Launch Pad

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

July 15, 2026
  
Click here to sign up for the Launch Pad
     

Today

Equity futures edged higher this morning, led by gains in semiconductor stocks after ASML raised its sales outlook for the second time this year, boosting optimism across the AI supply chain (more in company news). Despite the renewed optimism around AI, investors remain somewhat cautious this morning after renewed U.S. military strikes against Iran, which pushed oil prices higher and kept geopolitical risks in focus. Markets are also drawing support from yesterday’s softer-than-expected inflation report out of the U.S., which reduced expectations of a Fed rate hike later this month.  Investors are now turning their attention to the latest U.S. inflation data which showed producer inflation remaining relatively contained in June. Core PPI rose 4.7% year-over-year and 0.2% month-over-month, a slower pace than expected despite geopolitical tensions, suggesting that higher energy prices have not yet translated into broad-based inflation pressures. Headline producer prices increased 5.5% from a year earlier, while a separate survey showed New York manufacturing activity improved in July as new orders, shipments, and employment strengthened. 

China needs a boost. China’s economy grew 4.3% year-over-year in Q2, below both economists’ expectations and the government’s 4.5%–5.0% target range. This marks its weakest growth in more than three years and reinforces expectations that China will need additional policy support to stabilize growth in the second half of the year. The slowdown was driven by a contraction in fixed-asset investment, while consumer spending remained mixed despite stronger retail sales and resilient industrial production. Although China has technically exited economy-wide deflation, underlying price pressures remain weak, suggesting domestic demand is still fragile. The data increase pressure on policymakers to accelerate fiscal stimulus and infrastructure spending at the upcoming Politburo meeting, with several major banks lowering their 2026 GDP forecasts to 4.5%–4.6%. 

Fed Chair Kevin Warsh reiterated the Fed’s commitment to restore price stability as he faced Congress yesterday, stressing that policymakers will not tolerate high inflation. While acknowledging the encouraging June CPI data, which came in softer-than-expected, Warsh cautioned against drawing conclusions from a single month’s figures, emphasizing that the Fed still has work to and will remain data dependent. Warsh described the U.S. economy and labour market as resilient, highlighted the uncertain economic implications of the AI investment boom, and pledged to make policy decisions independently of political pressure. Plans for a review of the Fed’s policy framework, communications, and operating practices, were also outlined. While markets still expect at least one Fed rate hike this year, some strategists now expect the Fed to remain on hold through the rest of 2026, citing a stable macro backdrop, moderating inflation, and an economy that remains resilient without overheating. 

Japan’s rising government bond yields reflect a healthy normalization of monetary policy rather than the beginning of a fiscal crisis, despite Prime Minister Takaichi’s ambitious ¥370 trillion investment plan. Japan’s significant private-sector savings, large current account surplus, and government bond holdings by the Bank of Japan and other public institutions provide enough financing for higher borrowing needs. With inflation, wage growth, and economic capacity all strengthening after decades of deflation, experts now expect the Bank of Japan to continue raising interest rates, leaving strategists to underweight Japanese government bonds while turning positive on the yen. A combination of easier fiscal policy, tighter monetary policy, narrowing interest-rate differentials, and increased currency hedging by Japanese investors is also expected to support further appreciation of the undervalued yen. 

It was a big day for Wall Street’s largest banks yesterday after posting record equity trading revenues in Q2. This came amid heightened market volatility, the AI investment boom, and constant portfolio repositioning by clients, which in turn drove trading activity. JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs each reported record results from their equities businesses, while strong capital markets, including IPOs and mergers, further supported investment banking revenues. Despite concerns over war, inflation, and the broader economic outlook, executives noted that healthy consumer conditions and resilient markets continue to support activity, although they cautioned that the current pace of trading isn’t likely to be sustained. Rising expenses tied to technology investments and employee compensation remain a headwind, highlighting that stronger revenues may not fully translate into higher profits going forward. 

Too good to be true?  AI is making it difficult for employers to separate strong candidates from those relying on AI tools during the hiring process. Nearly half of job seekers now use AI to assist with applications, with some admitting to using chatbots to complete assessments or provide real-time interview responses. Companies are now reporting that this has led to costly hiring mistakes when new employees cannot perform as expected. In response, many companies are redesigning recruitment processes by adding in-person interviews, live technical assessments, AI-free interview policies, and enhanced identity verification. Whether we like it or not, AI is becoming more embedded in the workplace. This has caused employers to shift their criteria from polished interview performance to evaluating candidates’ genuine skills and critical thinking. 


Diversion: Safety First 
 
The
Tactical model 
(% equity weight)

To learn more, please click here.
 
 

Company news

Morgan Stanley posted a strong Q2 2026 with net revenue of $21.35 bln, up roughly 27% YoY from $16.8 bln a year ago and well ahead of the $19.58 bln consensus. The headline driver was a record equity trading quarter, more than 40% above the estimate and a significant jump from prior periods while FICC trading came in short of estimates. Wealth management held steady with $2.46 bln in revenue slightly ahead of expectations, and total deposits great to $446 bln vs. The $432.75 bln estimate, indicating continued asset growth. Expenses were the only area of concern, with non-interest costs of $13.90 bln running above the $13.28 bln. 

ASML Holding NV shares are getting a boost after raising its annual sales forecast for the second time this year and delivering plans to increase production as a surge in AI spending is driving demand for its chip-making machines. CEO Christophe Fouquet’s challenge is keeping up with demand for the company’s intricate machines, which are used by the world’s largest chipmakers to produce semiconductors that train and run AI models as well as chips for the data centers that host them. ASML is critical in the semiconductor supply chain as its the only maker of sophisticated lithography machines that are crucial for manufacturing advanced semiconductors, including for Nvidia Corp. As technology companies including Microsoft Corp. and Alphabet Inc. lead the charge, channeling hundreds of billions into securing the infrastructure for advanced AI skills, chipmakers are rushing to add manufacturing capacity. 

Johnson & Johnson had two stories to tell ahead of its Q2 earnings. The pharma side delivered, with newer drugs like Tremfya, Darzalex, and the lung cancer drugs Rybrevant/Lazcluze all growing strongly, outweighing the erosion from Stelara as competition remains strong. A new psoriasis pill had a strong debut with over 11,000 patients in its first full quarter, with management calling it a potential multi-billion dollar franchise. Medtech, however, disappointed, growing only ~4.5% and missing estimates, weighed down by weakness in the Abiomed heart pump business and competitive pressure in electrophysiology. The small FY guidance raise did not reassure investors given the Medtech shortfall, and a key question heading into the back half is whether those two devices’ franchises can recover. 

Uber Technologies is in advanced talks to buy German food-delivery company Delivery Hero SE, a deal that will allow the ride-hailing giant to better compete rival with DoorDash outside the U.S.  Uber has already built a shareholding in Delivery Hero of 24.99%, plus derivatives that take its total interest to about 36.8%.  Uber has previously approached Delivery Hero with an offer of €33 per share, but investors have been betting that a higher price will be required to seal the deal.  Any deal is likely to attract scrutiny from antitrust regulators globally. Delivery Hero has a presence in more than 60 markets, and the company and Uber overlap in parts of Europe and the Middle East.  


Commodities

Oil prices are higher for a third day as President Trump threatened further strikes on Iran, hours after the U.S. resumed its blockade on shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. Crude benchmarks are up nearly 1%, after rising over 10% the previous two days as the U.S. resumed its blockade at 4 pm ET, one hour after American forces launched strikes. Meanwhile, another TACO saw Trump back away from a plan he announced a day earlier to impose a 20% charge on shipments through the waterway. The reversal was a welcome sign for shippers shaken by the collapse of the U.S.-Iran ceasefire and the prospect of further disruptions. Oil has surged in recent days with prices climbing to their highest in about a month, recouping part of a roughly 30% second-quarter decline, as the escalating conflict revives concerns over supplies from the energy-rich region. On the supply side, the American Petroleum Institute reported U.S. crude inventories fell 600,000 barrels last week, marking the 11th decline in 12 weeks if confirmed by official data later today. 

Copper steadied as markets weighed mixed economic signals from key buyer China and ongoing hostilities in the Middle East, alongside reduced expectations for Federal Reserve interest-rate hikes. Data showed China’s economy slowed more than expected last quarter to the weakest pace in more than three years, however, industrial production in June beat forecasts, while a smaller drop in new home prices fueled hopes that the nation’s battered real estate market is stabilizing. The U.S. dollar weakened yesterday after cooler-than-expected U.S. inflation data prompted traders to pare bets on further Fed rate hikes, making metals prices in the currency cheaper for most buyers. Some indicators also pointed to tightness in the physical market. Canceled warrants, orders to withdraw metal from LME warehouses, have climbed to the highest since October 2021.  


Fixed income and economics

U.S. Treasuries rallied yesterday following a tepid CPI print as traders reined in bets on near-term Federal Reserve interest-rate hikes. The yield on two-year Treasuries.  which are the most sensitive to the near-term outlook for Fed monetary policy, fell as much as 14 basis points to 4.14%, marking its biggest one-day decline since February. The probability that the U.S. central bank raises rates later this month, as implied by the interest-rate markets, fell dramatically to 20% from 45%. The CPI figures offered relief to bondholders and U.S. policymakers who’d been weighing the need for swift action to bring inflation back toward the Fed’s 2% target. The market has been fearful of a hot print, so the  cooler print should be supportive for bonds and re-steepen the curve. However, the truce between the U.S. and Iran has been deteriorating quickly and fresh attacks in the Strait of Hormuz this week pushed Brent oil above $87 a barrel for the first time in a month. It creates a complicated picture for investors as they look to commentary from Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh this week. He’s set to tell lawmakers that policymakers have no tolerance for high inflation. 


Chart of the day


Markets


Quote of the day
 

Living well is the best revenge.

George Herbert

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

Don’t put all your dividends in one basket

13 July 2026. Market Ethos. Since bond yields normalized, how you get exposure to dividends really matters.

23 minute read

Investor Strategy

Technically speaking

7 July 2026. Investor Strategy. The first half of the year has shown the market’s ability to navigate uncertainty. Despite periods of volatility, equity markets…

23 minute read

Market Ethos

Dollar drama

29 June 2026. Market Ethos. Big moves are becoming the norm in this market and currency is no exception. Our Canadian Dollar has traded down…

23 minute read