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January 29, 2026
  
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Today


Stock futures moved higher this morning as investors digested a fresh wave of big tech earnings and the Fed’s and BoC’s decision to hold rates steady. Meta rose 8% after issuing stronger-than-expected sales guidance and Tesla gained 2% on an earnings beat, though Microsoft weighed on sentiment with a 6% drop after slower cloud growth and softer margin outlook, with Apple set to report after the close. Still, commodities continue to steal the spotlight as gold rallied above $5,500, silver extended its year-to-date gain to about 63%, and copper posted its biggest jump in years. Meanwhile, treasuries were little changed following recent weakness in the greenback, and brent crude topped $70 for the first time since September after Trump warned Iran to agree to a nuclear deal or face military action. All of this just highlights how the market has had to balance tech-driven optimism with geopolitical and currency risks.

Steady as it goes. The BoC held its policy rate steady at 2.25% for a second straight meeting, saying heightened uncertainty tied to evolving U.S. trade policy and tariff threats has made it difficult to predict whether the next move will be a hike or a cut. Governor Tiff Macklem warned that the era of open, rules-based trade with the U.S. is effectively over and that Canada must adapt to a the more unpredictable environment, adding that this shift is negative for both countries. While the bank still expects moderate growth of about 1.1% this year and 1.5% in 2027 and sees inflation hovering near its 2% target, officials stressed that those forecasts could quickly change. With consumption soft, investment cautious, and the labour market showing lingering slack, policymakers appear comfortable keeping rates near neutral and waiting for clearer signals on how trade tensions and global volatility play out. 

Not caving under the pressure. As expected, the Fed left interest rates unchanged at 3.5% to 3.75% yesterday, signaling patience as officials pointed to a solid economy and signs the labour market is stabilizing, with the FOMC voting 10–2 to hold and two governors dissenting in favour of a small cut. With no surprise in the decision to keep rates where they are, investors quickly turned their attention to the comments by Fed officials. Policymakers upgraded their view of growth, dropped language about rising downside employment risks, and described inflation progress as modestly positive, suggesting less urgency for near-term easing even as hiring remains soft and price pressures are still above target. Powell said the outlook has improved but warned that cooling trends continue, emphasizing a meeting-by-meeting, data-dependent approach rather than pre-committing to cuts. The decision comes amid political pressure from the Trump administration and scrutiny over Fed independence, although officials appear comfortable keeping rates unchanged. 

The USD weakened this week, prompting some strategists to question whether the Trump administration is intentionally allowing (or even encouraging) a softer currency to support trade competitiveness. Trump’s relaxed stance toward the dollar’s recent slide is fueling speculation that the U.S. currency may be entering a longer-term downtrend. While treasury yields, inflation expectations, and capital inflows remain relatively stable, the dollar entered 2026 overvalued and has since slid amid policy uncertainty, concerns about Fed independence, tense domestic politics, and speculation about coordinated U.S.-Japan currency intervention following reported rate checks. The softer greenback has lifted peers including the loonie, though analysts expect the loonie’s gains to be capped by flat oil prices and Canada’s fragile growth outlook, with its performance largely tied to broader dollar trends and ongoing trade risks around CUSMA. 

Brrrrr. A recent cold snap across parts of Canada and the U.S. is colliding with some of the highest U.S. energy costs in years, turning heating bills into a financial stress test for households already strained by food and housing prices. Electricity and piped gas costs are up 7.7% year-over-year and average home heating expenses in the U.S. are projected to rise 9.2% to about $995 this winter. And it wouldn’t be a 2026 story without a reference to AI. In some regions, next-day power prices are hitting record highs as rising demand from AI data centers tightens supply, pushing wholesale and retail bills higher and forcing families to ration heat, rely on space heaters, and fall behind on payments. The spike is adding pressure to consumer budgets at a time when savings rates are low and spending has outpaced income growth, raising concerns that higher utility costs could curb broader consumption, especially in hard-hit areas like the Northeast and parts of the South where heating reliance and infrastructure constraints make price swings even more painful. 

Homeward bound. A vacation in Spain turned into an ordeal for French couple when their cat escaped during a fuel stop. Despite weeks of searching and contacting authorities, the couple believed their cat was gone for good. That is until five months later when the cat was found just 500 meters from their home in France. It may seem too good to be true, but the couple was able to confirm it was their cat from its microchip. All in all, their feline friend somehow traveled roughly 250 km back across mountains, rivers and an international border. Scientists credit the return to cats’ spatial memory and ability to navigate using magnetic fields and scent cues. It’s safe to say, they’ll likely keep the cat home during their next trip. 


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Company news


AI negative. Microsoft shares are under pressure after announcing spending surged to a record high and cloud sales growth slowed, with concerns building that it could take longer than expected for the company’s AI investments to pay off. Capital expenditures for the fiscal second quarter hit $37.5 bln, up 66% from a year earlier and exceeding analyst estimates for $36.2 bln. Microsoft has experienced rapid growth in its cloud computing business, thanks in part to a landmark partnership with leading AI startup OpenAI. But despite spending heavily on data centers, Microsoft has struggled to get capacity online quickly enough to meet demand. Microsoft has been rushing to bake AI tools, including those powered by OpenAI, into its products, betting that chatbots and automation technology will boost sales of the company’s productivity software and cloud services.

AI positive. Meta Platforms beat earnings expectations, topped projections for quarterly revenue and delivered a strong forecast for the current period, boosted by a robust online advertising business that is making it possible for the company to invest in AI at record levels this year. Meta also said full-year capital expenditures will be $115-$135 bln, exceeding the $110.6 bln average analyst estimate. CEO Mark Zuckerberg has driven an aggressive campaign to amass the infrastructure, computing power and talent that he deems necessary to win a competitive AI race. Zuckerberg has committed publicly, including at a high-profile White House dinner, to spend $600 bln in the U.S. by 2028 to support AI technology, infrastructure and workforce expansion. Earlier this month, Meta cut about 10% of staff across Reality Labs as part of a move to shift resources away from some of the virtual reality products and into more AI-focused ventures, including its AI wearables, like the Ray-Ban Meta glasses. 

Tesla shares are looking to open higher after reporting adjusted earnings for the fourth quarter that topped the average analyst estimate. Tesla announced it will invest $2 billion in xAI, the artificial intelligence company controlled by its C.E.O., Elon Musk, and stop making the two oldest models in its lineup. The Chinese carmaker BYD has surpassed Tesla as the largest manufacturer of electric vehicles globally. In Europe, Volkswagen now sells more electric vehicles than Tesla. Despite this, Tesla shares are trading near a record high as shareholders believe Elon Musk will deliver on his promises to dominate the market for self-driving taxis and for robots capable of doing complex tasks better than humans.  

Let me google assist that for you. Alphabet’s Google is launching an AI assistant on its Chrome browser that can open websites and click around on a user’s behalf. The new feature, called auto browse, will allow users to ask an assistant powered by Gemini to complete tasks such as shopping for them or plan a family trip by asking Gemini to open different airline and hotel websites to compare prices. The rollout is the latest push to integrate AI advancements throughout Alphabet’s products. Earlier this month, Alphabet launched Personal Intelligence, where Gemini taps into users’ data across Gmail, Search, Photos and YouTube to personalize its responses. It can also help with logistics around a trip like checking school schedules and already-scheduled appointments to find the best option for the family. 


Commodities


Gold rush. Gold is continuing to extend its rally, rising past $5,500, fueled by a weaker U.S. dollar and investor flight from sovereign bonds and currencies. Silver also hit an all-time high above $120 an ounce this morning. Bullion jumped 3.3%, adding to the 4.6% from the previous session, the biggest one-day gain since the beginning of the pandemic. Precious metals have risen dramatically this year on heightened geopolitical tensions and worries about the independence of the Fed, which have supported the debasement trade. The latest move higher came as traders looked beyond the Fed’s widely expected decision yesterday to leave interest rates unchanged and ramped up bets on a dovish policy shift, which would benefit non-yielding precious metals. Technically, there are underlining risks to precious metals, gold’s relative strength index (RSI) spiked above 90 and silver’s was around 84. Readings above 70 typically signal the metal has been bought so heavily it could be due for a pause or pullback.

Oil prices are higher with Brent hitting $70 for the first time since September after Trump warned Iran to make a nuclear deal or face military strikes. Yesterday, in a social media post, Trump said that U.S. ships he ordered to the region were ready to fulfill their mission. Crude benchmarks have rallied so far this year, despite expectations for a market pressured by significant oversupply. Instead, geopolitical tensions from Iran to Venezuela and major supply disruption in Kazakhstan have helped to boost prices. Trump’s latest threats have injected a risk premium into prices. Bullish call options have been more expensive than bearish puts for the longest stretch in about 14 months as traders seek to protect against the risk of a new confrontation between the US and Iran. Bullish option  additions have also grown at the fastest pace in at least six years.  


Fixed income and economics


Treasuries were little changed yesterday after the Fed kept interest rates steady as expected and cited signs of stabilization in U.S. unemployment. The Fed left its benchmark overnight rate in a range of 3.5% to 3.75%, pausing after three straight quarter-point cuts since September. Traders had anticipated the decision in the wake of data showing a steadying labour market and inflation remaining elevated above the central bank’s target.  Rate markets continue to price in a Fed on hold until mid-year, with the next quarter-point reduction priced in at the central bank’s July meeting, and the potential for another cut toward year-end. Last month, Fed officials indicated via their quarterly outlook, known as the dot-plot, that they anticipate one quarter-point cut by the end of 2026.  Meanwhile across the pond, traders are placing large wagers on a bet that the ECB will surprise markets by delivering a quarter-point interest-rate cut at some point this year. A number of large wagers have been placed this week through options strategies tied to the three-month Euribor funding rate, which could pay out 12 times the amount paid, if the ECB cuts. It’s a contrarian move given the ECB has long been expected to hold borrowing costs steady this year, having brought inflation just below its target.  

Chart of the day


Markets


Quote of the day

 

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Albert Einstein

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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