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June 2, 2026
  
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Today


Markets are once again balancing AI enthusiasm against geopolitical uncertainty. Tech shares helped lift U.S. indexes higher yesterday, while the TSX finished modestly lower. Futures are pointing in the opposite direction this morning, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq set to open lower while the TSX edges higher. Investors now have several AI-related developments to digest. Alphabet is trading lower premarket after unveiling plans to raise $80 bln to fund its AI infrastructure buildout. The package includes a $10 bln investment from Berkshire Hathaway, $30 bln through underwritten offerings, and a further $40 bln expected to be raised in the public market. HPE (not to be confused with HPQ) is also surging after reporting second-quarter results that topped expectations and pulling forward its long-term financial targets (see company news below). Meanwhile, Marvell Technology is jumping after receiving a high-profile endorsement from Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang at Computex. Huang suggested Marvell could become the next trillion-dollar company, as investors broaden their focus beyond semiconductors to the networking, connectivity and infrastructure that’s needed to operate AI at scale.

The recent rise in interest rates is a good reminder that markets are driven by more than just one variable. While higher bond yields are (theoretically) negative for stocks because they increase the discount rate applied to future earnings, valuation is ultimately a function of both interest rates and expected earnings growth. Over the past several years, earnings expectations (particularly for AI-related companies) have risen faster than interest rates, allowing stock valuations to remain elevated despite rising Treasury yields. The S&P 500 traded at roughly 15x–18x forward earnings when the 10-year Treasury yielded around 2.3% between 2015 and 2019, yet today the market trades near 21x earnings with the 10-year yield around 4.5%. Investors are willing to pay higher multiples when they expect stronger future cash flows. Strong earnings growth from AI, and technology infrastructure has offset the headwind from higher rates, helping explain why stocks continue to trade near record highs despite the higher cost of capital. How long that lasts is another question. 

The upcoming SpaceX IPO highlights how some of the most valuable companies are staying private for longer, allowing most of their growth and value creation to occur before public investors have an opportunity to participate. Earlier technology giants such as Amazon, Apple, Netflix, Alphabet, and Nvidia typically went public within three to six years of founding, allowing public shareholders to benefit from decades of subsequent expansion. Things are a bit different these days, however, with private capital from venture funds, private equity firms, sovereign wealth funds, and institutional investors enabling companies to remain private much longer. As a result, IPOs represent liquidity events rather than growth-funding events, with public investors often buying into businesses that are already mature, dominant, and valued in the hundreds of billions (or even trillions) of dollars. 

Benchmark home prices in Canada have fallen roughly 20% nationally since their 2022 peak and more than 30% in some markets. Yet despite this decline, affordability remains a challenge because prices are essentially back to pre-pandemic levels, a time that was already considered unaffordable to many. According to a recent survey, 55% of Canadians still want home prices to fall further, including 69% of those aged 18 to 34, showing just how disconnected housing costs remain from incomes. The problem is particularly notable in major urban areas, where ownership costs consume an estimated 88% of median household income in Vancouver and 63% in Toronto. While rents have eased and housing supply has improved in some areas, much of the new inventory consists of condos that don’t meet the needs of many families, while affordable single-family homes remain in short supply. So, while the correction has improved affordability at the margin, it hasn’t solved Canada’s housing problem with many highlighting the need for policies that focus not just on building more homes, but on building the right types of homes in the right locations. 

The AI investment boom is beginning to broaden beyond the semiconductor giants, with investors looking for the next beneficiaries.  The expectation is that planned capital raises by companies like SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic could unlock tens of billions of dollars in additional AI infrastructure spending, creating opportunities for server assemblers, cooling-system manufacturers, advanced packaging firms, testing companies, power suppliers, and semiconductor materials producers. This is beginning to play out in Asia, where valuations for leading chipmakers TSMC, Samsung and SK Hynix continue to expand, leading investors to look further down the supply chain where earnings growth is accelerating but valuations remain more reasonable. The next phase of the AI trade may be less about owning the largest chipmakers and more about identifying the infrastructure bottlenecks like servers, power, cooling, networking, packaging, and energy generation. 

Labour peace at last. Canada Post workers have approved a new five-year agreement, with more than 85% voting in favour of the deal, bringing relief to businesses and consumers that rely on the national service. The vote marks a significant shift from last summer, when ~70% of employees rejected a previous offer over concerns about job security, pension protections, and the expansion of part-time work. While the latest agreement remains controversial among some union leaders, changing circumstances and the deteriorating financial condition of Canada Post appear to have shifted member sentiment. The Crown corp recently reported a record $1.57 billion loss in 2025, followed by a $205 million loss in the first quarter of 2026, highlighting the need for operational changes as mail and parcel deliveries continue to decline. The new agreement includes wage increases of 6.5% and 3% in the first two years and ends a labour dispute that has weighed on Canada Post, its employees, and customers for over two years. No need to send out holiday cards in July for December arrival this year. 

Not done yet. Serena Williams’ résumé speaks for itself; 23 Grand Slam singles titles, 73 tour victories, and a career that helped redefine women’s tennis. Widely regarded as the GOAT of the women’s game, Williams is returning to competition at age 44 after stepping away nearly four years ago, beginning with a doubles appearance at Queen’s Club ahead of Wimbledon. Whether it’s a serious bid for another major or simply a competitor who missed the game, it’s hard to blame her. Retirement often sounds better in theory than in practice, especially for elite athletes who have spent decades chasing excellence on the biggest stages. Many eventually find their way back to what they know best. For perhaps the first time in her career, however, Williams returns as an underdog, attempting a comeback after years away from the tour. If history is any guide, betting against Serena has rarely been a winning strategy. 


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Company news

Another AI boost. Hewlett Packard Enterprise shares are rallying in premarket trading after the company gave an outlook for annual sales that topped estimates, citing massive growth in AI-fueled demand for its servers and networking. Revenue will increase about 31% in the fiscal year, and about 10% in the year ending in October 2027, and both are significantly higher than analyst growth expectations. Expectations were high for HPE after competitor Dell Technologies posted blow-out results last week that boosted the shares of companies across the sector. HPE, one of the largest makers of computing equipment, has become a major beneficiary of the demand for hardware to train and deploy AI technology. The current wave of AI development is creating more demand for traditional servers, which are often powerful enough to deploy AI models.

Robinhood heads north. The U.S. brokerage that became synonymous with the pandemic-era retail trading boom and meme-stock craze around names such as GameStop and AMC, is officially entering Canada following the completion of its acquisition of WonderFi. The transaction gives Robinhood immediate access to WonderFi’s regulated crypto platforms, Bitbuy and Coinsquare, which hold ~$2 billion in client assets. Robinhood’s entrance adds another competitor to Canada’s self-directed investing market, where Wealthsimple, Questrade, bank-owned brokerages, and other fintech firms are already competing aggressively for investors. While Robinhood’s arrival is unlikely to dramatically alter the landscape overnight, it should accelerate innovation across trading platforms, and product offerings. The continued commoditization of trading has shifted competition away from transaction costs and toward the quality of advice, financial planning, portfolio construction, and overall client experience. 

Motorola shoots for the sky, stepping up its defense capabilities as it announced a $1.5 bln  acquisition of D-Fend Solutions, a leader in counter-drone technology. The deal strengthens Motorola’s position in airspace security as demand rises to address growing drone-related risks, with D-fend bringing strong growth, including over 50% annual revenue growth in recent years and expected 2026 revenue of about $185 mln. The acquisition will support Motorola’s push into higher-margin security solutions, as the global need to detect and neutralize unauthorized drones continues to expand alongside evolving regulation and defense spending, though Motorola’s valuation remains elevated at around 32x earnings, this suggests a portion of that growth might already be reflected in the stock. 


Commodities

Oil prices are lower on optimism around the prospects of a U.S.-Iran peace deal, a day after prices rose on signs that the agreement was in jeopardy. The lack of clarity over the potential extension of the current ceasefire and the future of flows through the Strait of Hormuz has kept oil prices in check, despite falling last month on optimism that a deal could be reached. A recent report from Iran’s semi-official Tasnim news agency said that Tehran and its regional proxies have placed on their agenda the complete closure of Hormuz, as well as the Bab el-Mandeb Strait at the southern end of the Red Sea, a crucial alternative for oil exports.

Base metals are getting a boost as unresolved conflict in the Middle East and optimism over demand helped push prices higher. Copper is climbing towards $14,000 a ton, while aluminum advanced to the highest level in more than four years, fueled by bets on tighter global supply. Aluminum supply is under pressure as the U.S. struggles to resolve its war with Iran, while copper traders are bracing for a crunch tariff decision by the Trump administration. Prices are also benefiting from bets on assets linked to AI and the energy transition. Tin, which is used in electronics soldering, is now trading near a record high. Analysts have also become bullish with Goldman Sachs raising its end-of-year copper forecasts by more than 10% in a note earlier this week, while Citigroup last month said aluminum was facing its most bullish supply-demand conditions in at least half a century. 


Fixed income and economics

Bond markets are rebounding this morning after Treasuries fell yesterday. Treasury yields continue to be led by crude oil prices, which since the U.S. attacked Iran in late February have moved inversely with the prospects for ending the broader regional conflict. The latest move in rates has bond markets upping their expectations that the Fed’s next move will be a hike. Interest-rate swaps showed that traders have priced in a hike by March 2027 and see a roughly 50% chance of a move as early as October. Treasuries have rallied in recent weeks with last week’s gain, the most since the war began, as optimism mounted that the U.S. and Iran would agree to reopen the Strait. Yesterday’s developments cast doubt on that outlook. Treasuries were also pressured by survey data showing U.S. manufacturing activity expanded in May at the fastest pace in four years. May’s ISM data is showing the resilience of the U.S. economy, feeding doubt that the current Fed’s policy rate range is restrictive enough to cool inflation. With hike expectations on the rise, shorter and intermediate Treasuries underperformed, leading to a flattening of the yield curve with spread between the five-year and 30-year yield narrowing to the smallest in a year. Bond markets will now look ahead to key labour data out at the end of the week with economists expecting the U.S. to have added 85,000 jobs in May, with the unemployment rate holding steady at 4.3%.


Chart of the day
 

Markets

Quote of the day
 

Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Willing is not enough; we must do.

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

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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