Tuesday, 4/7/2026 p.m.

  • Markets edge higher ahead of deadline for U.S.-Iran deal – The TSX and U.S. equity markets closed higher on Tuesday, with communications and energy stocks leading gains. President Trump has set an 8:00 p.m. ET deadline this evening for a deal between the U.S. and Iran, although this timeline could still shift. Bond yields were mixed, with the 10-year Government of Canada yield up to 3.48% and the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield down at 4.30%. In international markets, Asia was mixed overnight, while Europe was broadly lower. The U.S. dollar weakened against major currencies. In energy markets, WTI oil finished lower after briefly reaching $117 per barrel, its highest price since 2022. Despite the recent rise, energy futures continue to imply WTI may retreat toward the mid-$70s by year-end.
     
  • Employment report points to firmer job growth – U.S. private employers added an average of 26,000 jobs per week for the four weeks ending March 21, marking the third straight weekly improvement and the strongest pace since the weekly ADP series began in September 2025. While the recent rise in energy prices poses downside risks to both the economy and labour market, the pace of hiring remains broadly consistent with our expectation for monthly job growth in the 50,000 to 100,000 range this year. We think this modest pace should be enough to sustain near-full employment, given slower population growth tied to tighter immigration enforcement and an aging workforce. As a result, we expect the labour market to remain characterized by slower hiring but limited layoffs, which should keep the unemployment rate contained near 4.5%.
     
  • Durable goods orders fall more than expected – New U.S. orders for manufactured durable goods — those meant to last three years or more — declined 1.4% in February to $315 billion, a weaker-than-expected result and the third consecutive monthly decline. Transportation equipment was the main drag, down 5.4%, with nondefense aircraft orders especially weak*. Excluding the volatile transportation sector, new orders increased 0.8% month-over-month, ahead of estimates, suggesting underlying demand remains firmer than the headline figure implies. We also expect AI infrastructure buildout and business investment incentives in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act to help support continued demand.

Brian Therien, CFA ;
Investment Strategy

Source for all data not cited: FactSet. Source for data cited: *U.S. Census Bureau

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