Friday, 3/13/2026 a.m.

  • Stocks edge higher – Markets are posting small gains this morning as oil prices move off their peak. The S&P 500 index has opened 0.5% higher, bucking a trend of steady declines over the past three sessions. This follows a more upbeat tone in European equity markets, although Asian stocks closed lower overnight. Bonds are also rallying at the close of what has been a difficult week in sovereign debt markets. The yield on the U.S. 10-year Treasury note is down two basis points (0.02%) in early trading, while the shorter dated two-year note is five basis points lower (0.05%), helped by rising expectations for Fed rate cuts as oil prices moderate and softer than expected fourth-quarter GDP data. In Canada this rally is even more pronounced, with 2-year government bond yields down nearly 10 basis points (0.1%) in the wake of a weak labour report. WTI oil is trading at $95 per barrel, with investors continuing to closely monitor disruptions to global energy supplies through the Strait of Hormuz.
     
  • An ugly labour market report – The Canadian economy shed the most jobs in more than four years last month, in what was a surprisingly weak labour report. Headline employment fell by a full 84,000 over February, driven by a decline in full time employment of more than 100,000. This adds to a decline in jobs of 25,000 in January. Weakness in the Canadian labour market last year had been heavily concentrated in the manufacturing and trade sectors, sensitive to rising trade tensions with the U.S. However, today's report showed a sharp decline in employment in wholesale and retail trade, indicating broader-based weakness. The fall in jobs helped push up the unemployment rate to 6.7%, which remains below the recent peak but still elevated. These data point to an economy still struggling in the face of last year's trade war with the U.S., in our view, with uncertainty around trade policy likely to remain elevated through the renegotiation of the CVUSMA trade deal this year.
     
  • A tricky balancing act for the Bank of Canada – The market had increasingly been speculating that the Bank of Canada could hike interest rates this year, with higher energy prices set to push inflation higher. However, today's report has pushed back on these expectations and highlight the tricky balancing act facing the central bank, with inflation to move above target while growth remains soft. We think the Bank of Canada will remain on hold this year, essentially looking through the rise in price growth to instead keep policy supportive against the backdrop of a weak economy. Fed interest-rate expectations have also been sensitive to oil prices. Markets have been pricing out expectations for Fed easing, even if we are seeing a small reversal in this trend this morning. Current pricing suggests that the Fed will cut just once more this year, down from an expectation for two or more cuts at the end of February. The Fed seems unlikely to give strong guidance around next steps at its meeting next week, given the heightened uncertainty at present. However, markets might be sensitive to some of the hints it provides around how it might view the risks to inflation from an energy price shock, and how it might balance that risk against the hit to growth likely from higher prices.

James McCann ;
Investment Strategy

Source for all data: Bloomberg, FactSet. 

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