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Markets head lower following a hawkish rate cut by the U.S. Federal Reserve. We discuss the reasons behind the Fed’s shift and if investors really need to fear higher rates caused by stronger growth.
Higher productivity has propelled the U.S. economy ahead of its major peers in recent years, offering a blueprint for other countries and raising the stakes in the global race to harness emergent technologies such as GenAI.
The Bank of Canada lowered its benchmark interest rate by half a percentage point again in December, to 3.25%.
Learn what’s on the horizon for markets and the Canadian dollar—and discover four interesting investing opportunities.
Despite potential headwinds, we are generally constructive on Canadian markets, though we expect less outperformance in credit.
How can investors separate the policy changes that are likely to really matter for the economy from those that get a lot of press but may not have the most traction?
The Fed has cut policy rates by 75 basis points since September only to see longer-term Treasury yields and mortgage rates increase by the same degree. We take a closer look at this divergence and its implications.