Tuesday, 5/19/2026 p.m.

  • Stocks close lower following domestic inflation report – North American equity markets closed lower on Tuesday, despite a lower-than-expected consumer price index (CPI) reading for April. S. stocks underperformed, as rising S. bond yields weighed on sentiment and the S&P 500 took a pause after a more than 15% rally since its March low. Overseas, Asian markets were mixed overnight, with Japan’s Nikkei and Korea’s KOSPI posting declines, while European equities closed little changed. On the corporate front, home-improvement retailer Home Depot reported first-quarter results today, with earnings and sales in line with expectations, and reiterated its forward guidance. Management noted that despite ongoing consumer uncertainty and affordability challenges in the housing market, underlying demand has remained relatively stable compared to 2025. In fixed income, Canadian government bond yields were little changed, with the 10-year GoC yield closing at 3.71% while the 10-year S. Treasury yield climbed higher to 4.66%. In commodity markets, oil prices were little changed, with WTI crude holding near $104 per barrel, as there has been limited incremental progress toward resolving the conflict in Iran.
     
  • Inflation edges higher on rising energy costs, but core measures remain contained – Domestic headline CPI rose 2.8% year-over-year in April, up from a 2.4% annual increase in March but below economist expectations of a 3.2% gain. Higher energy costs were a key driver of the acceleration, with energy prices rising 19.2% year-over-year in April, following a 3.9% increase in March. However, excluding the impact of energy prices suggests that underlying price pressures remain relatively subdued. CPI excluding food and energy was unchanged in April and declined by 0.1% in March, bringing the three-month annualized rate to just 0.26%—the lowest level since the immediate aftermath of the pandemic in 2020. A closer look at core inflation measures closely monitored by the Bank of Canada—CPI-median and CPI-trim—also points to easing price pressures. CPI-median rose 2.1% year-over-year in April, the lowest reading since December 2020, while CPI-trim increased 2.0%, the lowest since February 2021. In our view, the combination of contained underlying inflation and a soft April employment report is likely to keep the Bank of Canada on hold in the near term.
     
  • Earnings season winds down with NVIDIA and Walmart in focus – A strong first-quarter earnings season is nearing its conclusion, with more than 90% of S&P 500 companies having reported results and earnings on pace to grow 26% year-over-year. This week will offer key updates on both AI-spending trends and consumer health. Tech giant NVIDIA is scheduled to report after the market close on Wednesday, while retailers Walmart, Target and Lowe’s are set to report later this week, providing insight into how consumers are faring amid the higher energy-price backdrop. Home Depot reported in-line results this morning and reiterated full-year guidance highlighting that despite ongoing consumer uncertainty, demand has remained stable compared to last year. At the index level, first-quarter earnings results have been robust, with 84% of companies reporting better-than-expected earnings, above the five-year average of 78%. The average earnings surprise has been 18%, also well above the five-year average of 7.3%. Strength has been led by technology, communication services and consumer discretionary, each of which is on pace to deliver earnings growth of more than 36%. However, cyclical sectors have also contributed meaningfully, with industrials, materials and financials all on track to post earnings growth above 19% in the first quarter. Looking ahead, the profit backdrop remains solid, with full-year earnings growth expected to exceed 20%. While higher-for-longer energy prices pose downside risks to corporate profits over the remainder of the year, we believe steady economic activity, healthy S. labour-market conditions, and robust technology-spending trends should support strong profit growth over the balance of the year, providing a constructive backdrop for equity markets.

Brock Weimer, CFA;
Investment Strategy

Source for all data: FactSet.

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