Thursday, 6/4/2026 a.m.

  • Markets open higher, supported by lower bond yields and oil prices – The TSX and U.S. equity markets are higher in early trading on Thursday as lower bond yields and oil prices appear to be offsetting weakness in technology stocks. Semiconductor manufacturer Broadcom is weighing on the technology sector, with shares down roughly 15% after the company reported fiscal second-quarter revenue that came in slightly below expectations and did not raise its AI chip outlook. The weakness appears to be spilling over into other semiconductor and AI-related companies. Bond yields are also declining, with the 10-year Government of Canada yield at 3.41% and the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield at 4.47%. Internationally, Asian markets finished mostly lower overnight, while Europe is moving higher. In energy markets, WTI oil prices are down, likely reflecting cautious optimism around U.S.-Iran diplomatic talks and the potential for reduced geopolitical risk. Meanwhile, the U.S. dollar is modestly lower against major currencies but has remained largely rangebound recently.
     
  • Jobless claims edge higher but remain low – U.S. initial jobless claims rose to 225,000 last week, above the 211,000 consensus estimate. While the increase bears watching, the reading remains consistent with a stable labour market, well below the 20-year average of about 365,000. Continuing claims — which reflect the total number of people receiving benefits — declined to 1.78 million, suggesting more workers are finding new employment. Taken together, we view the data as broadly consistent with other recent indicators pointing to a stable labour market. Friday's employment report should provide additional insight, with consensus estimates calling for 105,000 job gains, enough to keep the unemployment rate steady at 4.3%.
     
  • Productivity revised lower – U.S. nonfarm business sector productivity, which measures output per hour worked, was revised down to a 0.3% annualized gain for the first quarter of 2026. This compares to expectations to remain unchanged from the preliminary reading of 0.8%. Hourly compensation grew 2.1% year-over-year, providing growing disposable income that should help support consumer spending and the broader economy. Unit labour costs, which measure wage gains adjusted for changes in productivity, increased 1.8% annualized, below expectations for a 2.3% gain. In our view, the lower unit labour cost reading should help ease inflation pressures, even as the productivity revision suggests the economy may have less efficiency-driven growth momentum than originally estimated.

Brian Therien, CFA;
Investment Strategy

Source for all data: FactSet. 

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