Launch Pad

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December 16, 2025
  
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Today


U.S. equity futures are lower this morning as investors digest a slate of key economic reports that were delayed by the U.S. government shutdown. The Nasdaq has fallen for three straight sessions as AI-related unease mounts. In Canada, the TSX is looking to open lower, pressured by energy shares after Trump said Russia and Ukraine were closer to a peace deal, pushing oil prices down. While European leaders have vowed to protect Ukraine against Russian aggression and the U.S. has offered security guarantees, disagreements over Ukrainian territory remain. In Europe, defence stocks declined alongside oil, with Brent trading near a four-year low after falling below $60 a barrel (see commodities below for details).

Clear as mud. After contending with a government shutdown, agencies in the U.S. are releasing long-awaited economic data. First up were the jobs numbers which showed job growth in November, with NFP increasing by 64,000, slightly exceeding expectations. The unemployment rate, however, rose to 4.6%, which was higher than forecast and reinforces signs of a cooling labour market. The BLS also reported that payrolls fell by 105,000 in October, a decline economists largely anticipated after September’s unexpected gain. The retail numbers also painted a mixed picture, with U.S. retail sales essentially flat in October, as declines in motor vehicle purchases and lower gasoline receipts offset gains in other areas. While overall sales missed expectations, spending excluding autos and gas rose 0.5%, and the closely watched control-group measure jumped 0.8%, the strongest increase in four months, signaling firmer underlying consumer demand heading into the holiday season. Gains were led by department stores and online retailers, while restaurant spending slipped, highlighting a consumer environment supported mainly by higher-income households amid ongoing cost-of-living pressures. 

M&A activity rebounded this year, with deals totaling $4.5 trillion, up ~40% from last year. This marks the second-biggest deal year on record as companies pursued mega-deals amid easing interest rates and a friendlier regulatory climate. The boom included a record number of transactions above $30 billion, including Union Pacific’s acquisition of Norfolk Southern, Anglo American’s takeover of Teck Resources, and Netflix’s bid for Warner Bros. No surprise, tech and AI-driven deals also played an outsized role this year, helped by strong equity markets, Wall Street financing, and capital from the Middle East. Still, concerns around AI valuations, geopolitical tensions, and trade risks could trigger market volatility, potentially slowing deal momentum in the months ahead. 

Investors are becoming more optimistic that EM carry trades will continue to perform well into next year after delivering their strongest returns since 2009, helped by low currency volatility, a weakening U.S. dollar, and wide interest-rate differentials between developed and emerging economies. Central banks in developed markets, including the Fed, are widely expected to keep borrowing costs relatively low, supporting demand for higher-yielding emerging-market currencies like the Brazilian real, Colombian peso, South African rand, and Mexican peso. While lower volatility and easing U.S. monetary policy will support the strategy, some investors remain cautious that crowded trades, potential spikes in currency swings, or unexpected shifts in U.S. growth or inflation could impact returns. 

Home sales across Canada declined in November, falling 10.7% year over year and 0.6% lower from October. The national average sale price dropped 2% to $682,219, while the MLS Home Price Index fell 3.7% from a year earlier. Although the BoC’s decision to hold rates at 2.25% is seen by some as a green light for activity to pick up next year, others argue buyers remain held back by affordability pressures, economic uncertainty, and depleted savings. Analysts expect prices to stay under pressure in markets such as B.C. and Ontario, with modest gains elsewhere. And while pent-up demand could support gradual improvement in sales, many expect any meaningful rebound to be slow and uneven and something that will not materialize until late next year. 

Who needs sleep anyways? Stock markets in the U.S. are moving closer to near-round-the-clock weekday trading, with exchanges such as Nasdaq seeking approval to trade up to 23 hours a day and the NYSE laying similar groundwork. While that sounds great for those night owls out there, many major Wall Street banks remain cautious. While those in favour argue extended hours would benefit global investors by allowing faster reactions to news outside U.S. market times, banks and market experts warn of significant costs, thin overnight liquidity, wider spreads, higher volatility, and complex risk-management challenges that could require tens of billions of dollars in new investment with uncertain near-term returns. Although some firms see long-term demand and are preparing to participate, many institutional players expect adoption to be gradual, with meaningful liquidity and profitability likely emerging only several years after launch.  

That’s one way to boost your population. China is set to impose a new 13% sales tax on condoms, birth control pills, and contraceptive devices starting next year as part of broader efforts to counter declining birth rates, an aging population, and a shrinking workforce. The policy accompanies pro-natal measures such as tax exemptions for childcare and eldercare services, longer maternity leave, proposed paid paternity leave, and annual cash allowances of about $500 per child. The measures come amid high child-care costs, a weak job market, and historically low fertility, with births roughly half of what they were a decade ago. The new tax changes are more symbolic, with many doubting it will materially affect fertility trends while public health experts warn it could have unintended consequences. 


Diversion: Looks Great. Little Full, lotta sap 

 
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Company news


The Anglo American Plc’s acquisition of Teck Resources has been approved by the Canadian government, helping to clear the way for the creation of a $50 billion metals giant focused on copper mines in Chile and Peru. The approval under the Investment Canada Act formalizes commitments made by the miners in September and comes within a week of both firms’ shareholders giving their consent to the deal. The deal will give Anglo access to Teck’s portfolio of copper mines just as the metal is trading near record highs. Anglo’s copper business has also drawn the attention of rivals, with the London-based company twice rejecting approaches from BHP Group, the world’s biggest miner. Anglo and Teck agreed to strengthen earlier promises about the new headquarters, which will be in Vancouver. Two-thirds of senior executives at Anglo Teck will have to reside primarily in Canada, and the board will have 50% Canadian representation for seven years, according to Industry Minister Melanie Joly.

Pfizer forecast little to no sales growth next year as the drugmaker undertakes an effort to refresh its pipeline of hit drugs with a series of pricey acquisitions. Revenue in 2026 will be $59.5 to $62.5 billion, roughly in line with estimates, while sales this year are expected at $62 billion, within the range the company projected in early November. CEO, Albert Bourla, is facing a critical moment in his quest to rebuild Pfizer, as demand for Covid shots and treatments that caused sales to surge a few years ago fades. Its stock has plunged from than 50% from pandemic highs. And revenue from Covid-related products is still falling; Pfizer forecast sales from these products will fall about $1.5 billion next year to $5 billion. 

Ford will take $19.5 billion in charges tied to a sweeping overhaul of its EV business after struggling for years to make it profitable, with the majority of the charges coming in the fourth quarter. As part of the strategic shift, the automaker is cancelling a planned electric F-Series truck, shifting production toward gas and hybrid vehicles and repurposing an EV battery plant. Ford will also convert its signature electric F-150 Lightning pickup into an extended-range hybrid vehicle. The magnitude of asset impairments and writedowns is a testament both to the degree of difficulty Ford has had trying to profitably build and sell EVs, and the extent to which U.S. President Trump’s policy changes will only exacerbate those challenges.  


Commodities


Oil extended declines this morning, with Brent crude slipping below $60 a barrel for the first time since May, as indications grow that supply is outpacing demand against the backdrop of efforts to end the war in Ukraine. Crude benchmarks are now down to levels not seen since 2021. Signs of weakness are rising across the oil market, with Middle Eastern crude prices briefly entering a bearish contango pattern early yesterday. The same has happened with some barrels sold on the U.S. Gulf Coast. Other parts of the market, however, remain in the opposite backwardation pattern that still indicates supply tightness. Supply is set to exceed demand both this year and next thanks to growth in production from within the OPEC and a host of nations outside the group in the Americas. The International Energy Agency estimates that the size of the surplus next year will be the largest on record.

Copper inched lower as a risk-off mood set in across markets ahead of U.S. jobs data that could steer the debate about the extent of future interest-rate cuts. Copper has rallied by about a third this year, setting a series of records and on course for its strongest annual showing since 2009. The surge has been underpinned by supply snarls at some of the world’s biggest mines, as well as expectations that the Trump administration may impose a tariff on refined metal. The trade concerns have drawn copper inventories into the world’s biggest economy, tightening conditions elsewhere. Goldman Sachs just upgraded its copper-price forecast for next year, saying that potential U.S. curbs on imports are seen as less likely in the first half, allowing a window for shipments ahead of any restriction.  



Fixed income and economics


The trickle down. The direction for U.S. interest rates, Treasury market and the extent of Fed interest-rate cuts is about to get interesting as a string of long awaited data begins to trickle in this week. The main focus will be on announcements of monthly employment and inflation figures, and then early January will bring more key jobs data.  A delayed release last month showed a gain of 119,000 jobs in September. That beat estimates, although the unemployment rate rose to 4.4%, the highest since 2021. The reports will help answer the overarching question entering 2026 of whether the Fed is close to being done easing, after three straight cuts, or if it has to move more aggressively. Interest rate markets are showing that bond traders are betting the central bank will lower rates twice next year to support the job market and the growth outlook, even as inflation remains stubbornly elevated. That’s one more reduction than the Fed is indicating, and if market expectations are right it could set the stage for another solid run for Treasuries, which are headed for their best year since 2020.  Treasuries started this week with the policy-sensitive two-year yield at 3.51% and the 10-year rate at around 4.17%. Traders are building options positions that would pay off if market sentiment shifts to a rate cut in the first quarter. For now, another reduction isn’t fully priced in until mid-year, with a second one in October.  

Chart of the day

 

Markets


Quote of the day

 

A fool is wise in his eyes.

King Solomon

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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