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July 8, 2026
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Well, that didn’t last long. Markets have shifted back into risk-off mode, with U.S. and Canadian equity futures down after Trump said he believed the ceasefire with Iran was effectively over. The risk-off tone was even sharper in Asia, where Korea’s Kospi index entered a technical bear market after falling another -5%. Despite the pullback, it remains the best-performing major index this year, still up over 70%, thanks largely to its concentration in AI and tech names. The renewed tensions also pushed oil prices about 5% higher after the U.S. launched strikes on more than 80 Iranian targets and revoked a waiver allowing Iranian oil sales in response to renewed attacks on ships in the Strait of Hormuz. Iran said the U.S. escalation had rendered the interim peace agreement ineffective and responded by striking military bases in Kuwait and Bahrain. This is the latest threat to the fragile peace process, with disputes over Hormuz shipping, Iranian oil sales, frozen assets, nuclear ambitions, and the parallel Israel-Hezbollah conflict still unresolved. Trump said he is not confident in further negotiations but would allow talks to continue if the parties were willing. The escalation sent Brent crude to around $79 a barrel, although prices remain well below their April peak above $126.

Timely discussions. NATO allies announced at least $50 billion in defense deals at their summit in Turkey, aiming to demonstrate that Europe and Canada are responding to the U.S. admin’s demands for higher military spending. The agreements include purchases of drones, surveillance systems, and military aircraft, with some deals shifting procurement toward European suppliers. NATO members also plan to invest more than $40 billion in counter-drone capabilities over the next five years. Despite the commitments, Trump didn’t appear too pleased, renewing his criticism of the alliance after its perceived lack of support during the U.S. war with Iran. Trump has been the odd man out at this year’s NATO summit, disrupting effort to project unity by criticizing allies over defense spending. Trump singled out Spain for refusing to commit to the alliance’s target of spending 5% of GDP on defense by 2035 and renewed his push for U.S. control of Greenland, a territory of Denmark.

Canada’s merchandise trade surplus widened to $4.2 billion in May, the largest in four years, as exports rose 0.9% to a record $77.1 billion while imports edged down 0.2%. Export growth was driven by a rise in shipments of metal ores and non-metallic minerals, including sulphur and gold products sent to China, offsetting a decline in crude oil exports. Canada’s trade surplus with the U.S. expanded to $11.6 billion, the highest since January 2025. Although the headline figures were strong, export volumes were essentially unchanged, suggesting higher prices played a role in the improvement. Economists expect net exports to provide a solid boost to Q2 growth, reinforcing the view that the Canadian economy has remained more resilient than recent data may have implied.

Things don’t look as good south of the border, with the U.S. trade deficit widening in May to -$77.6 billion, the largest gap in more than a year, as imports rose 3.3% and exports fell -3.2%. Imports reached their highest level since March 2025, with gains across capital goods, consumer products, industrial supplies and vehicles, potentially reflecting strong domestic demand and companies rushing to bring in goods ahead of additional tariffs and supply-chain disruptions. Capital-goods imports hit a record, helped by purchases of semiconductors and equipment tied to the data-centre buildout. The widening deficit is expected to weigh on Q2 economic growth, with the Atlanta Fed estimating that net exports could subtract more than 1.6% from GDP.

The recent rotation in U.S. stocks toward small caps may be vulnerable because markets appear to be pricing in much stronger economic growth. Optimism has grown as lower oil prices and weak June employment data reduced expectations for Fed rate hikes, helping riskier parts of the market outperform. However, markets appear to be implying roughly 3.5% annualized U.S. GDP growth compared with actual growth of about 1.3% over the past two quarters, leaving the recent rotation exposed if economic data weaken or Fed Chair Kevin Warsh maintains a stronger focus on inflation. Strategists are warning that if volatility rises and the growth narrative disappoints, investors could begin to retreat from small caps and cyclicals.

A ‘rare’ opportunity. Rare earth elements are emerging as an important market theme as demand increases across defense, robotics, AI infrastructure, and the energy transition. China currently controls more than 90% of global refining and nearly 94% of high-performance magnet production. The West’s biggest vulnerability is not access to raw materials but the technically complex separation, refining, and magnet-manufacturing stages, prompting calls for government support to compete with China. Demand is high for heavy rare earths like dysprosium and terbium (apologies for the chemistry lesson), which allow magnets to withstand extreme temperatures in military systems and AI infrastructure. Growth in humanoid robotics is also expected to increase demand for lighter rare earths such as neodymium and praseodymium. Analysts are highlighting opportunities spanning the full mine-to-magnet chain, however, government support will likely be needed to reduce dependence on China.

7.7.7. It was a fitting date for Kyle Lowry to retire as a Raptor. The player who wore No. 7 signed a ceremonial one-day contract on July 7, bringing to a close a 20-year NBA career, including nine seasons with the Raps. The journey began on July 11, 2012, when the Raptors acquired Lowry from Houston in what would become one of the most consequential trades in franchise history (though some fans may have another trade in mind). Over the next nine seasons, Lowry helped transform the Raptors from a regular playoff team into NBA champs, bringing Canada its first NBA title in 2019. Lowry was traded to Miami in 2021 as the Raptors entered a new chapter and no longer required his veteran leadership. Even then, he made it clear that Toronto was “home” and that he intended to retire as a Raptor. On Tuesday, he kept that promise. The organization signed him to a symbolic one-day contract while announcing that his No. 7 jersey will be raised to the rafters during the upcoming season. It’s a fitting tribute to the player who many call the GROAT, the Greatest Raptor of All Time. There are plenty of stats to support that claim, but they only tell part of the story. Instead, we’ll end with a short montage celebrating some of the moments that cemented his legacy.



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Bear. The AI trade is quickly rotating across Asia as investors take profits from the chipmakers that powered this year’s rally and move into cheaper Chinese tech stocks. South Korea’s Kospi has fallen -20% from its record high, entering a technical bear market, as Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix slide despite growing profits. This comes amid concerns that roughly $1 trillion of AI spending by a handful of technology giants may not be sustainable. Meanwhile, Alibaba has rallied over 13% and Tencent over 4%, as reports of Chinese companies developing domestic AI chips renewed interest in China’s discounted tech sector. Foreign investors have sold more than $100 billion of Korean shares this year, while leveraged ETFs and momentum-driven retail trading have increased volatility. While the shift does not signal the end of the AI boom, it shows that investors are reducing concentration risk and looking for cheaper alternatives after remarkable gains in Korean and Taiwanese semiconductor stocks.

Reality check. Nvidia has shed roughly $1 trillion in market cap, down ~15% since its May 14 all-time high, and is now trading at its cheapest valuation since before the AI boom, leading the Mag 7 lower this morning at -1.6% . Despite the selloff, major banks still recommend buying the stock at current levels. On the product side, Perplexity AI confirmed it will use Nvidia’s Vera CPUs, Samsung began mass production of SSDs for the upcoming Vera Rubin platform, and Firmus Technologies announced an eight-yer data center partnership in Indonesia expected to generate up to $30 bln in&nbnbsp;offtake agreements.


Commodities


Oil prices are up over 5% as the prospect of a fresh round of conflict jumped with the tentative ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran on fragile ground. The latest targeted strikes, involving a Qatari LNG carrier and two large oil tankers, marks the biggest day of attacks since an interim peace deal came into effect in June. Oil’s rebound threatens a fresh wave of disruption for still-tense global energy markets, after futures had plunged in the second quarter as regional tensions cooled. The renewed hostilities in the region stand to complicate the decisions facing shipowners and regional producers over navigating the Strait of Hormuz. Before the strikes, the U.S. withdrew a sanctions waiver that had allowed Tehran to sell oil, reversing course on a key part of the interim peace deal with the Islamic Republic. The agreement to lift sanctions on Iran saw millions of barrels of the country’s crude flood out of the Persian Gulf in recent weeks, but that is now in jeopardy of being turned off again.

Copper prices are lower at the lower end of a narrow trading range seen since the interim peace deal was signed. The deal eased concerns that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates to counter the war’s inflationary impact, but the ongoing hostilities continue to weigh on risk appetite and the broad macroeconomic outlook. While aluminum, which was rocked by disruptions to Middle Eastern supplies at the outbreak of the war, is up 0.5%, climbing for a third day. Inventories in warehouses tracked by the LME have slumped during the war, reaching the lowest since 2022 on Wednesday and holdings in China have also plunged a quarter from their April peak.


Fixed income and economics


We’ve seen this before. With Middle East tensions heating up again, oil is surging, pushing yields higher on inflation concerns after Trump told reporters at the NATO summit in Turkey that he thinks the ceasefire with Iran is over. Yields across all maturities moved higher, with the 2-year Treasury note, which typically tracks short-term Federal Reserve interest rate decisions, up by more than 5 bps at 4.2182%. The benchmark U.S. 10-year yield rose above 4.5% yesterday and is now sitting near 4.58%, while the 30-year Treasury yield, which historically moves on geopolitical events, jumped back above 5%. As markets gauge how Trump’s comments are likely to shape borrowing costs longer term, they are also waiting for the Fed’s June meeting minutes out later this afternoon, for more monetary policy insights under new Fed chair Kevin Warsh after his first rate announcement.

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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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