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June 19, 2026
  
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Today

Global equity markets were relatively muted overnight, with London’s FTSE and France’s CAC 40 down -0.31% and -0.37%, respectively, while Germany’s DAX was little changed at the time of writing. In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei rose 0.28%, while markets in China and Hong Kong were closed for the Dragon Boat Festival. U.S. markets are also closed today for a public holiday. In Canada, TSX futures are pointing to a modestly lower open as investors continue to monitor fragile negotiations between U.S. and Iran. Optimism surrounding a deal took a modest hit overnight after talks scheduled to begin Friday in Switzerland were postponed following renewed fighting in southern Lebanon between Israel and Hezbollah. Iran reportedly declined to send a delegation, insisting that a ceasefire in Lebanon is a prerequisite for moving forward. While the delay raises fresh questions about the durability of this week’s memorandum of understanding, markets have so far taken the setback in stride, with oil prices little changed and the Strait of Hormuz remaining open. The latest developments are a reminder that the path from ceasefire to a permanent agreement on Iran’s nuclear program remains far from straightforward. 

One year later, same trade questions. A year after Mark Carney expressed optimism that a Canada-U.S. trade agreement could be reached following the 2025 G7 summit, investors are still waiting. Speaking in Paris after this year’s gathering, Trump delivered another round of mixed messages on the future of the Canada- U.S.-Mexico agreement, saying he would prefer to terminate the pact while also suggesting he may ultimately support its continuation. The comments come as Canada, the U.S., and Mexico prepare for the agreement’s July 1 review, with officials expected to hold a virtual negotiating session before meeting in Mexico City on July 20 for more substantive discussions. Uncertainty matters. The U.S. remains Canada’s largest trading partner by a wide margin, accounting for roughly 75% of Canadian merchandise exports, while deeply integrated supply chains across manufacturing, energy, agriculture, and autos depend on a stable trading framework. While markets and businesses have become relatively accustomed to shifting trade rhetoric, greater clarity and predictability would be welcomed by companies making long-term investment and hiring decisions. 

The cost of crossing the border. The Canadian dollar finished beyond 1.41 per U.S. dollar, for its lowest close yesterday since April 2025 as investors reacted to the Fed’s hawkish stance. With markets now pricing in the possibility of higher U.S. interest rates, the yield advantage of U.S. bonds over Canadian bonds has widened, making U.S. assets relatively more attractive and supporting the greenback. Softer oil prices have added to the pressure, but the primary driver has been the growing divergence between U.S. and Canadian interest rate expectations. For Canadians, a weaker loonie is a mixed blessing. It can support exporters and increase the value of U.S. investments when translated back into C$, but it also raises the cost of imported goods, cross-border travel, and purchases priced in U.S. dollars. As long as U.S. rates remain higher than Canadian rates, the currency is likely to remain under pressure. 

Canada’s population has declined for three consecutive quarters, the first sustained contraction since the 1950s, as the federal government reins in immigration after the post-pandemic population rise. While headline GDP has contracted for two straight quarters, economists say the economy is healthier than it appears because GDP per capita has returned to growth, suggesting living standards are improving even as the overall economy shrinks. Slower population growth is also reshaping the labour market, with fewer new jobs needed to keep unemployment stable, making flat employment figures less concerning than they would have been only a few years ago. Weaker population growth is expected to ease inflation by reducing housing demand and rental pressures, supporting the view that the BoC is unlikely to shift toward higher interest rates anytime soon despite ongoing trade uncertainty. 

Redirecting capital. The AI infrastructure race is changing Big Tech’s capital allocation, with massive spending on data centers and computing capacity replacing share buybacks that have supported stock prices for years. Alphabet, Meta and Amazon halted buybacks in the first quarter, while Microsoft’s repurchases fell to their lowest level in nearly a decade, and both Alphabet and Meta are considering large equity issuances to help fund AI investments. This shift reflects a move away from the capital-light business models that once generated ample free cash flow, forcing investors to focus more on returns from AI spending. While markets have so far rewarded the strategy, continued support will depend on whether these companies can generate attractive returns on their huge AI investments. 

We need more power… The U.S. is taking steps to accelerate access to electricity, a big bottleneck facing the AI buildout. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) approved new measures designed to shorten data centre grid connection timelines from years to as little as 90 days, helping to support power demand from AI infrastructure. The trade-off is that large tech companies may be required to fund grid upgrades, bring their own generation capacity, or reduce consumption during periods of system stress. Regulators also want to protect consumers from rising electricity costs by requiring regional grid operators to review how charges are allocated to large power users. These changes highlight a reality of the AI race. Success will depend not only on chips and software, but also on the ability to secure sufficient power. For investors, it reinforces the long-term tailwinds supporting utilities, power generation, transmission infrastructure and data centre development. 

First one, and (hopefully) not done. Canada earned its first World Cup victory in emphatic fashion, defeating Qatar 6-0 in Vancouver to remain atop Group B alongside Switzerland. With the Swiss having already secured three points earlier in the day, Canada needed a strong result to maintain control of the group, and they delivered in front of an electric home crowd. The evening, however, will be remembered for more than just the score. Following the devastating injury to Ismaël Koné, players were visibly shaken after seeing a teammate stretchered from the pitch. To their credit, they regrouped, refocused, and delivered a performance for the ages, with Jonathan David leading the way with a hat trick. Attention now turns to Wednesday’s group finale against the favoured Swiss, again in Vancouver. Anything but a loss would secure top spot in the group, a full week of rest, and a Round of 32 match in Canada against a third-place finisher. A defeat would likely mean a second-place finish, just three days of rest, and a more difficult knockout-round path beginning in Los Angeles. Canada has put itself in an enviable position, but there is still important work left to do. Go Canada! 

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Company news

Australian mining giant BHP Group shares posted the biggest one-day fall in 14 months this morning, after the company flagged a $2.3 billion write down on its giant potash mine in Canada due to cost and time overruns for an expansion of the project. Phase two of the Jansen mine development will now cost $6.9 billion, up from an earlier forecast of $4.9 billion. BHP said the mine will start producing toward the end of 2031. According to Barclays Plc analysts, BHP has routinely blown past cost estimates for the controversial project and now estimates the company has spent $20.3 billion on the project to date, of which $4.1 billion has now been impaired.   

Accenture had a rough day. The consulting giant reported Q3 FY26 results that on the surface, looks mixed. EPS of $3.80 beat estimates by 2.4% and free cashflow came in a whopping 26% above consensus, but the market was more focused on the bad news as the revenue of $18.72 bln narrowly missed, bookings of $19.3 bln fell short of the $20.7 bln analysts anticipated, and Q4 revenue guidance came in 2% below consensus. The stock plunged -18.2%, their worst single-day drop, dragging the entire IT services sector down with it. Accenture has been caught in a revenue slump from the Middle East conflict towards the end of the quarter, and some structural fears surrounding AI, the very technology Accenture is betting most of its money on. AI is replacing work that Accenture would normally bill for, meaning clients need fewer consultants and pay less, to get the same outcome. CEO Julie Sweet tried to frame AI as a long-term tailwind, but investors weren’t fully buying it.

Moderna’s influenza vaccine made with mRNA technology was recommended for approval by outside advisers to the US FDA, a positive development for what has been a contentious product at the company. The vote is a major victory for Moderna, and represents a continuing turnabout at the FDA, which appears to be rapidly backing off controversial drug and vaccine decisions it made under previous leadership. The recommendation by the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee isn’t binding, though the agency typically follows its guidance. The flu shot is key to Moderna’s efforts to diversify away from the flagging Covid immunization business and break even by 2028,. The company said the FDA is slated to make an approval decision for the immunization by Aug. 5, in time for the next flu season.  


Commodities

Brent is little changed as traffic through the Strait of Hormuz appeared to thin out today just as the U.S. and Iran postponed face-to-face talks over a permanent peace deal, raising uncertainty over a sustained recovery in Persian Gulf exports. There has been some movement on the Strait as trackers yesterday detected vessels carrying nearly 10 million barrels on or near the Strait, including the first Saudi-owned tankers since the conflict began more than three months ago. The U.S. also reported that nearly 12.5 million barrels of oil had passed through the Strait of Hormuz the night before. Just to put it in context, the International Energy Agency reported that before the war, the Strait of Hormuz used to see daily transits of oil and products totaling about 20 mln barrels. The process of fully reopening Hormuz may prove to be a difficult operation. To run smoothly, the process needs to be choreographed, with ships in the right place, wells restarted, infrastructure repaired and steps agreed to de-mine the waterway. Brent is now trading just below $80 and on track for a weekly drop of about -9%. With this week’s selloff crude futures have nearly relinquished almost all of the gains triggered by the war, which erupted on Feb. 28.  

Gold prices are lower and on track for a third consecutive weekly decline, as a stronger U.S. dollar and hawkish signals from the U.S. Federal Reserve weighed. Also not helping gold, markets in mainland China and Hong Kong are closed for the Dragon Boat Festival holiday. Despite the Fed holding rates unchanged on Wednesday, the new dot plot showed nine of the U.S. central bank’s 19 policymakers believe they will need to raise the policy rate this year. Inflationary pressures stemming from the Iran war have prompted a growing number of central banks to either raise borrowing costs or signal moves to tame price growth. Traders now see an 87% chance of a U.S. rate hike in December, jumping from 61% prior to the Fed decision, according to the CME FedWatch Tool.  


Fixed income and economics

Bond markets have been rallying and yield curves flattening as hawkish signals from central banks and in particular, the Federal Reserve, are increasing pressure on corporate credit spreads which are near historic lows. As major central banks continue to tighten policy, traders are reassessing rich credit valuations, raising the prospect of further credit spread widening in the months ahead. Globally, high-grade corporate credit spreads remain near historic lows, with yield premiums at 76 basis points, just two basis points above a nearly two-decade low hit in January. Heavy spending on AI infrastructure and resilient corporate earnings have helped drive credit spreads tighter this year, despite widening out briefly in the wake of the U.S.-Iran conflict. While investors are somewhat optimistic about the outlook for economies, particularly after a peace deal was struck between Iran and the US, inflation concerns are still lingering and higher-for-longer bond yields are set to pressure corporates with weaker balance sheets, increasing the potential for surprise credit shocks.  Mark Reade, head of credit strategy at Mizuho Securities, stated “despite decent fundamentals and receding geopolitical risk, it is hard to see Asia investment-grade spreads tighten much further,” pointing to the more hawkish stance from most global central banks and headwinds for liquidity in markets. 

Chart of the day
 

Markets

Quote of the day
 

Struggle is a never ending process. Freedom is never really won,
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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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