Thursday, 4/9/2026 a.m.

  • Markets open mixed as energy prices rebound – The TSX is higher, while U.S. equity markets are down in early trading on Thursday, with health care and technology stocks leading the pullback. Bond yields are higher, with the 10-year Government of Canada yield at 3.48% and the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield at 4.31%. In international markets, Asia declined overnight and Europe is also trading lower, pointing to a broadly risk-off tone. The U.S. dollar is weaker against major international currencies. In energy markets, WTI oil is up near $100 as disruptions persist in the Strait of Hormuz amid disputes over the terms of the U.S.-Iran ceasefire. While the recent move higher in oil prices underscores the energy market's sensitivity to geopolitical risks, futures pricing still reflects the view that this disruption could be temporary, with WTI implied to drift back toward the mid-$70 range by year-end.
     
  • Fed's preferred inflation measure in line with estimates – U.S. headline personal consumption expenditure (PCE) inflation held steady at 2.8% annualized in February, matching forecasts. Slowly rising goods prices — up 1.8% year-over-year — have helped offset services inflation, which has also cooled but remains elevated at 3.3%. Shelter inflation slowed to a 3.1% pace, a key driver in moderating services inflation. Core PCE, which excludes more-volatile food and energy prices, ticked down to 3.0%. PCE inflation remains meaningfully above the Fed's 2% target and could reaccelerate modestly as higher oil prices feed through. As a result, we expect the Fed to maintain its recent pause on rate cuts. We think the stabilizing labour market should help provide flexibility for policymakers to remain patient to confirm that higher inflation does not become persistent.
     
  • Jobless claims rise modestly – U.S. initial jobless claims increased to 219,000 this past week, above the 210,000 consensus estimate. Continuing claims — reflecting the total number of people receiving benefits — fell more than expected to 1.79 million, suggesting more workers are finding new employment. Together, we think these readings point to a stabilizing labour market. Slower job creation alongside a moderate pace of layoffs should help keep wage gains running modestly above inflation, in our view. However, price pressures could pick up due to energy costs, potentially raising the bar for real wage gains.

Brian Therien, CFA ;
Investment Strategy

Source for all data: FactSet. 

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