Launch Pad

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

November 20, 2025
  
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Today


Markets are once again buoyed by Nvidia’s results, with the chip maker posting record sales and issuing strong guidance (more in company news below). Canadian and U.S. futures are higher this morning, and global chip stocks are also up on renewed AI confidence. Investors had grown wary of massive AI spending pledges and valuations, with U.S. equities down in four of the last five sessions, but Nvidia’s numbers have likely pushed out immediate worries about a toppy, AI-led market. Retail bellwether Walmart also reported this morning, delivering solid sales growth and raising its outlook for the year. Attention now turns to the long-delayed U.S. jobs report, released this morning following the record-long U.S. government shutdown.

While the numbers may be stale, investors are taking comfort in the latest U.S. jobs numbers, after it was reported that job growth climbed in September, with nonfarm payrolls rising by 119,000 after a prior-month decline. While the unemployment rate edged up to 4.4%, the participation rate also climbed, signaling a stabilizing jobs market. Jobless claims fell to 220,000 last week, below economists’ expectations, suggesting employers are still reluctant to cut staff despite uncertainty. 

Santa Powell is unlikely to gift a cut in time for the holidays. The Bureau of Labor Statistics announced they will not publish an October jobs report. The agency said that October’s household survey, which determines key metrics like the unemployment rate, couldn’t be collected during the government shutdown and cannot be reconstructed retroactively. Instead, October’s payroll data will be folded into the November employment report, now scheduled for Dec. 16. This will pose a problem for the Fed as their next policy meeting is on December 10th, meaning they will be flying (at least partially) blind. The shutdown-related disruptions also mean the September JOLTS report has been cancelled, with September and October data set to be released together on Dec. 9, while the timing of the October CPI report remains uncertain. The delay, combined with recent hawkish Fed commentary, has reduced the odds of another rate cut this year to less than 30%. 

Fed officials were divided on where rates should be, according to minutes from the last FOMC meeting with discussions centred around whether inflation or unemployment poses a greater risk to the economy. Several policymakers opposed October’s rate cut and leaned against another reduction in December, while others said a December cut could be appropriate. Despite the divide, the committee approved a second consecutive 25bps cut, with two dissents, and the cherry on top from Powell who emphasized that another cut is not guaranteed. While the pace of cuts remained contentious, officials agreed to end the drawdown of its balance sheet earlier than expected and expressed interest in shifting holdings from longer-dated bonds to Treasury bills. The minutes noted a larger allocation to T-bills would give the Fed more flexibility to manage market liquidity and support policy implementation without raising reserve levels. 

Canada–U.S. trade talks could resume, according to Pete Hoekstra, the sometimes combative, always opinionated U.S. ambassador to Canada. He said the two countries still have a path to a tariff reduction deal despite last month’s blowup, when Trump abruptly stopped negotiations after an Ontario ad that used Ronald Reagan’s words to criticize tariffs, was aired. Hoekstra said talks had been progressing until then and expects them to restart, though getting there will not be easy. Hoekstra also said that Canada should accept that the era of duty-free trade is over, pointing to the baseline tariff the U.S. maintained in its recent agreement with the UK. The stakes are far higher for Canada though, given our country’s deep economic ties with the US. Canada exported over $400 billion to its neighbour last year and remains the largest buyer of U.S. goods. 

Crypto investors rushed to the exits earlier this week, withdrawing about $523 million from BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust on Tuesday, its largest single-day outflow since launch. The selling came as bitcoin fell below $90,000, its weakest level in seven months. The sudden drop is a stark reminder of how fast the market can shift, with Bitcoin hitting a record high just last month. The correction has prompted investors to rotate toward safer assets like gold, raising doubts about bitcoin’s role as a hedge. 

Take me to the Azores. Canadians may be skipping U.S. trips, but airlines like WestJet is using the shift to widen its reach. The country’s second-largest airline is adding new routes from Toronto to Medellín, the Azores and Cardiff. It’s also launching flights from Halifax to Lisbon, Madrid and Copenhagen, taking advantage of Canada’s east-coast geography, where some European trips are shorter than domestic ones. CEO Alexis von Hoensbroech says softer U.S. demand and a growing longer-range fleet are opening room for this shift, backed by a major Boeing order and a broader strategy under owner Onex to tilt the business toward western Canada and long-haul leisure trips. Happy travels. 


DiversionOld toy, new tricks 

 
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Company news


What bubble? Nvidia Corp. delivered a surprisingly strong revenue forecast and pushed back on the idea that the AI industry is in a bubble, easing some concerns that had spread across the tech sector. Nvidia now expects sales of about $65 billion in the January quarter, about $3 billion more than analysts predicted. Nvidia also said that a half-trillion-dollar revenue boost due in coming quarters may be even bigger than anticipated. The outlook signals that demand remains robust for Nvidia’s AI accelerators, the expensive and powerful chips used to develop AI models. Nvidia had faced growing fears in recent weeks that the runaway spending on such equipment wasn’t sustainable. The forecast for the latest quarter reflects an incredible run for the company with sales up more than 10-fold from where they were in the same period just three years ago. And Nvidia is on course to deliver more annual net income than two longtime rivals, Intel Corp. and Advanced Micro Devices Inc., will report in sales. Nvidia results have become a barometer for the health of the AI industry, and the news lifted a variety of related stocks like CoreWeave Inc., a provider of AI computing, Nebius Group NV, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and Tokyo Electron Ltd.

Walmart shares are looking to open slightly higher after delivering a strong third quarter, beating top- and bottom-line expectations while raising guidance for the fiscal year. Revenue rose 5.8% year over year to $179.5 billion, ahead of projections for $177.4 billion and global e-commerce sales jumped 27% from a year ago, helping drive market share gains and sales growth. Walmart raised its fiscal-year guidance to reflect the strength of its third quarter. It now expects net sales to increase between 4.8% and 5.1% from a year ago, better than the prior range of 3.75% to 4.75%. Walmart also announced that it was transferring the listing of its common stock and nine bonds to the Nasdaq stock market on Dec. 9. It currently trades on the New York Stock Exchange. The move underscores Walmart’s success in transforming a bricks-and-mortar retailer into a leader in e-commerce. Earlier reports from other retailers, including Home Depot, Lowe’s, and Target, have already given investors a peak into how American households are doing heading into the end of the year: they’re wary, but are still spending.  

Alphabet Inc. shares were up the most in two months as a wave of glowing reviews for the newly released version of its Gemini AI model on Tuesday spurred investor confidence about the company’s position in the ever-changing tech landscape. The strength of the model stands in contrast to OpenAI’s GPT-5 model, which was met with mixed reactions when it was launched earlier this year. The stock also got a rare form of validation for a tech company, as Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. revealed late last week that it had built a stake in Alphabet during the third quarter. The position represents a show of confidence from the legendary investor, who is typically less exposed to tech stocks, outside of Apple Inc.  


Commodities


Oil prices are higher as investors weighed the fallout from U.S. sanctions on Russia’s Rosneft PJSC and Lukoil PJSC that are set to take effect on Friday. U.S. penalties on the Russian oil giants have already upended crude flows, most notably to India, and forced Lukoil to seek buyers for its international assets. Suitors are lining up to acquire various parts of Lukoil’s international business following the penalties. Exxon Mobil Corp. officials met with Iraqi Oil Minister Hayyan Abdul Ghani on Wednesday to discuss the Russian company’s stake in the West Qurna 2 field, which accounts for 10% of Iraqi production. From another front, the EU is exploring more curbs on entities enabling Russia’s shadow fleet of tankers transporting oil in a further effort to disrupt Moscow’s ability to fund its war against Ukraine.

Industrial metals including copper, aluminum and zinc are higher following news that Beijing is considering measures to turn around China’s struggling property market, after a years-long slump that’s dented commodities demand. A number of options from mortgage subsidies to tax rebates and lower transaction costs are being considered by policymakers, according to people familiar with the matter. The poor state of China’s housing market has dented construction activity and weighed on domestic metals demand, though other sectors from new-energy products to power-grid investments have picked up some of the slack. Zinc led most metals higher on the LME, gaining as much as 1.2%, while aluminum was 0.4% higher and copper rose 0.5%.  


Fixed income and economics


Sounding the alarm. The BoC is warning that Canada is trapped in a cycle of weak productivity, where low business investment has suppressed output per worker, wage growth, and ultimately consumer demand. These factors then lead firms to become more discouraged from investing in technology and equipment. Officials have emphasized that Canada’s productivity gap with other G-7 economies, especially the U.S., has widened significantly since the 2000s, costing the country an estimated 9% in lost GDP. Some argue that fixing productivity is key to improving real incomes, affordability, and economic resilience. There are many ways experts suggest Canada can get out of this funk, including attracting investments, modernizing regulation and infrastructure, boosting competition, lowering internal trade barriers, diversifying export markets, and investing in human capital.

The U.S. trade deficit narrowed in August to $59.6 billion, which is an almost 24% improvement, after Trump’s tariffs began to kick in. The tariffs triggered the biggest drop in imports in four months while exports edged up slightly. The decline was driven mainly by a fall in gold imports after tariffs on Switzerland rose, although capital goods imports, like computer accessories and teleco equipment also weakened. The data, delayed due to a government shutdown, highlights just how volatile trade has been over the last few months, as companies previously rushed to import goods ahead of the tariff changes. Adjusted for inflation, the trade deficit fell to its smallest level since late 2023, adding a potential boost to third-quarter GDP forecasts. 


Chart of the day

 

Markets


Quote of the day

 

Life is not a matter of holding good cards, but sometimes, playing a poor hand well

Jack London

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, Member Canadian Investor Protection Fund. Richardson Wealth is a trademark of James Richardson & Sons, Limited used under license.

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