Launch Pad

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

June 8, 2026
  
Click here to sign up for the Launch Pad
     
Today

Middle East flareups combined with Friday’s selloff following a much stronger-than-expected jobs report and concerns about Fed tightening, would be enough to put markets on edge, but apparently not. Futures are up this morning, with all major North American indexes moving higher. Overseas, the mood was less optimistic, with markets under pressure across both Asia and Europe. Losses in South Korea were severe, with the Kospi falling more than -8%, weighed down by Samsung and SK Hynix, the latter continuing to retreat from the US$1 trl valuation it reached only weeks ago. Providing some support to U.S. futures are Marvell and Flex after both were selected for inclusion in the S&P 500 effective June 22. Departing the index is The Campbell’s Company, one of the index’s original constituents. Another sign of the times, although history suggests today’s market leaders are not always tomorrow’s. 

Tensions in the Middle East escalated over the weekend, raising concerns around the sustainability of the U.S.-Iran peace negotiations. Israel carried out its first strike on the outskirts of Beirut since a U.S.-backed Lebanon ceasefire proposal was announced last week, targeting areas linked to Hezbollah after rockets were fired into northern Israel. Iran launched missiles toward Israeli targets and warned that both Israeli assets and U.S. military bases remain legitimate targets if ceasefire agreements continue to be violated. While the situation remains fragile, Iran announced this morning that its retaliatory military operations had concluded, helping ease some concerns around escalation. Iran’s decision to halt attacks and Trump’s comments supporting an immediate ceasefire suggest both sides remain interested in avoiding a wider escalation. Markets are likely to remain sensitive to these developments though, with any renewed military escalation rising delays to reopening key shipping routes, keeping energy prices elevated, and adding to inflation pressures that have already complicated the outlook for central banks and global economic growth. 

Stocks in the U.S. suffered its worst selloff in months on Friday as investors took profits in AI and semiconductor stocks following a stronger-than-expected jobs report and rising bond yields. The Nasdaq fell -4.2%, its largest one-day decline since the tariff-driven volatility of early 2025, while the S&P 500 declined -2.6% and the Dow lost nearly 700 points. The selling was concentrated in semiconductor stocks, with the Broadcom earnings report acting as an initial catalyst after management failed to raise its AI outlook despite strong results. The decline intensified as Treasury yields rose following a surprisingly strong U.S. employment report showing 172,000 new jobs versus expectations of 88,000, increasing concerns that the Fed may need to keep rates elevated or even raise them further. The semiconductor sector was hit hard, with shares of Micron Technology falling -13%, Advanced Micro Devices and Intel dropping about -11%, and semiconductor ETFs seeing their worst day since March 2020. Despite the pullback, semiconductor stocks remain up nearly 80% this year, reinforcing the view that the selloff reflects profit-taking and valuation concerns rather than a fundamental deterioration in the AI investment theme. 

Competing for capital. The recent selloff in AI stocks and crypto comes ahead of the highly  anticipated SpaceX IPO, highlighting competition for investor capital and raising questions about whether the market’s appetite for risk is fading. While the immediate catalyst for Friday’s selloff was rising bond yields and profit-taking in semiconductor stocks, investors are also preparing for what could become the largest IPO in history, with SpaceX expected to debut at a valuation exceeding  US$1.8 trillion. Some strategists believe investors are selling AI stocks, crypto, and other momentum trades to free up capital for the offering, as retail investors now account for ~20% of U.S. equity trading volume. With today’s market offering more speculative alternatives than previous cycles, including crypto, leveraged ETFs, prediction markets, and AI-themed investments, some have noted that even a blockbuster IPO must compete for investor attention and capital. Whether SpaceX attracts new money or redistributes existing capital could be a test of the durability of the current bull market and the retail-driven enthusiasm that has powered many of its biggest winners. 

The euro is approaching a potentially important technical inflection point against the U.S. dollar after weakening steadily throughout this year. The currency has faced pressure from a combination of higher energy costs related to the Iran war, safe-haven flows into the U.S. dollar, and weaker economic performance in Europe relative to the U.S.. From a technical perspective, analysts are focused on a possible head-and-shoulders topping pattern, which is often viewed as a sign that a longer-term uptrend may be ending. The key level to watch is approximately 1.1425 against the dollar, with a convincing break below that level potentially opening the door to a move toward the 1.08–1.09 range. Additional warning signs include weakening momentum indicators, as the euro failed to generate stronger momentum despite reaching a multi-year high in January, and contracting Bollinger Bands, which can signal the end of a prior trend. 

Canada is in a technical recession by one common definition, as real GDP contracted for two consecutive quarters, including a -0.1% annualized decline in Q1 following a -1.0% decline in Q4 2025. However, economists say the label is misleading because the downturn has not been broad or severe enough to meet the traditional definition of a recession, which requires weakness that is pronounced, pervasive, and persistent across the economy. Recent data paints a mixed picture. While GDP has been weak, Stats Canada’s preliminary estimate suggests growth rebounded by 0.4% in April, and the economy added 88,000 jobs in May, pushing the unemployment rate down to 6.6%. The C.D. Howe Institute Business Cycle Council, which is often viewed as Canada’s unofficial recession caller, said it is too early to classify the current slowdown as a recession. Economists also note that unusual factors like U.S. trade uncertainty, lower immigration, government spending restraint, and shifting global supply chains, are distorting traditional economic indicators. While growth is weak and many Canadians continue to feel financial pressure, the evidence according to economists, currently points toward a soft patch or technical recession rather than a full-scale economic downturn. 

A drought nearing an end? The NBA Finals return to New York tonight for the first time in 27 years, with the Knicks just two wins away from their first championship since 1973. While not quite in Leafs territory, the drought has lasted long enough that many fans have never seen their team win. There is also plenty beyond basketball itself to watch. In addition to Madison Square Garden hosting its first Finals game in a generation, many are also eager to see Victor Wembanyama, whom some view as the league’s next global superstar, play his first Finals game in New York. Adding to the spectacle, Trump is expected to attend, becoming the first sitting president to attend an NBA Finals game. Trump has developed a habit of showing up at the country’s biggest sporting events including last year’s Super Bowl, another first for a sitting president. For fans, that means more security, road closures, and airport-style screening that accompany a presidential visit. Fans willing to brave all of that will also need deep pockets, with the cheapest tickets selling for more than $6,000 and lower-bowl seats approaching an eye-watering $90,000…in U.S. dollars no less. 


Diversion: Say cheese!
The
Tactical model 
(% equity weight)

To learn more, please click here.
 
 
The latest
Market Ethos 


Beneath the surface​ – NEW
A tale of two consumers 
Watching the clock​
Patience pays off​ 


Sign up for the Market Ethos mailing list.
 

Company news

Spending big. Alphabet has reached an agreement to pay SpaceX $920 mln per month from October 2026 through June 2029, roughly $30 bln in total for access to ~110,000 Nvidia GPUs, marking its second major external computer deal in a matter of weeks following the Blackstone AI cloud agreement in May. If SpaceX fails to provide access to Nvidia’s chips as part of the deal by September, Google has a right to terminate the contract with a one-month grace period. This deal comes right after Alphabet raised its equity raise to $84.75B to fund surging AI capex. On the regulatory side, the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) ordered Google to give publishers more control over how their content is use in AI research summaries and training.

Marvell Technology shares are getting a boost and is up nearly 9% in premarket trading after the S&P announced the AI chipmaker would be joining the benchmark S&P 500 index. The semiconductor company, which trades on the Nasdaq, will join the broad-market index on June 22. Electronic manufacturing company Flex is also on the list of firms joining the S&P 500 later this month, while Pool Corp and The Campbell’s Company will be removed from the index. Marvell, which has a market cap of $230 billion, specializes in designing high-performance chips used in global data infrastructure such as cloud computing, AI, enterprise networking, 5G carrier networks and automotive systems. You may remember the name as it was recently brough center stage after Nvidia’s CEO Huang touted the firm as the “next trillion-dollar company”.  


Commodities

Oil prices are nearly 3% higher as the conflict in the Middle East got heated again after Iran and Israel traded fire, a fresh escalation in a war that has passed the 100-day mark. Europe’s natural gas benchmark is also jumping higher as the risk of a prolonged conflict threatens to choke global LNG exports at a time when the region should be refilling inventories. Even if a U.S.-Iran peace deal is agreed, multiple hurdles will impede normal resumption of oil flows. Among them, mines in Hormuz must be removed, shut-in fields may take months to restart, and damage to energy infrastructure from drone and missile strikes needs to be repaired.

Gold is extending losses pushing the metal to flat on the year after losing -5% last week during the worst flare-up in regional hostilities since the truce was agreed in early April. Now in its fourth month, the war has disrupted energy flows via the Strait of Hormuz, driven oil prices higher and raised concerns about global inflation, making central banks more likely to keep interest rates steady or raise them, a headwind for precious metals. Also not helping gold, data on Friday showed better-than-expected U.S. jobs data is also fueling bets that the Federal Reserve would raise borrowing costs in 2026. Bond yields and the U.S. dollar climbed after jobs growth topped all forecasts in May, weighing on gold. Traders were also assessing another around of gold purchases by the People’s Bank of China, which added around 10 tons to its reserves last month. That was the highest monthly total since 2024 and extends the Chinese central bank’s buying streak to 19 months, underscoring continued interest from one of the world’s biggest purchasers. 


Fixed income and economics

Bond markets are beginning to price in a more hawkish Fed after a strong U.S. jobs report and expectations that upcoming inflation data will show the largest price increases in several years. Investors are awaiting Wednesday’s U.S. CPI print, where market pricing implies annual inflation could reach roughly 4.3%, a level not seen since 2023, as elevated energy prices linked to the Iran war continue to feed through the economy. The stronger labour market has already pushed Treasury yields higher, with the two-year yield climbing above 4.1% and the 10-year yield reaching around 4.55%, while traders expect the Fed’s next move to be a rate hike rather than a cut. The shift is significant because many investors entered the year expecting easing in 2026, but stronger growth, persistent inflation, and higher oil prices have caused major banks to abandon those forecasts and, in some cases, begin discussing multiple rate increases instead. 

Chart of the day
 

Markets

Quote of the day
 

Coming together is a beginning; keeping together is progress; working together is success.

Edward Everett Hale

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

Investor Strategy

Beneath the surface

2 June 2026. Investor Strategy.

25 minute read

Market Ethos

A tale of two consumers

25 May 2026. Market Ethos. While the lower arm of the K-shaped economy is struggling, the upper arm is doing enough to keep total consumer…

25 minute read

Market Ethos

Watching the clock

19 May 2026. Market Ethos. We’re seeing big value creation in some very narrow pockets of the market, evident in the narrow breadth of the…

25 minute read