Daily market snapshot

Published December 9, 2025
 Woman on couch looking at laptop

Tuesday, 12/9/2025 p.m.

  • Stocks little changed ahead of BoC and Fed meetings – North American equity markets closed near the flatline on Tuesday as investors await the conclusion of the final Bank of Canada and FOMC meetings of the year tomorrow. Market expectations call for the Fed to deliver a 0.25% interest-rate cut at tomorrow’s meeting*, with much of investors’ attention likely focused on updated Fed economic projections and commentary regarding the appropriate path of monetary policy over the coming year. The Bank of Canada is expected to hold its policy rate steady at tomorrow's meeting.* On the economic front, the U.S. NFIB Small Business Index edged higher in November to 99, slightly above expectations for a reading of 98.3.* Additionally, U.S. job openings for October were higher than expected, holding steady near 7.7 million and signaling steady labour demand, in our view.* Bond yields closed slightly higher, with the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield finishing around 4.18% while the 10-year GoC yield rose to 3.42%.*
     
  • U.S. small-business optimism improves in November – The U.S. NFIB Small Business Index rose to 99 in November, a modest improvement from the prior month and slightly above the 30-year average of 98.* Encouragingly, the percentage of small businesses planning to increase employment climbed to 19% for the month—a four-point increase from October and the highest level since December 2024.* This strong employment reading points to underlying stability in the U.S. labour market, in our view, and contrasts with the ADP employment report for November, which showed small businesses shedding over 100,000 jobs.* Additionally, the percentage of small businesses expecting inflation-adjusted sales to rise over the next three months increased to 15%, the highest since January.* We expect U.S. labour-market conditions to remain stable despite slowing job growth, which should help support healthy economic activity over the coming year, with U.S. real GDP growth settling around 2% in 2026, in our view.*
     
  • Loonie weakness has provided support to overseas returns in 2025 – A softer loonie relative to developed overseas currencies, such as the euro and British pound, has helped provide a boost to overseas stock returns for Canadian investors in 2025. In local currency terms, the MSCI EAFE Index has posted a healthy 19% gain, but in Canadian dollar terms, the index has gained 24%.* In our view, 2026 could be another year of loonie softness relative to overseas currencies. With the European Central Bank likely at the end of its easing cycle and economic activity appearing to improve in Europe, we see limited scope for yields to decline there. Additionally, the Bank of Japan is expected to continue raising its policy rate into 2026.* Taken together, overseas yields could rise relative to those in Canada, potentially putting downward pressure on the loonie and helping reinforce the case for maintaining a globally diversified portfolio.*

Brock Weimer, CFA;
Investment Strategy

Source: *FactSet 

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