Daily market snapshot

Published November 14, 2025
 Woman on couch looking at laptop

Friday, 11/14/2025 p.m.

  • Stocks stabilize to end the week – After a sharply lower open, North American equity markets recovered to close near the flatline on Friday, supported by a rebound in tech shares.* For the week, the TSX posted a gain of over 1%, while U.S. markets were mixed, with the S&P 500 posting a modest gain and the Nasdaq closing slightly lower, as concerns over elevated valuations in growth sectors has weighed on performance over the past two weeks.* Adding to recent investor caution were hawkish-leaning remarks from Federal Reserve officials, signaling that a December rate cut remains uncertain.* Futures markets now assign a 45% probability to a cut, down from 70% earlier this week.** Overseas, Asian markets closed lower following weaker-than-expected industrial production data from China, while European markets also declined.* In fixed income, bond yields moved modestly higher across the curve, with the 10-year GoC yield climbing to 3.18% and the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield ending the day near 4.15%.*
     
  • Leadership rotation underway in November – Despite today's recovery, mega-cap tech shares have come under pressure in recent weeks, likely due to investor concerns over elevated valuations.* The Nasdaq, which is heavily weighted toward technology, has declined over 3% this month and posted its second consecutive losing week, despite being higher by roughly 19% year-to-date.* Despite recent volatility, we believe there are reasons for optimism around growth sectors of the market longer-term, as enthusiasm around AI has driven robust earnings growth in these stocks and may enhance overall economic productivity over time. However, given the sector’s outsized influence on the U.S. market, we stress the importance of diversification. As part of our opportunistic U.S. equity sector guidance, we recommend maintaining balance between growth and value sectors by overweighting industrials, health care, and consumer discretionary, while underweighting consumer staples and utilities. We suggest neutral allocations to all other sectors, including technology. To view our full suite of portfolio guidance, check out our Monthly portfolio brief.
     
  • Overseas stocks on pace for strongest year since '93 – Overseas equities have delivered strong performance in 2025, with the MSCI AC World ex-U.S. Index on track for a gain of over 27% in Canadian dollar terms—the best annual return since 1993 if sustained.* European markets have contributed meaningfully, supported by renewed economic momentum following the ECB’s rate-cutting cycle and Germany’s fiscal stimulus announcement this spring.* Tech-heavy regions of emerging-markets have also driven gains, with the MSCI China Index up roughly 40% and the MSCI Korea Index surging over 85%.* A modestly weaker Canadian dollar has further boosted overseas returns; excluding currency effects, year-to-date performance stands at 23.7% for overseas stocks.* Looking ahead, we believe overseas equities remain compelling and recommend overweight positions in emerging-market equity and overseas developed small- and mid-cap stocks as part of our opportunistic asset-allocation guidance. In our view, these asset classes may benefit from improving global growth, attractive valuations and easing global trade tensions. 
     

Brock Weimer, CFA;
Investment Strategy

Source: *FactSet  **CME FedWatch Tool

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