Launch Pad

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November 14, 2025
  
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Today


Equity futures are under significant pressure, following the worst session in more than a month for U.S. equities. The pullback reflects a broader risk-off shift, driven by growing uncertainty caused by the government shutdown and concerns that elevated AI-driven valuations may be due for a reset. The end of the record-long U.S. government shutdown has also brought uncertainty, as missing economic data from the standoff may cloud the Fed’s decision-making and weigh further on market sentiment. Added pressure has come from shifting expectations around Fed rate cuts, with a December cut now effectively a coin toss, down sharply from a month ago.  

Back to work. After a record 43-day U.S. government shutdown that halted air travel, froze food assistance, and left 1.4 million federal workers unpaid, agencies are beginning to reopen, though the political standoff remains unresolved. The temporary funding deal restores back pay, reverses thousands of dismissals, and restarts key programs like SNAP, museum operations, and airport security, but does not constrain Trump’s spending authority nor address the healthcare subsidies that originally sparked the shutdown. Both parties are dealing with internal rifts, and public blame is almost evenly split. The economic fallout may also take time to clear, with missing federal data, delayed small-business loans, and an estimated 1.5% GDP drag likely to linger even as activity eventually recovers. On the data front, we’re still partly in the dark. The October jobs report will be released, but without the unemployment rate, as statistical agencies are only gradually resuming operations. The Bureau of Labor Statistics has yet to publish a revised release schedule, leaving a gap in visibility on the economy’s current health. 

China’s economy continued to weaken in October as factory output and retail sales grew at their slowest pace in more than a year. The decline highlights just how much pressure the country has been under from the U.S. trade war, soft domestic demand, and a deepening investment slump. Industrial production rose just 4.9% and retail sales 2.9%, both missing expectations, while fixed-asset investment fell more sharply than forecast as confidence declined amid the persistent property downturn and fading government subsidies. Policymakers acknowledge that structural reforms are needed to rebalance the economy toward consumption and reduce heavy reliance on exports and infrastructure spending, but these changes are politically risky. With exports tumbling, auto sales unexpectedly contracting, and consumer sentiment muted even during Singles’ Day promotions, analysts warn that China’s growth momentum is deteriorating and that meaningful new policy support may be required in 2026 despite officials’ concerns about using too much stimulus now. 

While it doesn’t appear as dire, Europe is also facing its own growth challenges. The euro zone economy expanded by a modest 0.2% in the third quarter, confirming earlier estimates, as strong performances in France and Spain offset continued stagnation in Germany, where weak output, muted consumption, and soft exports persist. Annual growth reached 1.4%, slightly above expectations, while the bloc’s trade surplus jumped to €19.4 billion in September, its highest since March, driven by strong exports to the U.S., particularly in chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and machinery. Economists caution that the rise may reflect temporary factors such as frontloading ahead of tariffs, and despite the currency bloc’s resilience amid global trade tensions, there are few mechanisms that can meaningfully accelerate growth. 

Hedge funds and institutional investors have been using the market’s record-breaking rally to take profits, selling more than $67 billion in equities this year, while retail investors have continued to act as the primary dip-buyers sustaining the three-year bull market. A new report found that hedge funds and institutions have been the largest net sellers, especially of tech stocks amid valuation concerns, while retail investors, reminded of the pandemic rebound, consistently added cash during pullbacks and helped push the S&P 500 to repeated all-time highs. With the market’s sharp run-up showing signs of exhausting retail enthusiasm, the divide between professionals and small investors will be closely watched. 

Trump is preparing significant tariff cuts and a series of targeted trade deals with Argentina, Guatemala, El Salvador, and Ecuador in an effort to lower food prices and address voter concerns about affordability. The agreements would remove or reduce tariffs on items like beef, bananas, and coffee beans, while broader tariff exemptions also under consideration. The White House expects cheaper imports to translate into lower grocery bills, though many of the changes simply roll back tariffs Trump imposed earlier this year. The most notable deal supports Argentina’s President Javier Milei by expanding market access for U.S. goods, while easing beef trade has drawn criticism from U.S. ranchers worried about competition. Additional negotiations are also being negotiated, although it seems like Canada is still in the doghouse.   

Joy Ride. Earlier this week, a man (briefly) stole a Hamilton city bus after the driver stepped away for a break, taking it on a 15-minute joy ride with roughly 10 unaware passengers aboard. The man drove the bus up the Mountain, made regular stops, followed passenger directions when he became lost, and even refused boarding to someone with an expired pass (rules are rules), all while causing no damage and injuring no one. Police tracked the bus using GPS to avoid alarming the driver, ultimately arresting the man without incident. He is charged with theft over $5,000, but seeing just how good he was at driving, seems like he may get a job offer soon enough. 


Diversion: Was never going to end well

 
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Company news


Merck has agreed to acquire Cidara Therapeutics, a biotech company developing a flu treatment, as part of its ongoing efforts to make up for the upcoming patent loss of its blockbuster cancer drug Keytruda. Merck is seeking deals to expand its portfolio of treatments as it prepares for patent losses that are expected to erode its sales by $18 billion over the next five years. In 2028, Merck faces a patent expiration for Keytruda, the best-selling drug in pharmaceutical history which accounted for almost half of the company’s revenue last year. Merck is one of the biggest vaccine makers, a group that’s under threat by the Trump administration. Cidara’s drug, CD388, is not a vaccine, meaning it doesn’t depend on producing an immune response. It’s a long-acting treatment to prevent the flu in people who are at higher risk of complications. It’s currently in a late-stage trial. Cidara says it could provide an additional option to vaccines and antivirals to help prevent influenza. The purchase has been approved by both Merck’s and Cidara’s boards, and is expected to close in the first quarter of 2026.  

Applied Materials shares are under pressure after announcing a sales decline last quarter and predicting another drop in the current period, though the chip-equipment maker sees demand improving in the second half of 2026. Sales will be approximately $6.85 billion in fiscal first quarter, which was slightly higher than the $6.81 billion average estimate, but represents a decline of more than 4% from the year-earlier period. Trade restrictions have weighed on sales to China, CEO Gary Dickerson said in an interview after the results were released. Last month, Applied Materials said an expansion of US export curbs to China would cost the company $600 million in lost revenue in fiscal 2026, which started in recent weeks. Applied Materials also announced plans to cut 4% of its global workforce. 

More job cut announcements. Verizon Communications Inc. is discussing plans to announce job cuts next week that could downsize the company by as much as 20%. The size and scope of the potential layoffs are still being discussed, but they could impact 15,000-20,000 workers. Verizon has about 100,000 employees. The planned cuts are part of an aggressive strategy that CEO Schulman recently unveiled to reclaim market share. The dismissals are expected to extend to employees at every level and in all parts of the business. The goal is to notify affected employees with in-person manager conversations beginning next week. The bulk of the laid-off employees would be off Verizon’s payroll by the end of year.  


Commodities


Oil prices are higher for a second day after Ukraine attacked a key Russian oil port and Iran seized a tanker near the Strait of Hormuz, injecting a fresh geopolitical premium into prices. Global benchmark Brent rallied the most in three weeks, at one point adding as much as 3%, before paring those gains. The attack came on the same day that a U.S. defense official said Iranian forces seized a tanker after it passed the vital Strait of Hormuz chokepoint, adding to concerns that Iran is turning to hijacking merchant ships again. The two concerns come against the backdrop of a tightening of U.S. sanctions against Russia. Curbs on the country’s two largest oil companies, Rosneft PJSC and Lukoil PJSC, are due to kick in within days and a major trading company has begun letting employees go. The measures are already impacting fuel prices and key figures from the International Energy Agency to Europe’s largest refiner have warned about the impact on the market from the curbs.   

Gold prices are lower, but still setting up for its best week in a month, with prices fluctuating wildly on headlines that the U.S. government closure was coming to an end. For the technical traders out there, gold’s rise this week may have been amplified by a so-called “gamma squeeze,” a technical pattern whereby dealers who sold cheap options are forced to buy bullion futures as a hedge. In a thin market, any sudden rise in price can increase the urgency to buy and snowball into a surge even without fresh demand from physical buyers. Though it has retreated from a record above $4,380 last month, gold is still up nearly 60% this year and remains on target for its best annual performance since 1979. Central banks have stepped up purchases, seeking a store of value and asset diversification, while investors have piled into the metal as a hedge against growing fiscal unease in some of the world’s biggest economies.  


Fixed income and economics


U.S. Treasuries were lower yesterday as rate markets priced in less probability of a rate cut in December with policymakers cautioning against further reductions. Odds of a December cut assigned by the market slipped below 50% as Fed officials signaled concern about inflation that remains above their target. Investors had fully priced in the cut as recently as last month, wagering that weakness in the labour market would outweigh price pressures.  The long bond led the selloff, with the 30-year yield rising about three basis points after the $25 billion auction of the tenor was awarded at 4.694%, higher than the yield just prior to the bidding deadline, suggesting soft demand. The U.S. bond market is now bracing for more volatility now that the government will start releasing more data again. The ICE BofA MOVE Index, a gauge of expected bond-market volatility, has rebounded to a one-month high after recently reaching a four-year low. To add another piece of uncertainty, National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett said that the jobs report will be released without a reading of the unemployment rate.  

fixed income  

Markets


Quote of the day

 

If there is no struggle, there is no progress

Frederick Douglass

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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