Thursday, 3/26/2026 p.m.

  • Stocks close sharply lower as oil prices rise – Stock markets were notably weaker today, with the Nasdaq leading the decline at about -2.4%, compared with roughly -1.7% for the S&P 500 and -1.5% for the Canadian TSX. The move lower was driven by a renewed rise in oil prices and worsening sentiment around Middle East negotiations, as mixed signals on a possible ceasefire and tougher rhetoric toward Iran revived concerns about supply disruption, inflation pressure, and a longer period of policy caution. U.S. Treasury yields moved higher alongside that shift in sentiment, with the 10-year Treasury yield rising about 0.1% to 4.43%, reflecting reduced optimism on de-escalation and lingering inflation worries. Abroad, global equity markets also reflected a more defensive tone, with Europe’s Stoxx 600 closing 1.2% lower, while Asian markets were mixed overnight as investors weighed the same geopolitical and energy-related risks. Stepping back, the broader backdrop still suggests an oil-driven shock that is likely to be growth-negative and inflation-positive, but not necessarily a repeat of past energy crises given a less oil-intensive economy and relatively solid underlying fundamentals. Overall, volatility may remain elevated in the near term, but if energy prices eventually stabilize, we think the larger picture still points to modest slowing rather than a deeper downturn, with resilience in the underlying economy helping to cushion markets over time.
     
  • Why this is not a 1970s-style energy crisis – While the Iran conflict has created a major oil shock, today’s backdrop is fundamentally different from the one that produced the stagflation of the 1970s for several reasons. Energy is a smaller drag on consumers than it used to be: In the U.S., energy spending as a share of total consumer spending is materially lower than it was during the 1970s and early 1980s (roughly 2% today versus about 6% then), suggesting that the direct hit to household purchasing power from a given oil shock is smaller today. The U.S. is far more insulated on the supply side: The U.S. has been a net exporter of oil since 2019, and domestic natural-gas prices have remained relatively insulated from the disruption, even as Europe and Asia face a supply crunch. U.S. shale producers stand to benefit from higher prices, even if that support does not fully offset the drag from weaker consumer spending. Oil still matters, but less in a services-based economy: Large oil-price moves still hurt, but the global economy is less oil-intensive than it was during the original energy crisis. Since 1950, the amount of energy required to produce one unit of GDP has fallen by roughly 70%, reflecting efficiency gains and the growing importance of the services sector.
     
  • Broadening leadership a key theme of the first quarter – After three consecutive years of strong performance by U.S. technology and growth-style stocks, market leadership has broadened in the first quarter of 2026. Year-to-date, the energy sector has been the top performer of the S&P 500, rising more than 35%. Industrials, materials, utilities, and consumer staples have also posted gains of more than 5%. Meanwhile, technology, communication services, and consumer discretionary have been among the laggards, each declining more than 5%. In Canada, the energy sector of the TSX has also led the way, higher by over 25% this year, whereas technology has lagged, declining over 20%. In our view, diversification will be critical for investors over the remainder of the year. In Canada, we recommend investors consider overweighting the energy, industrials and materials sectors, offset by underweights to technology, consumer discretionary, consumer staples and communication services. In the U.S., we favour the consumer discretionary and industrials sectors, offset with underweights to utilities and consumer staples.

Mona Mahajan ;
Investment Strategy

Source for all data: FactSet.

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