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December 9, 2025
  
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Today


Stock futures are subdued and mixed this morning, as the FOMC kicks off their two-day rate meeting today. Nvidia shares are slightly higher pre-market after news the U.S. administration will allow the company to export its H200 chips, a more powerful version of the H20 chips currently permitted, though still short of its flagship model. Nothing comes free, however, as the U.S. government will take a 25% share of the sale, a so-called win-win for all parties. On the data front, the Fed gets more delayed jobs figures to parse ahead of tomorrow’s interest rate decision, with the October JOLTS report due later this morning. The market has all but priced in an interest rate cut at the final FOMC meeting of the year.

Short on memory. A global shortage of memory chips, ranging from basic flash storage to advanced high-bandwidth memory for AI data centers, is driving prices higher and forcing major tech companies, smartphone makers, and electronics retailers to fight for limited supply. As chipmakers like Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron prioritize high-margin AI memory to meet growing demand from firms such as Nvidia, Google, Microsoft, and ByteDance, production of conventional chips has fallen behind, creating shortages across PCs, phones, and consumer electronics. Prices have more than doubled in some categories, and retailers in Japan are beginning to ration purchases, while Chinese smartphone manufacturers warn of steep price hikes. The shortage may derail major AI infrastructure projects, slow productivity, and has the potential to add to global inflationary pressures.   

U.S. supply chains have found a way to diversify away from China, Hong Kong, and Korea, with the share of supplier volume dropping from 90% to 50% over the last few years, a trend that accelerated after Trump’s first term trade war with China. Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand, and India have benefitted as companies moved midsize suppliers to South and Southeast Asia, while imports from China to the U.S. fell 26% year-over-year. Yet China’s overall trade picture remains resilient. Its trade surplus climbed above $1 trillion for the first time in November, with exports up 5.4% and imports down over the first 11 months of 2025, widening the surplus by more than 21% year over year. Exports to the U.S. fell for the eighth straight month, but strong demand from ASEAN and the EU more than offset the decline as Chinese firms diverted goods through third countries such as Vietnam. While the recent U.S./China trade truce eased tensions and boosted rare earth and soybean flows, economists warn that trade frictions could return as China’s growing surplus raises concerns. For now, exports remain the key bright spot for China, helping the country maintain its roughly 5% growth target despite weak domestic demand, even as policymakers are expected to deploy more stimulus to counter manufacturing and housing weakness. 

Feeling bullish. Asset managers around the world appear bullish heading into 2026, with over 75% positioning portfolios for a risk-on environment driven by expectations of solid global growth, supportive monetary and fiscal policy, and ongoing momentum from AI. Most remain overweight equities, especially in emerging markets, the U.S., India, and small caps, arguing that strong earnings and early-stage AI adoption justify current valuations, despite how elevated they appear. Managers also see opportunities in sectors like health care and industrials, while clean-energy providers and small caps are set to benefit from lower rates. Still, there are plenty of risks, including potential disruption if the Fed halts its easing cycle, geopolitical shocks that could drive up oil prices, and uncertainty surrounding Trump’s trade policies. Despite these concerns, confidence remains high that equity markets can extend their multi-year rally. 

Canada’s stock market is shrinking as delistings and take-private deals continue to outpace new IPOs, leaving the TSX with 45% fewer corporate listings than in 2008, even as its overall market value has nearly tripled. More than $100 billion in Canadian companies have gone private in recent years, driven by attractive private-equity valuations and an abundance of private credit, limiting public-market access to growth opportunities for ordinary investors. While only a handful of firms have gone public recently, bankers see growing investor appetite and expect the next few years to bring a healthier pipeline, with several high-quality Canadian companies preparing to list. With valuations improving and successful IPO examples beginning to re-emerge, the environment may finally be turning more favourable after a few weak years for deals. 

The Canadian housing market remains under pressure despite close to a year and a half of Bank of Canada rate cuts, with U.S.–Canada trade war overshadowing cheaper borrowing costs and a growing number of new listings. Even with a 275 bps drop in the policy rate and significantly lower mortgage rates, national sales and prices are roughly unchanged from early 2024, suggesting that economic anxiety and not interest rates, is leaving potential buyers on the sidelines. First-time buyers appear reluctant to jump into the market, investors have disappeared, and major markets like Toronto and Vancouver are dragging despite pockets of strength in more affordable areas. Analysts also warn that 2026 could bring a tougher mortgage-renewal shock for households that locked in ultra-low 2021 rates and have since seen their home equity weaken. While major concerns like the trade conflict may ease, experts expect only a slow, uneven recovery rather than a rapid rebound. 

As you’re making your way through all those holiday classics, keep this in mind. Inflation has risen so dramatically since Home Alone 2 debuted in 1992 that Kevin McCallister’s $967 Plaza Hotel room-service binge would now cost $2,233 (he did ask for 3 scoops and wasn’t driving). His entire New York adventure is estimated at about $8,511 in 2025, up from about $2,109 at the time. Next time you think about a New York get away, note that prices at the Plaza are up around 303% over 33 years, with an average suite now $6,244 a night, and some reaching $33,000. Even a sundae will put a dent in your wallet, with the hotel now selling a $350 “Home Alone Sundae” in honour of the film. 


Diversion: It was him… 
The
Tactical model 
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Company news


Home Depot is offering cautious preliminary guidance for next year, a sign that the home-improvement retailer doesn’t anticipate the housing market to rebound in the short term. The company expects comparable sales growth to be in a range of flat to up 2% for the year, below the average of estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Comparable sales are a key gauge of performance for the industry. Home Depot also gave projections for total sales growth that were below estimates. The U.S. housing market has weighed on Home Depot as high interest rates prompt consumers to remain on the sidelines for big-ticket purchases and projects that require financing. While mortgage rates are lower than they were a year ago, Americans have been cautious amid higher costs across the economy. Home prices also remain high, meaning that housing has become more out-of-reach for a large portion of the population.

Exxon Mobil raised its expectation for future earnings and cash flow due to growth in key assets in the Permian Basin, Guyana and LNG, and more cost savings. Exxon expects $35 bln in cash flow growth by 2030, an increase of about 17% from what it was projecting a year ago, with no changes to capital expenditure. Costs savings will rise 10% to $20 billion compared with 2019 levels. Exxon also plans to bring online a large natural gas export terminal, Golden Pass, in the coming weeks, allowing it to turn what was a Permian byproduct into a high-revenue fuel sold globally. 

CVS Health raised its full-year profit forecast and said earnings would rise in 2026, a sign of hope as it navigates a turbulent retail environment and government scrutiny across the health care industry. The outlook suggests CVS expects to manage a volatile environment that has posed challenges for all three of its businesses. Health insurance plans are facing greater government scrutiny and drug benefit managers are changing their business practices while retail pharmacies are struggling to increase their profits.  

Microsoft announced a $7.5 bln investment in Canada over the next two years, as the tech giant focuses on expanding its cloud and AI infrastructure footprint. New capacity under the investment will begin to come online in the second half of 2026, Microsoft said, adding that its total estimated investment in Canada amounts to $19 billion between 2023 and 2027. 


Commodities


Oil prices are slightly higher after the biggest drop this month as traders look to reports coming this week to assess the extent of an oversupply – the Energy Information Administration is set to release its Short-Term Energy Outlook today, with reports due from the International Energy Agency (IEA) and OPEC later this week. The IEA has predicted a record surplus next year, and the volume of oil on the oceans is rising. Prices for refined fuels have softened in recent days, removing one factor that has supported crude during the last few weeks. Still, Brent ultimately remains in the tight $4-a-barrel range it has traded in since the start of November.

Iron ore fell to the lowest in a month, extending declines ahead of a key meeting of Chinese officials this week that will provide details on policy priorities for next year. China’s Central Economic Work Conference is expected to take place in the coming days, and follows a meeting of the Communist Party’s decision-making Politburo. The group made strengthening domestic demand their top economic priority for 2026. China’s prolonged property sector downturn has weighed on steel demand, but the nation’s iron ore imports has improved this year, climbing to a record over the 11-month period through November. Inventories at major Chinese ports are above the seasonal average, though lower than 2024. A ban on some supply from BHP Group by China’s state-backed iron ore trader has provided support to prices in recent months, but a resolution could lead to a rush of product hitting the market and further downward pressure.  


Fixed income and economics


Treasury yields are climbing to the highest in more than two months, following losses in most global government-bond markets, ahead of a Federal Reserve interest-rate decision that may alter expectations for monetary policy in 2026. The market trimmed losses and a sale of $58 billion of 3-year notes at 1 p.m. New York time, came in at a lower than forecast yield, a sign of better than anticipated demand. Auctions of $39 billion 10-years and $22 billion 30-years are set for today and Thursday, respectively. The Treasury shifted this week’s auction schedule to accommodate the Fed’s two-day meeting, which concludes with Wednesday afternoon’s announcement. Rate markets are pricing in nearly a 90% chance that the central bank will deliver a third straight quarter-point reduction, to a range of 3.5% to 3.75%. Also, markets will be looking to the Fed officials’ outlook for 2026, the “dot plot”, for future guidance on rates with inflation remaining stubbornly elevated. Amid worries over the prospect that the Fed downplays the inflation risk and eases aggressively next year under a new chair, longer-dated yields have risen toward multi month highs in a sign that investors are demanding more of a risk premium.  

Chart of the day

 

Markets


Quote of the day

 

Start where you are. Use what you have. Do what you can.

Arthur Ashe

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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