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February 27, 2026
  
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Today


Stock futures are on the decline this morning after a hotter-than-expected January producer price index reinforced concerns about lingering inflation. Producer prices in the U.S. rose 0.5% in January, exceeding expectations and marking the largest monthly gain since September, driven largely by higher services costs. Core producer prices, which exclude food and energy, jumped 0.8% on the month, well above forecasts and the biggest increase since July. On an annual basis, headline PPI climbed 2.9%, while core prices advanced 3.6%, both topping estimates and signaling persistent pipeline inflation pressures. The stronger-than-expected data suggest that inflation remains an issue, potentially complicating the Fed’s interest rate path.

Canada’s economy contracted at an annualized rate of -0.6% in Q4 2025, a steeper decline than expected, as a drop in business inventories weighed on growth. The weakness was partly offset by resilient household consumption, stronger exports, and a rise in government capital spending (particularly on defense), while domestic demand overall rose 2.4%. For 2025 as a whole, real GDP grew 1.7%, the slowest annual pace since the 2020 contraction, reflecting the drag from U.S. tariffs and softer investment. Residential construction fell -4.4% in the quarter, though business investment in non-residential structures increased 2%, and consumption expanded at a 1.7% pace. With January growth estimated to be flat, and the policy rate held at 2.25%, the data suggests a slowing but not collapsing economy, as policymakers balance trade-related headwinds against inflation risks.  

AI hedge? Investors are beginning to hedge against a potential drop in the S&P 500, with the cost of downside protection rising to multi-year highs amid concerns over AI disruption, trade policy  uncertainty and geopolitical tensions. However, some strategists see this pessimism as a contrarian bullish signal, noting that historically, heavy hedging and cautious positioning often precede rallies. Indicators such as low investor leverage, reduced retail participation and elevated demand for short-term hedges suggest investors are defensive, which could leave room for upside if risks ease, particularly if geopolitical tensions fade or tech earnings restore confidence. Some analysts believe a renewed rally led by mega-cap tech stocks could push the S&P 500 above the key 7,000 level, forcing sidelined investors back into the market, though ongoing geopolitical risks and weakening retail engagement mean stronger catalysts may still be needed to sustain a rally. 

Crushing it. All of Canada’s Big Six banks beat first quarter earnings estimates, supported by broad-based revenue growth across retail banking, capital markets, and wealth management. Recapping the results, RBC reported adjusted EPS of $4.08 versus $3.84 expected, with strength across personal banking, commercial lending, and markets. Adjusted ROE came in at 17.8%, though provisions for impaired loans were modestly above forecasts. TD delivered adjusted EPS of $2.44 versus $2.25 expected, driven by solid performance in both Canadian and U.S. retail operations and capital markets. ROE of 14.2% exceeded its medium-term target, with restructuring efforts continuing to support expense discipline. CIBC posted the largest beat, with adjusted EPS of $2.76 versus $2.38 expected, nearly 16% ahead of forecasts, alongside record revenue across divisions and ROE above 17%. BMO also topped expectations, earning $3.48 per share versus $3.22 forecast, benefitting from strength in U.S. banking and trading, while credit provisions came in below estimates. National Bank rounded out the group with adjusted EPS of $3.25 versus $2.95 expected, boosted by its Canadian Western Bank acquisition, which drove double-digit revenue gains in personal and commercial banking, supported capital markets strength, and prompted an increase in its 2026 ROE target alongside an expanded share buyback program. 

Behind closed doors, Canada-U.S. trade talks are apparently more constructive than the public rhetoric suggests, at least according to trade minister Dominic LeBlanc who described negotiations over the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement as cordial and productive. That contrasts with comments earlier this week from U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer calling for higher tariffs. Either way, there is growing acceptance that access to the U.S. market will carry a higher cost.  Most Canadian exports remain exempt under USMCA rules, keeping Canada’s effective tariff rate near 4.9%. Political volatility in Washington remains the wildcard, including the risk of late-stage intervention from Trump, as we saw when tensions flared over Ontario’s Ronald Reagan television ads. The agreement, however, remains in force unless all parties decide otherwise. Meanwhile, Ottawa is signalling a broader push to diversify trade ties beyond the U.S., aligning with Prime Minister Mark Carney’s strategy. 

Europe is pushing China to allow the yuan to strengthen against the euro as a condition for expanding trade, saying that China’s currency remains undervalued in real terms and gives its exporters a major competitive advantage, especially after Europe’s production costs rose significantly while China experienced flat or falling prices. European leaders, including German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, have emphasized that currency imbalances, subsidies and trade distortions have contributed to China’s record $1.2 trillion global trade surplus and a widening deficit for countries like Germany, where imports from China have risen while exports have fallen. Although the yuan has risen modestly against the dollar, it has remained largely unchanged against the euro, resulting in a roughly 40% real competitiveness shift favouring Chinese producers, prompting European officials to warn that stronger trade ties may depend on yuan appreciation to ensure fair competition. 

That upgrade may cost you. The global smartphone market is expected to shrink 12.9% this year to about 1.1 bln shipments due to a severe memory chip shortage driven by rising demand for AI hardware, which has drained supply and pushed component costs higher. The shortage, projected to last into at least mid-2027, is forcing manufacturers to eliminate low-end models, reduce  specifications and focus on more profitable premium devices, marking a significant shift in the industry. Rising DRAM and NAND prices are hurting lower-cost Android brands, while premium phones like Apple’s iPhones are better positioned to absorb the cost increases. Experts caution that even as supply conditions normalize, memory prices are unlikely to revisit prior lows, suggesting higher costs for smartphones going forward. 

Mad Max is coming back. Max Scherzer is returning to the Toronto Blue Jays on a one-year, USD$3 million deal with up to USD$10 million in bonuses tied to innings pitched. The decision had a personal angle, with Scherzer sharing that his eight-year-old daughter wrote a note to the team after last year’s World Series run saying how much she loved the city and hoped they would return. The 41-year-old went 5-5 with a 5.19 ERA in 17 starts last season and made three postseason appearances, including a memorable Game 4 of the 2025 ALCS when he famously convinced (there was some yelling/growling involved) manager John Schneider to leave him in with two outs in the fifth, then struck out the next batter to end the inning. He now joins a rotation expected to feature Dylan Cease, Kevin Gausman, Shane Bieber and José Berríos, reinforcing what should remain one of Toronto’s strengths as it pushes to contend again in 2026. 


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Company news


Season finale? Netflix dropped out of the bidding war to buy Warner Bros. Discovery, clearing the way for rival Paramount Skydance to clinch its $111 billion deal for the historic Hollywood studio. Netflix said although the deal would have passed with regulators and created shareholder value, it didn’t  want to keep bidding. Netflix shares jumped as much as 13% in after-hours trading, indicating that investors were happy to see the company walk away from the deal, while Warner Bros. fell, with investors no longer anticipating a bidding war. Paramount shares were little changed. Paramount said Thursday it has $57.5 bln of debt financing committed for the deal, provided by Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc. and Apollo Global Management Inc. The three firms had previously committed $54 bln. We’ll see how it ends.

Jack Dorsey’s Block is cutting 4,000 employees, reducing its workforce by nearly half, in a move the financial technology firm is describing as a bet on AI changing the future of labour productivity. Block has been restructuring its business model and staffing since 2024 as the company’s stock has lagged. At the same time, the company has invested heavily in AI tools to run more efficiently, including building its own tool called Goose. Dorsey, the company’s co-founder, said in a call with analysts that he believes many companies will ultimately have to make similar moves due to AI.  Block’s cuts are the latest case of workforce reductions across fintech and the broader technology sector, in which companies have pointed to AI as a catalyst, with companies from Amazon Inc. to Salesforce Inc. citing the technology as justification for shrinking headcounts. 


Commodities


Oil prices are nearly 1.5% higher as U.S. and Iran agreed to more nuclear talks next week, while the deployment of American forces in the Middle East kept the market on edge. The U.S. military buildup is the largest in the region since the 2003 invasion of Iraq, and was ordered by President Trump to pressure Iran into negotiations about its nuclear program. In a further sign of rising tensions, the U.S. Department of State authorized the departure of non-emergency staff and their families from Mission Israel due to “safety risks,” according to a post on X by U.S. Embassy Jerusalem. Crude benchmarks have been increasing since the beginning of the year as concerns about a potential U.S. strike on Iran have helped to offset broader glut expectations. Markets will also be looking ahead to the scheduled OPEC+ supply meeting on Sunday, as conflict risks cloud the outlook.

Copper is heading for a second weekly gain as investors chased a metals rally after China’s Politburo called for more policies to boost domestic consumption. Top lawmakers in Beijing urged more proactive fiscal policy and moderately loose monetary policy to stimulate demand, supporting metal prices. Copper is up about 4% this week, also boosted by President Trump’s new tariff on all imports, which effectively lowers the duty on incoming Chinese goods. Still, in a sign of tepid physical demand post the Lunar New Year break, inventories held at warehouses monitored by the Shanghai Futures Exchange expanded 44% to 391,529 tons as of Friday, the highest since 2016. Inventories at the LME  have also increased and nearly doubled from mid-January to 253,700 tons, the highest level since last March. Copper is consolidating after a surge, driven by a wave of speculative buying that pushed it to a record high in late January.  


Fixed income and economics


Global credit spreads which were near 20-year lows at the beginning of the year have widened the most in months on recent AI-driven volatility and are starting to show some signs of strain. Yield premiums on Asian investment-grade dollar notes were about two basis points wider Friday, and if that holds, weekly spreads would climb by the most since November. Globally, premiums on comparable debt have already widened by nearly 4 basis points this week, the largest move since early November, as more investors warn that AI could increase default risks across parts of the software sector, particularly among more leveraged borrowers and all the spending that has been occurring. Markets are fearful that risks in the software sector, along with problems in private credit, a key funding source for technology firms, may upset the relative calm seen in public debt markets with spreads hitting multi-decade lows a month ago. Despite the recent moves, swings in high-grade credit gauges have been modest compared with the sharp moves in the equity markets and riskier parts of credit. Investment-grade corporate risk premiums have widened about 8 bps over the last month to 82 bps. That remains well below the 10-year average of 119 bps.  

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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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