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July 9, 2026
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Today


War jitters appear to be fading, at least in the equity markets for now. Yesterday’s trading session initially reflected a risk off response, with the Nasdaq falling as much as -1% in early trading following renewed attacks between the U.S. and Iran. However, buyers returned throughout the day, lifting the index to a 0.2% gain by the close. That resilience has carried into this morning, with Nasdaq futures again leading gains. Overseas, trading was mixed, with London’s FTSE the only major European index lower at the time of writing, while China’s and Japan’s markets led advances in Asia. Despite another round of overnight attacks, markets appear to be looking past the latest escalation. The U.S. said it had struck Iranian infrastructure and sites near the Strait of Hormuz to degrade Tehran’s ability to target commercial shipping, while Iran responded that passage through the Strait would be determined by Iranian arrangements, not American threats. Investors may also have taken some comfort from comments by Trump aboard Air Force One following the NATO summit, where he claimed Iran “want(ed) to make a deal so badly.” Whether those remarks reflected meaningful diplomatic progress remains unclear, but for now markets appear to be treating the conflict as a contained geopolitical risk rather than pricing in a broader disruption.

AI offsets global headwinds. The IMF left its 2026 global growth forecast unchanged at 3%, saying the AI investment boom has helped offset the economic damage from the Middle East war. The global economy has weathered the conflict better than initially feared, with AI-related exports and investment driving strong growth in economies like South Korea, Taiwan, Malaysia, and Thailand. Still, the IMF warned that risks remain tilted to the downside, due to renewed U.S.-Iran tensions, trade uncertainty, and the possibility that high expectations surrounding AI could unravel. Inflation has also proved more persistent, with the IMF raising its 2026 global consumer-price forecast to 4.7% from 4.4%, mainly due to higher energy and food costs. The group expects conditions to improve next year, raising its global growth forecast to 3.4%, although it’s worth noting that the latest escalation between the U.S. and Iran occurred after the report was finalized.

China saw consumer inflation slowing to 1% in June, while core inflation also eased to 1%, suggesting that weak domestic demand is limiting companies’ ability to pass higher costs on to consumers. Producer prices were still 4.1% higher than a year earlier, but they fell 0.3% from May, their first monthly decline since July 2025, leading some economists to find that factory-price inflation has peaked. Renewed U.S.-Iran tensions could temporarily lift energy-related prices, but analysts expect inflation to drift back toward very low levels once oil supplies normalize. The softer inflation outlook leaves room for additional policy support, with some economists expecting the People’s Bank of China to cut its key policy rate later this year as economic growth weakens. This comes after the PBOC said it plans to increase financial support for domestic consumption as the country struggles with strong production but weak demand. Attention now turns to Q2 GDP data, with economists expecting growth to slow from Q1, with the government now targeting annual growth of 4.5% to 5%.

Canada courts Saudi capital. Mark Carney is visiting Saudi Arabia, the first Canadian leader to do so in 26 years. Canada hopes to finalize a Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement (FIPA) this year, laying the groundwork for a potential free trade agreement. Discussions have centred on attracting investment from Saudi Arabia’s $900 billion Public Investment Fund into sectors such as critical minerals, energy, artificial intelligence, defence, agriculture, and life sciences, while also expanding opportunities for Canadian companies in the Kingdom. During the visit, Carney met with senior Saudi officials, including representatives from the Public Investment Fund, Saudi Aramco, and Ma’aden, Saudi Arabia’s state-backed mining company and one of the world’s largest producers of phosphate and other critical minerals. The meetings reflect Canada’s effort to position itself as a reliable supplier of critical minerals and other strategic resources while reducing its economic dependence on the U.S.

Hawkish. Minutes from the Fed’s June meeting showed that a few officials saw a case for raising interest rates, although the committee ultimately voted unanimously to keep the federal funds rate at 3.5% to 3.75%. Policymakers expressed growing concern about inflation while becoming somewhat less worried about the labour market, with several officials expecting rate hikes if price pressures remain high. The Fed discussed risks from strong AI-driven demand, high energy prices and tariffs, while recent renewed hostilities between the U.S. and Iran have further complicated the inflation outlook by pushing oil prices higher. Officials still expect solid economic growth and a stable labour market, but their rate projections revealed a more divided outlook, with half anticipating at least one hike this year and the other half expecting no increase or a cut. Investors are now focused on June inflation data for further clues about whether the Fed will begin tightening monetary policy later this year.

Na na na na na….Police in Mexico are searching for a vigilante dubbed the “Batman of Lagos de Moreno” after at least five motorcycle thieves were found duct-taped to lampposts over a 10-day period. Some of the men even had mustaches, cat whiskers, and the Spanish word for thief drawn on their faces, while the stolen motorcycles were left nearby. Authorities are treating the tied-up men as victims and are trying to identify the vigilante responsible for chasing them down and restraining them. The men were freed and treated for injuries, although it remains unclear whether they are also being investigated for the alleged thefts. With no arrests made, you may want to think twice about stealing a motorcycle if you happen to be in Mexico.


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Company news


Meta will invest around $10 billion to build its first data centre in Canada as the company expands its infrastructure to support its AI ambitions. The data centre will be based in Sturgeon County, Alberta and will have one gigawatt of power capacity, the equivalent of the power used by around 750,000 homes and will be largely run on natural gas. Meta said it’s funding the new electrical generation, which will be connected to Alberta’s grid. The Alberta project marks the 33rd data centre in its fleet. Meta’s latest data center announcement comes after Canadian midstream company Pembina Pipeline Corp. and partners Morgan Stanley Infrastructure Partners and Kineticor Asset Management said they would move ahead with a $3.2 billion gas-fired electricity plant in Sturgeon County.

China is planning to allow select domestic AI companies, including Alibaba, ByteDance, and DeepSeek to purchase a set quantity of Nvidia H200 chips, a notable shift after months of import delays despite Trump granting Nvidia export approval in December of last year. The move appears driven by surging domestic AI computing demand, but approvals require strict usage restrictions, and more advanced chips like Blackwell and Rubin remain off-limits on national security grounds. For Nvidia, this development is an incremental step up. CFO Colette Kress had already excluded H200 China revenue from guidance, while Alibaba surged +11.6% to $109.48 on the news, reflecting the market’s view that access to H200s could accelerate Chinese AI labs’ model training capabilities.

Oui, je parle français. Air Canada has appointed Anko van der Werff from SAS AB will be its new CEO, selecting an outsider to lead the carrier through a major expansion. Van der Werff has led the Scandinavian airline for around five years, helping it emerge from bankruptcy and guiding it through the tail end of the Covid pandemic and the restart of regular travel. This is an important time for Air Canda as the company is in the midst of a multibillion-dollar program to buy new aircraft and renovate the interiors of existing ones as it plots out new routes. The airline currently operates more than 300 planes and expects to reach nearly 400 by 2030.

PepsiCo reported Q2 2026 results this morning, posting adjusted EPS of $2.20, a close $0.01 beat vs. consensus, and net revenue of $24.18 bln, topping estimates by ~1% on international strength. Domestic business remained the key drag with Foods North America revenue down 2% YoY and flat volume despite price cuts of up 15% on some SKUs, while adjusted operating margin missed by 88bps 16.4%. The company has recently raised prices on smaller bags and rolled out high protein and fiber products to address shifting consumer preferences. Full year guidance was maintained, though management flagged EPS growth is now primary weighted toward Q4.


Commodities


Oil prices are continuing higher as conflicts escalated and traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has come to a near standstill with a truce between the U.S. and Iran looking increasingly vulnerable to fall apart. Some vessels crossed yesterday with their transponders turned off. An India-flagged supertanker that had aborted an earlier attempt to transit Hormuz reappeared in the Gulf of Oman on Thursday, indicating it had made the crossing in the dark, while a UAE-linked bulk carrier did the same, resurfacing off Fujairah on Thursday. As the war has gone on, it’s become increasingly evident that some oil tankers have been sailing through Hormuz with their transponders off to lower the risk of attack. Crude benchmarks have now risen five of the past six trading days, and nearly 10% higher.

Corn futures are lower for a second day in Chicago as on improved weather outlook in major U.S. growing regions, with rain expected to bring relief from a heat wave that had sent prices soaring earlier in the week. The most-active corn contract was lower by as much as -1.3% this morning, while wheat and soybeans also dropped. This is an important time for the growing season as corn enters the pollination stage and the potential rain forecast for the U.S. corn belt over the next two weeks is likely to help boost yields for the grain. The USDA is scheduled to release its monthly WASDE report Friday, which could affect the current outlook. Ending stocks for U.S. inventories for 2026-27 are seen at 1.9 billion bushels, about 60 million less than the USDA’s previous estimate in June.


Fixed income and economics


The bond rout continued as the two-year U.S. Treasury yield climbed back toward last month’s peak and near a year high as rising oil prices ignited inflation concerns again. That short-term yield, which closely tracks expectations for the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy, rose as much as five basis points to 4.23%, within a basis point of its June 22 peak, which is the highest level since February 2025. The benchmark 10-year yield closed at 4.59%, the highest since late May. The surge in yields reflects resurgent expectations that the Fed will need to start hiking interest rates to rein in rising consumer prices and Fed minutes released yesterday afternoon that some of the committee member saw a case for a rate increase, though they ultimately supported the decision to make no change. Keep in mind, that it was the hawkish comments at the Federal Reserve rate announcement in June, the first under Chairman Kevin Warsh’s leadership, that drove the U.S. two-year yield to its 2026 high over subsequent days. The bond selloff boosted the yield for an auction of 10-year Treasuries. The $39 billion second reopening of the 10-year note that debuted in May was awarded at 4.580%, the highest for the tenor since February 2025. The decline in the U.S. Treasury market yesterday followed a deeper one earlier in the day in Europe, when yields jumped more sharply on stepped up bets about rate hikes by the ECB and the BOE.

Chart of the day


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Quote of the day


The price of anything is the amount of life you exchange for it.

Henry David Thoreau

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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