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March 17, 2026
  
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Today


Stock futures edged lower this morning as rising oil prices once again pressure markets following new attacks on energy infrastructure in the Middle East. Brent crude climbed toward $103 a barrel, while U.S. diesel prices surpassed $5 a gallon for the first time since 2022, raising concerns over the inflationary impact of the ongoing conflict. Investor sentiment has turned more cautious, with surveys showing increased bearishness and higher cash allocations. Markets are now focused on upcoming central bank decisions, particularly from the Fed and ECB, as policymakers weigh the inflation risks from elevated energy prices against potential downside risks to economic growth. This has led bond investors to move into a more defensive position, increasing exposure to short-term U.S. Treasuries ahead of the upcoming decision by the Fed. Policymakers are widely expected to keep the benchmark rate in the 3.50%–3.75% range while assessing how the conflict and higher oil prices could affect inflation and employment. Rising energy costs and persistent inflation have pushed two-year Treasury yields higher, while many investors are avoiding longer-term bonds until there is more clarity on the war and the Fed’s policy outlook. Despite the caution, some investors believe the conflict will remain contained, and that stable inflation could eventually allow the Fed to cut rates later in the year, potentially supporting a rally in Treasuries. For now, however, markets are pricing in fewer rate cuts as geopolitical tensions, inflation risks, and signs of labour-market weakness cloud the outlook. 

Looking for friends. U.S. allies are showing reluctance to join a military effort proposed by Trump to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, fearing involvement could escalate the war with Iran. EU foreign ministers signaled they do not want to expand their naval mission to the strait, while countries such as Japan and the UK have also declined to commit to escorting tankers through the waterway. Leaders including UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said they would explore options with allies but stressed the importance of avoiding a broader conflict. The hesitation comes despite the strait’s critical role in global energy supply, with roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil passing through it and disruptions already pushing energy prices higher. European officials emphasized that NATO should not automatically be involved unless member states are directly attacked, though some countries remain open to discussing possible support if a formal plan is presented, although that hasn’t really been Trump’s M.O. 

Not the same playbook. Investors are drawing comparisons between the current Middle East conflict and the market reaction following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, as the war with Iran has triggered volatility in energy markets and renewed inflation concerns. Oil prices have risen about 40% since the U.S.-Israel strikes, briefly nearing $120 per barrel, while the U.S. dollar has strengthened and global equities have fallen, similar to 2022. However, some key differences have emerged, like how European gas prices have risen far less than during the Ukraine crisis, gold has declined rather than rallied, and bond yields have risen as markets quickly price in inflation risks. European stocks have dropped roughly 5% so far, about half the decline seen early in the Ukraine war, while overall market volatility remains elevated but below crisis levels, suggesting investors are wary of another energy-driven inflation shock but not yet expecting the same scale of disruption we saw in 2022. 

Home prices in Canada declined again in February, with the benchmark price falling 0.6% month over month to about $661,100, as economic uncertainty continued to weigh on buyer demand. Data from the Canadian Real Estate Association showed transactions dropped 1.3% and new listings fell 3.9%, reflecting a cautious market environment. Concerns around the ongoing U.S. trade tensions and rising costs linked to the Iran conflict have added to uncertainty, while steady interest rates from the BoC have kept borrowing costs elevated. With inventory levels higher than a year ago, buyers are gaining leverage and pushing for discounts, while many potential buyers remain on the sidelines waiting for clearer signals on mortgage rates and home prices. 

Special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs) are raising capital again this year, but the number of actual deals taking companies public remains small. So far this year, 53 IPOs have raised about  $11.7 bln, the busiest start since the 2021 boom, yet only 13 SPAC mergers have been announced, leaving many blank-check firms still searching for targets. The lack of completed transactions could raise questions about the viability of the SPAC model, which depends on merging with private companies to take them public. According to SPAC Research data, nearly two-thirds of more than 400 companies that went public through SPACs over the past six years have lost more than 80% of their value, highlighting the sector’s struggles. Some recent deals involve emerging industries such as quantum computing, including a planned listing of IQM Quantum Computers via Real Asset Acquisition Corp., but investor interest remains  lukewarm. Analysts expect merger activity may pick up later in the year, though for now many SPACs remain stuck waiting for targets. 

New bank lending in China fell in February to 900 bln yuan, well below expectations and down from a seasonally strong 4.71 tln yuan in January, highlighting weak credit demand in the world’s second-largest economy. Loan growth slowed to a record-low 6% year over year, driven largely by a decline in household borrowing as the ongoing property slump and cautious consumer sentiment weighed on mortgage demand. Household loans dropped by 650.7 bln yuan, while corporate lending also fell significantly despite some support from policy rate adjustments by the People’s Bank of China. Although credit typically dips in February due to the Lunar New Year slowdown, the weaker-than-expected figures underscore continued economic softness, prompting officials to rely more on fiscal stimulus and targeted support measures to boost domestic demand and stabilize growth. 

Blackout. Cuba’s electric grid suffered a total collapse yesterday and suffered a nationwide blackout with 10 mln residents being subject to rolling outages as the government struggles with a chronic lack of fuel. The Ministry of Energy and Mines is investigating the cause, but said that there was no damage to the power plants operating at the time of the failure. Cuba’s thermoelectric power plants require about 100,000 bpd to meet demand and domestic production accounts for just two fifths of that and the island hasn’t received a major fuel shipment in three months as Trump’s administration is trying to use economic pressure to make the country more financially dependent on the U.S. in a bid to bring about political change after 67 years of one-party rule. Even when there is fuel, Cuba’s aging power plants fail regularly and earlier this month, about two-thirds of the country was left without electricity for hours after the island’s main power plant went off line. It suffered a half dozen nationwide blackouts in the span of a year before fuel shipments were cut off. 


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Company news


CoreWeave Inc., Cerebras Systems Inc. and BCE Inc. will collaborate on one of Canada’s most powerful data centers in Saskatchewan, with a first phase expected to come online in the first half of next year. The 300-megawatt data center, to be located on the southern edge of the city of Regina, will be dedicated to AI computing. AI chipmaker Cerebras and hyperscaler CoreWeave have secured 160 and 140 megawatts, respectively, as tenants for the new facility. The project has the potential to generate about $12 bln in economic value over time, according to BCE, which plans to invest $1.7 bln to build the facility’s four data center halls. BCE cut its free cash flow guidance for 2026 because of the expense of the project and now expects its free cash flow to be no more than $2.3 bln this year. Previously, it had forecast as much as $3.5 bln. S&P Global affirmed its BBB rating and maintained its negative outlook on BCE, as leverage will remain high with the capital expenditures associated with the new data center.  

Headlines are surfacing that OpenAI is in advanced discussions to form a joint venture with private equity firms, including TPG Inc., Brookfield Asset Management and Bain Capital, that would focus on bolstering adoption of its AI software. The joint venture would have a pre-money valuation of roughly $10 bln, and the private equity investors would commit about $4 bln toward the venture.  TPG, Brookfield and Bain declined to comment. In a social media post Monday, Fidji Simo, OpenAI’s chief executive officer of applications, described the venture as “building a deployment arm” for its technology, without directly commenting on the participants, financing and valuation. OpenAI and its rivals have been pushing to convince more business professionals to pay up for their services to offset the immense cost of developing AI systems and support their lofty valuations. Those efforts have focused on sectors such as financial services and health care.  

Nvidia expects to generate at least $1 trln in revenue from its Blackwell and Rubin AI chips by the end of 2027, highlighting the enormous demand for hardware used to train and run AI models. CEO Jensen Huang announced the forecast at the company’s GTC conference, extending a previous projection of $500 bln in sales through 2026. The company also introduced new products, including a chip using technology acquired from startup Groq to improve AI responsiveness and a new computer built around general-purpose CPUs, expanding into a market historically dominated by Intel. While Nvidia remains the main supplier of chips for the AI boom and the world’s most valuable company, it faces rising competition from rivals such as Advanced Micro Devices and from major customers developing their own in-house AI chips. Investors are watching closely for continued growth, especially as Nvidia’s stock has been flat this year despite its massive market value of roughly $4.4 tln


Commodities


Oil prices are rebounding after the first drop in almost a week, as Iran pressed on with attacks on energy infrastructure around the Middle East and Israel said it killed senior Iranian officials. Brent is up near $104, after slipping almost -3% yesterday, while WTI is at $97. Operations were suspended at the Shah gas field in the UAE, while an Iraqi oil field was also targeted by drones and missiles. Crude loadings from the UAE’s port at Fujairah were again halted, according to a note from Inchcape Shipping Services. The strikes further hampered the outlook for global energy supplies as the war enters its third week, with a near-complete halt of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz starting to impact consumers, especially in Asia. In the Middle East, the UAE and Kuwait have both  reduced oil output further while Saudi Arabia is racing to boost exports through an alternative route that bypasses Hormuz. The number of Iranian ships crossing the waterway jumped to a wartime high on Monday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, which included an oil tanker heading for China.  

Copper prices are lower with inventories tracked by the LME surging to their highest level in more than six years as demand for physical metal continues to come under pressure from higher prices. LME stockpiles jumped by nearly 19,000 tons to 330,375 tons, the highest level since September 2019. A rapid buildup of exchange inventories since the start of the year reflects a growing bearish mood in the physical market for copper. Sellers have struggled to offload cargoes as demand weakens in China, while a rush to ship metal to the U.S. ahead of potential tariffs has waned. Prices that reached a record above $14,500 at the end of January, and remain 30% up from a year ago, are giving many buyers pause. Meanwhile, aluminum recovered after a two-day slide, as uncertainty over the duration of the Iran war continues to fuel worries about further potential output cuts at major plants across the region. Also, to add to the volatility yesterday, a technical failure led to a halt of electronic trading in all contracts on the LME for more than two hours, with dealers unable to place orders in markets ranging from aluminum to zinc. 


Fixed income and economics


Global bonds along with Treasuries are little changed this morning after rallying yesterday as oil prices retreated from recent highs, relieving some concern about their inflationary potential while lingering at levels that stoke worry that elevated energy prices will slow economic growth. Despite the capacity of higher energy prices to restrain growth, their initial impact on inflation rates via gasoline at the pumps, which has climbed to about $3.70 a gallon in the U.S. from under $3 before the U.S.  attacked Iran on Feb. 28, has dented expectations for Fed interest-rate cuts that benefit Treasuries.  The moves in Treasuries echoed those in European bond markets on Monday, where the UK 10-year yield fell as much as 10 basis points to 4.72%. German 10-year yields were five basis points lower at 2.93%. The global pullback in yields comes after concern spiraled last week about the risk that war in the Middle East continues to shove energy prices higher and fuel inflation. Treasury yields last week reached the highest levels since at least early February, led by short-maturity tenors that are most sensitive to changes in the Fed’s rate. Fed policymakers, who meet this week for the first time since pausing rate cuts in January, are expected to leave their target lending rate unchanged again at 3.5% to 3.75%. Rate markets continue to price in a quarter-point rate cut by year-end, but the consensus was two cuts this year before the oil price rose.  

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Charts are sourced to Bloomberg unless otherwise noted.

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