Friday, 5/1/2026 p.m.

  • U.S. stocks hit new highs – U.S. equity markets kicked off May on the front foot, building on a rally over April which was the strongest seen in a single month since 2020. The S&P 500 was up 0.3% over the session, pushing this large-cap index to a new record high, while the Nasdaq index, which has been bolstered by strong performance in the tech sector over recent weeks, was up an even better 0.9%. In Canada, stock markets were steady at the close of the week, with the S&P/TSX index trading 1.7% shy of its all-time highs. WTI oil prices fell over the day, helped by reports that Iran has delivered a new peace proposal to the U.S., but at $102 per barrel these remain elevated. Bonds were little changed, with the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note trading at 4.38%. Gold prices were steady around $4,600 per ounce, and the dollar continues to drift lower against a basket of trade-weighted international currencies, with the rally in the greenback seen through March following the outbreak of the conflict in Iran having now fully reversed.
     
  • Stalemate in the Middle East – The ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran continues to hold, but we are seeing limited signs of progress toward a more permanent peace agreement that enables the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. Markets reacted positively this morning to reports that Iran has delivered a new peace proposal to the U.S. via intermediaries in Pakistan. However, subsequent commentary from both sides indicated that reaching an agreement remains challenging. Iran's foreign minister warned that the U.S. should not pursue "excessive demands" while President Trump commented that Iran is "asking for things I can't agree with". Reports have surfaced that the commander in chief has been briefed on another round of potential military strikes. In our view, we likely need to see more concrete signs of progress start to emerge from these talks to avert further increases in oil prices which could threaten some of the increasing optimism priced into markets.
     
  • A big data week – We think market optimism in part reflects hopes for a normalization in global energy supplies over coming months but also increasing confidence over the economic and earnings backdrop. Data over the past week support these hopes, with the economy so far resilient in the face of higher oil prices, and corporate earnings growth coming in even stronger than expected. Next week's U.S. labour-market report will help provide further insight into the economic picture, with consensus expecting a solid if unspectacular gain in payrolls of 60,000 in April, consistent with low unemployment insurance claims over the month and solid labour-market signals across a range of survey data. In Canada, expectations are tilted toward a marginal 5,000 gain in employment over the month, building on the rebound seen in March after a weak start to 2026. If delivered, this would be consistent with a slow-but-steady labour-market backdrop. Meanwhile, the final run of first-quarter earnings reports will help provide further insights into profitability across the corporate sector. In our view, the fundamentals around growth and earnings remain supportive for stocks, even if oil prices continue to pose some downside risk to the outlook.

James McCann;
Investment Strategy

Source for all data: Bloomberg, FactSet

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