Episodi

  • Listen to the January 2026 Corporate Bond Newsletter
    Jan 26 2026

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    The Blue Jays captured the hearts of Canadians this past season with an improbable run to the World Series. And while it ended with the heartbreak of a Game 7 extra-innings loss, the Jays wasted no time in their efforts to run it back, storming into the offseason with bold roster moves. Canadians are now gearing up for the upcoming Winter Olympics in February, where the return of NHL players to Olympic ice promises a thrilling showdown and a chance to reclaim hockey supremacy. All this evokes a sense of Canadian pride in the face of ever divisive issues. We are certainly operating in an environment of heightened uncertainty, though you wouldn’t know it from looking at financial market results.

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    18 min
  • Listen to the January 2026 Market Observer
    Jan 16 2026

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    Last year was a volatile one for the financial markets as unpredictable Donald Trump entered the White House in January. Expecting the returning President Trump to bring hot markets with his election, as in his first term, investors soon learned to their chagrin that he was serious about his “Beautiful Tariffs”. Markets then tanked, recovered and then soared when he dropped the worst of his tariffs. That, and a renewed Artificial Intelligence (AI) mania, ignited a buying frenzy. Seemingly everything that could be traded went up, with even crypto, gold and silver joining the financial market glee.

    Sources:

    1. Source: The Washington Post. (2026, January 11). Running deficits larger than during the Great Depression is reckless.
    2. Source: Ward, Jasper. (2025, December 17). Trump says next Fed chair will believe in lower interest rates ‘by a lot’.
    3. Source: Swanson, Ana. (2026, January 3). Why Haven’t Trump’s Tariffs Had a Bigger Impact?
    4. Source: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. (2023, November 8). Changes in U.S. Family Finances from 2019 to 2022.
    5. Source: Choi, Matthew and Merica, Dan. (2026, January 12). After Venezuela, Trump eyes Iran.
    6. Source: Atkins, Eric et al. (2025, November 30). Manufacturing meltdown.
    7. Source: Craig Brown, Robert. (2015, March 4). National Policy.
    8. Source: Smith, Fergal. (2026, January 2). Canadian factory downturn lengthens as new orders hit a three-month low.
    9. Source: Senate Democrats. (2026, January 3). President Trump Discusses the Capture of Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela.
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    34 min
  • Listen to the October 2025 Market Observer
    Oct 23 2025

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    We last left you in early July with the observation that the financial markets now seemed to thrive on and reward uncertainty. The equity and credit markets had plunged in March on the initial economic fears over the Trump tariffs and then rebounded joyfully in April when Trump variously delayed and fiddled with his tariff strategy that had threatened to burn the U.S and global economy.

    Sources:

    1. Source: Kirby, Jason. (2025, October 4). U.S. tariff revenue piles up as Canada abandons tit-for-tat trade war approach.
    2. Source: Chase, Steven. (2025, October 2). LeBlanc hopes to make progress on steel, aluminum tariff relief before USMCA review
    3. Source: Chase, Steven et al. (2025, October 7). Ahead of talks with Carney, Trump says his tariffs are working.
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    21 min
  • Listen to the October 2025 Corporate Bond Newsletter
    Oct 23 2025

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    Fear and uncertainty moved aside this summer, and optimism is now abound. Central Bankers are cutting rates, equity markets are touching new highs, and the Toronto Blue Jays are headed to the World Series! In credit markets, we also continue to experience historically strong market conditions.

    Sources:

    1. Ronalds-Hannon, Eliza and Weinman, Aaron. (2025, October 12). From Tricolor to Saks, Bonds are Now Crashing at Breakneck Speed.
    2. Nakamoto, Michiyo and Wighton, David. (2007, July 9). Citigroup chief stays bullish on buy-outs.
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    13 min
  • Listen to the July 2025 Corporate Bond Newsletter
    Jul 23 2025

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    Interest rates have been on the rise since the end of the first quarter, particularly in the long-end of the curve. From March 31st until time of publication, Canadian long bonds have risen 66 basis points (bps) while their American counterparts are up 44 bps, translating into price declines of 13% and 7%, respectively.

    Sources:

    1. Fool, Motley. (2025, May 22). The U.S. Government’s Credit Rating Just Got Downgraded for the Third Time Since 2011. History Says the Stock Market Will Do This Next.
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    20 min
  • Listen to the July 2025 Market Observer
    Jul 10 2025

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    The theme of our previous April 2025 Market Observer was that only a fool would try to predict what would happen to the financial markets and the global economies after Donald Trump declared his Tariff War on the World. The more expertise you possessed, the less you were probably able to forecast the actual outcome. As they say, it’s not over until it’s over but rising equity markets and tightening credit spreads weren’t most experts’ first choice, but that’s what has happened.

    Sources:

    1. Source: Canso Investment Counsel Ltd. (2025, April). April 2025 Market Observer.
    2. Source: Burgess, Mark. (2025, July 4). Who cares about uncertainty anyway?
    3. Source: Boggioni, Tom. (2025, July 5). ‘It’s all fake’: White House insider admits Trump’s trade war is just for show.
    4. Source: McCreesh, Shawn. (2025, Feb 28). ‘This is going to be great television’: Trump sums up his showdown with Zelensky.
    5. Source: Blanchfield, Mike and Hawkins, Ari. (July 6, 2025). In tech tax ‘cave,’ Trump and Carney may have both gotten what they wanted.
    6. Source: Rjoseph1. (June 3, 2018). Trudeau calls tariffs ‘insulting’ while Trump aide labels it as ‘family quarrel’.
    7. Source: Aiello, Rachel. (May 14, 2025). Canada’s new housing minister doesn’t think prices need to come down.
    8. Source: CNC News. (Dec 16, 2024). Read Chrystia Freeland’s letter of resignation from Trudeau’s cabinet.
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    21 min
  • Listen to the April 2025 Market Observer
    Apr 25 2025
    21 min
  • Listen to the April 2025 Corporate Bond Newsletter
    Apr 25 2025
    21 min