Daily market snapshot

Published January 7, 2026
 Woman on couch looking at laptop

Wednesday 1/7/2026 p.m.

  • Stocks end mixed after fresh highs – Markets diverged today, as the Nasdaq advanced while the TSX and Dow slipped after touching record highs, amid ongoing geopolitical headlines and ahead of key U.S. labour data*. Bonds rallied, sending yields lower, following weaker-than-expected German retail sales, moderating eurozone inflation, and a decline in total U.S. job openings*. Oil prices fell after President Trump indicated Venezuela will ship 30–50 million barrels of sanctioned oil to the U.S., as Washington seeks greater control over the country’s industry*. Also making headlines, Trump threatened to pause capital returns for defense contractors and proposed a ban on single-home purchases by institutional investors, pressuring shares of defense companies and some asset managers. On the corporate front, Warner Bros. Discovery rejected Paramount’s latest bid, calling it inferior to its existing deal with Netflix. Meanwhile, precious metals paused after a strong 2025 and a solid start to the year, with both gold and silver declining today*.
     
  • Small-caps and value lead early-year gains - Just a few days into the new year, markets are already digesting major geopolitical headlines while bracing for a wave of economic data ahead. Despite the headline volatility, equities have largely shrugged off the news, with major indexes hitting fresh highs yesterday*. While recent developments carry significant geopolitical implications, they do not materially alter the near-term outlook for the economy or oil supply, in our view, the factors markets truly care about. Meanwhile, a pro-cyclical rally is underway, with small-cap stocks outperforming large-caps and value-style investments outpacing growth*. We believe this reflects supportive fundamentals, including an expected broadening of earnings momentum both within and beyond U.S. mega-cap tech.
     
  • Labour-market data in focus – U.S. private payrolls, as reported by ADP this morning, rose by 41,000 in December, roughly in line with consensus expectations*. This moderate pace suggests a labour market that may be stabilizing after a soft patch over the past six months. Most job gains came from familiar sectors such as education and health services*. Encouragingly, for the first time in four months, firms with fewer than 50 employees added jobs*. This data precedes Friday’s December employment report, which will likely be closely watched for its implications on Fed policy. Last month’s report showed unemployment rising to 4.6%, a four-year high, but largely for constructive reasons as more workers re-entered the labor force*. We believe the current low-hiring, low-firing environment will persist. However, with economic activity remaining solid, hiring could pick up slightly. We expect monthly U.S. job gains to firm modestly into the 50,000–100,000 range, while a smaller labour supply—partly due to lower immigration—keeps unemployment near 4.5% in 2026. In Canada, we think we may be past the peak in unemployment, as we expect private hiring to pick up, (hopefully) helped by an easing in trade-policy uncertainty and an accompanied improvement in Canadian growth.

Angelo Kourkafas, CFA;
Investment Strategy

Source: *Bloomberg 

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