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May 15, 2026
  
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Today


Stocks are pointing to a lower open this morning as a global bond rout sends yields higher, potentially ending the week, and the unofficial start to summer, on a dour note. Mixed messaging out of the Trump-Xi Jinping summit did little to help sentiment. Oil prices are moving higher again, with Brent crude futures back above $107 per barrel while Treasury yields are pushing higher. Overseas, European equities are also under pressure, and in Asia, KOSPI reversed, falling more than -6% after its recent surge. While both Trump and Xi spoke positively about the visit, with China referring to a vision of “strategic stability” and Trump describing the relationship as “very strong,” no formal joint agreement came out of the summit. On Iran, Trump stated the two countries agreed the conflict should end and the Strait should reopen, though China did not reference the war in its official readouts. However, on the summit’s second day, China’s foreign minister said that the war should not have been started in the first place, showing some divergent messaging between the two sides.

Who will win the race? The next major phase of AI competition may be determined by which countries can most effectively industrialize physical AI through robotics deployment, manufacturing scale, and supply-chain dominance. Experts argue that the long-term winners in robotics may not be defined by who builds the smartest robots first, but by who can mass-produce and deploy them fastest at industrial scale. This is something where China currently has an advantage. While the U.S. leads in software and intelligence, China is better positioned to dominate other areas which will use AI like manufacturing. China also has an edge due to lower production costs and state-backed support.   

Powering up. Mark Carney unveiled a strategy to double Canada’s electricity generation by 2050, a plan expected to cost over $1 trillion and require coordination across federal and provincial governments, as well as private capital. No small feat. The proposal includes loosening clean electricity rules to allow greater use of natural gas, and incentives for home retrofits and a transition toward electric power. It also calls for expanding transmission infrastructure to improve east-west grid connectivity and support a more integrated system. While the plan sets an ambitious target, it remains light on execution details, with consultations to follow across provinces and industry. Achieving the balance between affordability, reliability, and emissions reduction will require significant coordination, policy clarity, and alignment across jurisdictions. 

It was a week full of disappointing (but predictable) inflation prints out of the U.S., with April’s inflation data suggesting the U.S. may not be confronting isolated price shocks. Both the CPI and PPI data pointed to the growing effects of repeated fiscal, geopolitical, and policy disruptions that risk reshaping longer-term inflation psychology. While current pressures remain heavily energy-driven, the broader concern is that consecutive shocks from tariffs, war, and fiscal responses, could eventually  unanchor inflation expectations if policymakers fail to restore credibility and stability. For new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, the core challenge is less about reacting to one inflation print and more about preserving institutional confidence that the Fed remains committed to price stability despite political pressure. 

Canada’s housing market appears to be stabilizing, although we have yet to see a meaningful rebound. Recent data points to demand modestly improving, although elevated listings continue to restrain broader price appreciation. The data suggests buyers are cautiously re-engaging, particularly as affordability improves relative to recent peaks, but persistent macro headwinds, including trade uncertainty, elevated energy costs, and weaker labour conditions, are still limiting momentum. It’s also worth noting that this stabilization is occurring unevenly across segments, with more vulnerable markets such as condos likely remaining under greater pressure than detached housing. So while Canada’s housing sector is showing early signs of bottoming, sustained recovery will likely depend on broader economic confidence. 

Add this to the list of questionable decisions made after a few drinks. A man reportedly changed the password to his Bitcoin wallet while under the influence, only to lock himself out of his account for over 11 years. In hindsight, the mistake was a profitable one as the value of the five Bitcoin be bought in college ballooned to nearly $400,000. After years of trying to get in, the man eventually turned to AI. Using Claude, the software acted as a digital forensic assistant by analyzing old computer files, uncovering an overlooked backup file, and identifying a technical bug in existing recovery software that had previously prevented success. Beyond an expensive password lesson, the case highlights AI’s growing potential as a powerful tool for crypto recovery through data analysis and troubleshooting. For now, the simple takeaway is don’t change your passwords after a few cocktails. 



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Company news


Applied Materials, the largest U.S. supplier of semiconductor equipment, delivered sales and profit forecasts that far exceeded analysts’ estimates, fueled by soaring demand for AI computing and memory chips. Revenue will be nearly $8.95 bln compared to the average analyst estimate of $8.15 billion on average. Applied Materials customers such as Samsung Electronics Co. and Micron Technology Inc. are expanding manufacturing to cope with short supplies of memory chips. CEO Gary Dickerson stated that the AI growth will contribute to a sales increase of more than 30% in the company’s semiconductor equipment business this calendar year, and this is also helping boost gross margins, which are at the widest level in more than 25 years. He added, Applied Materials had already been investing to expand its production, aiming to meet a run-up in demand and has “basically doubled” its manufacturing capacity.

Cerebras saw an explosive IPO debut, with the stock rising nearly 70% yesterday, reinforcing how aggressively markets are rewarding companies positioned at the core of AI infrastructure expansion. While Cerebras appears well-positioned to emerge as a secondary AI compute player, the company remains far from threatening Nvidia’s market position. While shares are set to open lower today, analysts note that the company’s high valuation suggests markets are currently rewarding optionality and that AI remains the dominant capital allocation theme globally, though the extreme enthusiasm also raises longer-term questions around competitive execution and valuation sustainability. 


Commodities


Oil prices are higher and headed for a weekly gain as negotiations between the U.S. and Iran remain at an impasse and the crucial Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed. Brent crude climbed above $107, adding almost 7% this week, while WTI is nearly 9% higher over the same time period. Today also saw a broad selloff in bond markets as concerns grew that oil flows won’t normalize quickly, leading to a spike in inflation. Physical crude markets have firmed again in recent days, offering a reminder of the wider tightness that’s hitting the global oil industry as a result of the conflict. Earlier in the week, the International Energy Agency (IEA) reported that the war has driven global oil inventories down at a record pace, and the market will remain “severely undersupplied” until October even if hostilities end next month. To drive in the point, the Energy Information Administration also reported flows of crude and fuels through Hormuz fell by almost 6 mln bpd in the quarter after hostilities began in late February.

Metals from gold to copper sank in a broad risk-off move, as a war-driven surge in U.S. inflation fueled expectations for higher interest rates. The broad retreat in bond markets also dragged stocks lower, putting a sudden halt to the AI-fueled equity rally that has helped boost industrial metals. Copper was down as much as -2.5% while silver, which has traded in close tandem with copper, also reversed strong gains from earlier in the week and fell as much as -7.1%. Gold, which is down over –10% since the war started, has traded in a fairly narrow range since falling sharply in the early days of the war as investors assess inflation risks that could keep rates higher and growth concerns that could prompt monetary easing as the conflict drags on.  


Fixed income and economics


The global bond rout continued this morning, pushing yields to multi-year highs from Japan to the U.S. on intensifying concerns that war-driven inflation may push central banks to hike interest rates. In the U.S., the 2-year Treasury hit 4.06%, a level not seen since March 2025 while Japan’s 30-year yield hit 4% for the first time since 1999. An ongoing political crisis is also adding to issues in the UK pushing their 30-year gilt yields to a 28-year high. In Japan, the rise in yields also reflects renewed concerns over the nation’s fiscal policy. A report in Kyodo News said the government is weighing an extra budget to fund relief measures for the economy. Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama later said the situation has not yet reached the point where that’s needed. The bond selloff worsened as crude benchmarks this morning climbed nearly 2% higher and back-to-back U.S. hot inflation reports earlier in the week showed the ramifications of the continuing conflict between the US and Iran. While yields have gradually moved higher in recent days, the bond selloff gathered steam across the globe this morning, with yields in Germany, Spain, Australia and New Zealand also pushing up. Central banks which have mostly remained unchanged at their rate policy meetings may have to act soon as inflation concerns are rising dramatically.  

Chart of the day

 

Markets


Quote of the day

 

Perfection is attained by slow degrees; it requires the hand of time.

Voltaire

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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