Stay on top of market movements with the Launch Pad. Updated daily.
May 7, 2026
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Today
Global equities are extending their advance, with stock futures edging higher this morning. A renewed surge in tech pushed the S&P 500 and Nasdaq to fresh highs in yesterday’s session, helped by strength in chip stocks, with shares of Super Micro Computer (24.5%) and AMD (18.6%) rising following their results, alongside gains in Nvidia (5.8%) and Intel (4.5%). In Asia, markets are also being driven by AI, with Japan’s Nikkei leading gains, up 5.6% as SoftBank surged more than 18%, its largest move since the pandemic. Meanwhile, oil prices continue to slide, with Brent trading below $100 at the time of writing. On the geopolitical front, the U.S. and Iran are working with mediators on a one-page framework to restart negotiations, potentially paving the way to end the conflict and reopen the Strait, with talks as early as next week in Pakistan.
China is stepping up diplomatic pressure to resolve the Iran war, with officials urging for the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz ahead of a high-stakes meeting between Xi Jinping and Trump. The push reflects China’s need for stabilized global energy markets, given its heavy reliance on Middle Eastern oil. That’s not all though, with experts noting that China is also trying to position itself as a key geopolitical mediator. Progress toward reopening the strait and potentially easing U.S. sanctions, has already moved energy markets, highlighting how central this chokepoint is to global economic stability.
Economic activity in Canada rebounded in April, with the Ivey PMI jumping back into expansion territory and signalling the strongest activity in seven months. The improvement was broad-based, with both employment and hiring picking up, suggesting underlying resilience in the domestic economy despite ongoing global uncertainty. However, the rise in the prices index highlights growing cost pressures, likely tied to higher energy and commodity prices, which could complicate the outlook for inflation. For the BoC, this combination of stronger growth and rising price pressures reinforces a cautious policy stance, as the economy appears to be holding up better than expected but with inflation risks still very much present.
There will be more employment reports to parse through this week, with investors awaiting tomorrow’s jobs data out of Canada and the U.S. These reports are pivotal for markets as they will help determine whether the holdings of rates remain intact for the BoC and the Fed or whether meaningful labour market softening could reopen the door to rate cuts. For now, resilient growth, sticky inflation, and geopolitical energy shocks have reduced expectations for near-term easing, making labour deterioration the primary catalyst that could shift policy expectations. However, even a weaker jobs report may not be enough on its own unless accompanied by sustained unemployment increases and broader economic softness.
Benchmarks for private markets. JPMorgan has introduced a new index tracking roughly 6,400 U.S. middle-market private companies with a combined $1 trillion in annual revenue. The index aims to provide more visibility into a segment that has historically been difficult to track. The J.P. Morgan Private Assets Index (JPAX) – Middle Market covers firms with $10 million to $1 billion in revenue and estimates performance using company financials alongside public market valuation proxies. It is designed as a diagnostic tool, not a tradable benchmark, reflecting the structural limitations of private market data. The introduction comes as the number of public companies has declined while private firms have grown, highlighting a gap in measurement. In short, this is less about investability and more about building the infrastructure to better track and understand private market performance.
Still living at home or have kids still living at home? That just means you’re part of the trend. A new study from Stats Canada shows millennials are twice as likely to live with their parents as baby boomers were at the same age, with over 16% of those aged 25 to 39 living at home in 2021 versus 8.2% in 1991. The trend is more pronounced in expensive cities like Toronto and Vancouver. At the same time, homeownership rates have declined, with just under half of millennials owning homes compared to roughly 56% for both boomers and Gen X at similar ages, and those who do own are less likely to live in detached homes. While affordability is a key factor, the shift also reflects delayed marriage, parenthood, longer periods in education, and changing demographic patterns. Homeownership rates remain stable for those in partnered households, reinforcing the role of household formation. With first-time buyers entering the market later, part of the gap reflects delayed entry rather than permanent dislocation.
Diversion: Good mindset
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Company news
BCE beat analyst expectations in the first quarter as its investments in AI infrastructure pay off. Revenue came in at $6.2 bln, 4% higher than last year and better than the average of estimates. BCE disclosed revenue from its business markets division for the first time, which grew 9.7%, primarily driven by triple-digit gains in its AI businesses. BCE’s Bell AI Fabric network aims to provide computing power of 800 megawatts over time. As an example, BCE partnered with AI firms CoreWeave Inc. and Cerebras Systems Inc. in March to back a data center in Saskatchewan and expects to complete the first phase in 2027. On the mobile side, it gained 16,947 net postpaid subscribers over the quarter, more than analysts expected and better than the 9,598 loss a year earlier.
McDonald’s reported first-quarter sales that fell just short of expectations, with slower-than-expected growth in the U.S. weighing on results. Sales at established restaurants rose 3.8% in the period, slightly below the average of estimates, but show a rebound from a year ago, when consumer confidence wavered in anticipation of new tariffs by the Trump administration. McDonald’s has bettered its value offerings in recent years to appeal to diners grappling with tighter budgets, while also promoting pop culture-inspired items for those looking to splurge. The company previously said momentum has continued in 2026 after a strong end to last year. It warned that U.S. snowstorms in the first quarter would likely dampen results.
Sony Music is finalizing a deal to acquire a music catalog from Blackstone Inc. that includes works of Justin Bieber and Neil Young in one of the largest such deals in music history. Sony, through a joint venture with Singaporean sovereign wealth fund GIC, will pay between $3.5-$4 bln to buy Recognition Music Group, which owns the rights to more than 45,000 songs. Blackstone has amassed a large portfolio of music rights over the last decade, much of which was once owned by the UK-based Hipgnosis Songs Management. The Sony deal would be the third multi-billion-dollar music deal in the last few months, following the merger of Concord with BMG and the sale of Kobalt to Primary Wave Music. Investors have plowed billions of dollars into music catalogs even as growth in the global market for music has slowed.
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Commodities
Oil prices continue to drop with Brent now below $100 a barrel, extending an -8% slump in the previous session, as the U.S. and Iran continue to push to end their war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz. A post from Al Arabiya, a Saudi-affiliated outlet, said that agreements were reached on easing the U.S. blockade in exchange for a gradual reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, citing sources. The effort follows weeks of deadlock and failed diplomatic attempts to hold talks. Trump is under pressure to bring the war to a close as US retail energy prices surge with gasoline price recently breaching $4.50, fanning voters’ concerns about affordability. In addition, Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are due to hold a summit in Beijing on May 14-15. This week, China’s top diplomat called for the swift reopening of Hormuz in a meeting with his Iranian counterpart. On the data front, U.S. government data showed exports of oil products rose to a record last week as the country became a key supplier of fuel to the world amid the crunch caused by the conflict while crude inventories fell.
Gold prices extended gains for a third day as optimism over a potential U.S.-Iran deal pushed down oil and gas prices, diminishing concerns of inflation. Silver also rose more than 3%, after jumping 6.2% in the previous session. Falling energy prices weigh on bond yields, and with the U.S. dollar back to pre-war levels, these are both tailwinds for bullion. Despite oil prices lowering, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Austan Goolsbee and President of St. Louis Fed Alberto Musalem struck a note of caution, highlighting that inflation concerns remain as it is still running above the target of 2%. Gold has fallen more than -10% since the conflict erupted in late February, as the closure of Hormuz and resulting energy price shock raised concerns about rising inflation that would keep rates higher for longer.

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Fixed income and economics
Global bonds are continuing higher this morning after a dramatic rebound yesterday as the prospect of a peace deal between the U.S. and Iran pushed oil prices lower and lowering probabilities on interest-rate hikes as inflation concerns eased. UK gilts led the rally with long-bond yields retreating from their highest level since 1998. The moves pushed the U.S. 10-year yield lower by as much as nine basis points to 4.33%, while Germany’s dropped as much as 10 bps. The scale of Wednesday’s moves underscored the market’s inclination to rally on signs of a peace deal that unlocks Middle East oil supply. Bonds have rallied several times on previous headlines of a breakthrough in negotiations between Washington and Tehran. The price rise held in the U.S. even after the Treasury Department made no changes to its quarterly financing plan and anticipates steady note and bond auction sizes for at least the next several quarters. The Treasury’s quarterly refunding announcement provided a measure of support to the bond market by pushing further into the future the point at which it’s expected to have to increase auction sizes to meet new borrowing needs while rolling over maturing debt. In the meantime, the government will rely on shorter-maturity bill sales to plug the gap.
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Quote of the day
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Independence is happiness.
Susan B. Anthony
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Contributors: A. Innis, A. Nguyen, P. Kwon
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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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