S. in Q3, with real GDP growing at a 4.3% annualized pace (the fastest in two years) driven by resilient consumer spending, solid business investment and more stable trade conditions. This followed an already-strong 3.8% expansion in the prior quarter. The data, released later than usual due to the government shutdown, highlights continued momentum in the U.S. economy despite policy uncertainty and mixed sentiment among the population. Closer to home, Canada’s economy returned to modest growth in November, with advanced estimates for November showing GDP rising 0.1% after a 0.3% contraction in October, underscoring resilience despite the drag from U.S. tariffs. The October decline, which was in line with expectations, reflected weakness across both goods-producing and services-producing industries, while the November rebound suggests stabilization rather than renewed momentum. Against this backdrop of steady but uncertain growth, the BoC has held its policy rate at 2.25% and signaled that it is likely to keep rates on hold in the near term unless the outlook shifts meaningfully. 

Staying put. A new report found that fewer Canadians are changing jobs, with the monthly job-switching rate falling to about four per 1,000 workers, down from roughly seven before the pandemic. This comes as job vacancies decline, housing costs rise, and economic uncertainty makes workers more cautious. Economists warn this slowdown is reducing career mobility, especially for young and early-career workers which can slow wage and productivity growth. While fewer job changes can reflect improved job satisfaction, the broader backdrop shows a weakening labour market, with vacancies continuing to fall for more than two years and are now roughly half their 2022 peak. Housing constraints, weaker confidence, and ongoing shocks (including the pandemic, inflation, and trade tensions) are also discouraging workers from moving. 

A tale of two safe havens. This year saw some classic safety trades fail to protect, while others literally shined.  Precious metals and defense stocks were the clear winners this year amid a turbulent global backdrop, with gold rising more than 60% (its strongest gain since the late 1970s) while silver and platinum more than doubled, supported by central-bank demand and their role in the tech build-out. On the other hand, other traditional safe havens disappointed as government bonds delivered weak or negative real returns, defensive equity sectors lagged growth, and oil prices fell. Haven currencies also diverged, with the Swiss franc holding gains while the yen and U.S. dollar weakened, and volatility strategies failed to pay off. Overall, caution was penalized this year, with investors rewarded for exposure to metals and growth assets rather than the typical safety plays. 

Wrapping up the year with a bow. Global equities delivered impressive returns in 2025, with some markets posting double-digit gains and regions like Europe, Japan, EM, and the UK benefiting from improving growth, fiscal support, and more attractive valuations. The results showed that investors did not need to solely rely on the U.S. (and just tech) for growth. Sector-wise, opportunities moved beyond tech, with financials seeing solid gains, healthcare trading at a rare discount despite resilient earnings, and AI-related infrastructure, utilities, and clean energy providing indirect exposure to AI without the hefty price tags and volatility. While the AI boom may continue, strategists note that investors who are concerned of elevated valuations may still have room to participate while also diversifying by region and sectors. 

Tariffs not working for everyone, no cheers here. Jim Beam, one of the largest makers of American whiskey globally, is shutting down bourbon production at one of its Kentucky distilleries for a year.  Trump’s trade war with Canada has contributed to the decline in U.S. liquor sales after Canada boycotted American booze, and more young adults are cutting back on the consumption of alcohol. Jim Beam, owned by Suntory Global Spirits, is one of Kentucky’s biggest bourbon producers, and the $9 billion whiskey bourbon industry has been struggling to manage its abundant supply of liquor against the drop in demand. Perhaps, this will be part of the CUSMA talks that will be happening in early 2026.   



DiversionMy wrapping will not look like this

 
The
Tactical model 
(% equity weight)

To learn more, please click here.
 
 

Company news


Novo Nordisk won approval to sell a pill version of its blockbuster obesity shot Wegovy in the U.S., a crucial step in its effort to defend its market share from rival Eli Lilly & Co. Novo will start selling the pill in the U.S. in early January. The approval was based on the results of the Oasis 4 trial, which found people taking a 25 milligram pill once daily lost about 13.6% of their body weight over 64 weeks. The company said it filed for approval in Europe and other parts of the world in the second half of 2025. The pill is crucial for Novo’s strategy to take on Lilly, which has said its own oral obesity drug could be approved by March. That would give Novo a head start of just a few months. The company plans to sell the 1.5 milligram starting dose of the pill to cash-pay patients at an introductory price of $149 a month.

Alphabet has agreed to buy clean energy developer Intersect Power LLC for $4.75 billion in cash, plus existing debt, marking one of the largest deals by the tech giant to dramatically expand its data center footprint for AI. The acquisition intended to give Alphabet’s Google access to more electricity for its data centers as aging U.S. grids struggle to meet power demand that’s booming for the first time in decades thanks in part to artificial intelligence. Google took a minority stake in the energy provider last year by entering a partnership with Intersect to build big energy plants next to data center campuses. Intersect, backed by private equity firm TPG Inc., has focused on clean energy solutions to help power large data centers, including solar and battery storage projects. The company has $15 billion of energy assets in operation or under construction in the U.S., according to its website. As part of the deal, Alphabet will acquire Intersect’s power development platform and team, including the existing in-development assets that are already contracted by Google.  


Commodities


Oil prices are higher for a fifth straight day as traders weighed the U.S. clampdown on shipments from Venezuela against weak demand. Geopolitical conflict on the seas has risen with the U.S. boarding one tanker, seizing another and recently pursuing a third near Venezuela, as Washington piles pressure on the government of Nicolas Maduro. Still, more than a dozen vessels have loaded oil off the country’s coast since the U.S. intensified efforts to curb Venezuela’s crude revenue. Geopolitical stresses, including the threat of U.S. land strikes against drug operations in Latin America and the ongoing war in Ukraine, have helped stop a slide in oil prices that has been underway since mid-June. Crude benchmarks are down nearly –20% this year, and heading for the biggest annual drop since 2020, as increasing supply outpaces demand.

Copper rallied to a record above $12,000 a ton as mine outages and trade disruptions tied to Trump’s tariff agenda upended global supply chains, setting the metal on course for its biggest annual gain since 2009. A rush by traders to ship copper into the U.S. ahead of potential tariffs has tightened availability elsewhere, sparking a bidding war even as demand in China (which consumes about half of global supply) has softened. Supply risks have added to the rally, with mine disruptions across the globe and warnings from major banks that output is falling adding to concerns. Analysts now expect the global copper market to face its largest shortfall in more than two decades next year, raising expectations that prices can rise further despite some skepticism that prices have run ahead of current fundamentals. 



Fixed income and economics

 

Economists expect the BoC to keep its policy rate at 2.25% next year, but if it does move, the next step is more likely to be a hike than a cut. The central bank plans to watch how earlier rate cuts filter through the economy as it works to keep inflation near 2% amid mixed economic signals. Despite surprise jobs numbers, gains are mostly part-time, total hours worked have slipped, and business investment remains weak, while population growth and productivity are slowing. Risks tied to the 2026 CUSMA review and ongoing U.S. tariffs are also weighing on the outlook, and many major banks forecast no change to rates next year, although a growing cohort see potential hike late in 2026. 

Bond traders are making bullish bets on U.S. Treasuries, loading up on options that would pay off if the 10-year yield falls back to around 4% in the coming weeks. CME data show unusually heavy buying of a single March 10-year options contract, with roughly $80 million in premium spent and open interest rising more than 300% in just a week. The trades signal strong belief that yields will slip despite hovering closer to 4.15%–4.20%. The trade is positioned to capture potential shifts in rate expectations following the Fed’s January policy meeting, at a time when Treasury volatility is near four-year lows and year-end data is few and far between. While recent auctions have met solid demand, traders appear to be positioning ahead of early-2026 catalysts, particularly the December employment report, which could reignite a bond rally and push yields meaningfully lower. 


Chart of the day


Markets


Quote of the day

 

There’s no use doing a kindness if you do it a day too late.

Charles Kingsley

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.

Related articles

Market Ethos

Ethos rewind: the year’s biggest themes

December 15, 2025. Market Ethos. As is tradition, this final Ethos of the year takes a look back at the most popular editions based on…

1 minute read

Investor Strategy

Finish line in sight

8 December 2025. Investor Strategy. At the moment, lots of market-friendly AI capex spending, decent economic data and somewhat lower rates/yields is providing a pretty…

1 minute read

Market Ethos

Laggards need to join the party

December 1, 2025. Market Ethos. The TSX may enjoy solid returns in 2026, but it is going to be tough, given valuations. To keep the…

1 minute read