Events in the Middle East have materially changed the near-term economic and financial outlook. Economies’ sensitivities to the conflict and its knock-on effects differ. Many of the largest economies in Asia-Pacific are heavily reliant on energy supplies from the Middle East. The impact on an economy will also be determined by a range of factors, including its energy mix, strategic reserves, policy responses, and whether it is a net energy importer or exporter. As the U.S. and Canada are energy exporters, this mitigates the impact on their projected growth rates over the next twelve months. In April we maintained our twelve-month forward outlook of three months of Stagnation (U.S. Real GDP growth less than 2.5%) followed by nine months of Recession (negative GDP growth) over the next twelve- month period.

China’s economy expanded 5.0% in Q1 2026. The economy has managed to absorb the shock of the Iran conflict with limited disruption, supported by ample oil reserves, a diversified energy mix, and state controls that help contain price volatility.1 China’s annual inflation eased to 1.0% in March,2 while surveyed urban unemployment rate to 5.4% in March.3 China’s trade surplus narrowed to $51.13 billion in March 2026. Export growth slowed sharply to 2.5% while imports soared 27.8% year-on-year.4 The Euro Area’s annual inflation rate was revised higher to 2.6% in March. The increase was largely driven by energy, with prices rising 5.1%, as the conflict with Iran pushed oil prices sharply higher. Considering the bloc’s largest economies, inflation rose in Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and the Netherlands (2.6% vs 2.3%).5 Unemployment in the Euro Area increased to 6.20% in February.6

The U.S. economy expanded at an annualized rate of 0.5% in Q4 2025, revised down further from 0.7% in the second estimate and 1.4% in the preliminary reading.7 The annual inflation rate in the U.S. jumped to 3.3% in March, driven by higher energy costs (12.5%), due to the war with Iran.8 The U.S. unemployment rate fell to 4.3% in March.9 The trade deficit in the U.S. widened to $57.3 billion in February 2026 as exports increased 4.2%, led by nonmonetary gold and natural gas. Imports went up 4.3%. The largest deficits were recorded with Taiwan, followed by Mexico, Vietnam, and China. The gap with the EU decreased to $5.1 billion from $6.1 billion and the shortfall with Canada also narrowed to $0.74 billion from $2.7 billion.10 Headline inflation in Canada surged to 2.4% in March. The surge reflected the initial impact of war, as the disruption of tankers from the Persian Gulf triggered energy shortages worldwide.11 The unemployment rate in Canada stood at 6.7% in March.12 Canada’s trade deficit rose to C$5.7 billion in February 2026, as total imports surged 8.4% to a record high of C$72.1 billion, led by a 45.6% jump in purchases of metal and non-metallic mineral products, particularly gold in the United States. Exports rose 6.4% to C$66.3 billion.  Canada’s trade surplus with the U.S. shrank to C$1.7B, as imports surged 13.6% and exports rose 4.4%.13

Global financial conditions have tightened since late February, with equity prices declining and bond yields and spreads increasing. U.S. equities navigated a turbulent first quarter, buffeted by a trifecta of tariff -related anxiety, renewed AI concerns, and private credit worries. Jitters escalated in March as the conflict in the Middle East reignited stagflation fears, and hopes for Fed rate cuts dissipated. The S&P 500 closed March down 5.0%. The S&P Mid Cap 400 and S&P SmallCap 600 were down by 5.4% and 4.1%, respectively. The S&P/TSX Composite was down 4.3% in March.  The S&P Europe 350® was heavily impacted by the war with Iran, plunging 7.5% in March. Asia Pacific equities initially rose but reversed course in March, leaving the S&P Pan Asia BMI (USD) down 12.7% in March.

In April we maintained exposure to U.S. and Canadian Equities. We continue to believe that Canada is managing the U.S. tariff uncertainty relatively well, replacing some U.S. exports with contracts in Europe and abroad. Gold is held across all models as a long-term strategic asset, playing a role as an effective hedge against the heightened geopolitical uncertainty and market volatility. Gold has become more tightly linked to reserve accumulation by central banks while volatility has been triggered by liquidity-driven deleveraging, not by a change in fundamentals.

How the conflict and related disruptions evolve in the outlook period will determine the effects on commodity and financial markets and the economic implications. The global system is moving deeper into a regime defined by rising volatility across asset classes, energy scarcity, fiscal strain, and elevated inflation risk. For the U.S. economy, stagflation risk is higher because of limited policy flexibility from the Federal Reserve. Our approach to portfolio management is nimble, opportunistic, and deliberate in identifying asset classes that are best placed to generate returns in a new world order. Our focus is on protecting portfolios from downside risk, and we believe that our investment process is working to achieve that goal.

Deborah Frame, President and CIO

Drew Millard, Portfolio Manager

1 Trading Economics. China GDP. April 16, 2026.

2 Trading Economics. China Inflation. April 10, 2026.

3 Trading Economics. China Unemployment. April 16, 2026.

4 Trading Economics. China Trade. April 14, 2026.

5 Trading Economics. Europe Inflation. April 16, 2026.

6 Trading Economics. Europe Unemployment. April 1, 2026.

7 Trading Economics. U.S. GDP. April 9, 2026.

8 Trading Economics. U.S. Inflation. April 10, 2026.

9 Trading Economics. U.S. Unemployment. April 3, 2026.

10 Trading Economics. U.S. Trade. April 2, 2026.

11 Trading Economics. Canada Inflation. April 20, 2026.

12 Trading Economics. Canada Unemployment. April 10, 2026.

13 Trading Economics. Canada Trade. April 2, 2026.

Index return data from Bloomberg and S&P Dow Jones Indices Index Dashboard: U.S., Canada, Europe, Asia, Fixed Income. March 31, 2026. Index performance is based on total returns and expressed in the local currency of the index.

The Middle East conflict that erupted at the end of February saw an immediate reaction from asset prices in March. Oil prices climbed, the dollar rallied, and yields softened. Gold bounced, up almost 5% across the first two trading sessions. Historically gold has responded positively when oil prices rise in response to a demand surge but fall in the short run, in response to a supply removal shock. Gold is being sold because liquidity is being raised, not because its role as a strategic asset has diminished. In March we maintained our twelve-month forward outlook of three months of Stagnation (U.S. Real GDP growth less than 2.5%) followed by nine months of Recession (negative GDP growth) over the next twelve- month period.

China’s annual inflation jumped to 1.3% in February from 0.2% in January,1 while China’s surveyed urban unemployment rate rose to 5.3%.2 China’s trade surplus stood at USD 213.62 billion in the first two months of 2026.3 The Euro Area economy grew by 0.2% in Q4 2025, down from 0.3% in Q3, highlighting modest momentum despite easing inflation, lower interest rates, and resilience amid headwinds from U.S. trade tariffs on E.U. imports. Among major economies, Spain led with 0.8% growth, driven by strong household consumption and investment, followed by the Netherlands at 0.5%. Germany and Italy each grew 0.3%.4 The annual core inflation rate in the Euro Area was confirmed at 2.4% in February.5

The U.S. economy expanded an annualized 0.7% in Q4 2025.6 The annual inflation rate in the U.S. held steady at 2.4% in February, while unemployment rose to 4.4%.7 The U.S. trade deficit narrowed sharply to $54.5 billion in January 2026. Exports jumped 5.5% to a record high of $302.1 billion led by sales of nonmonetary gold. Imports declined 0.7% to $356.6 billion. The largest trade gaps were recorded with Vietnam, Taiwan, Mexico, and China.8 The headline inflation rate in Canada fell to 1.8% in February from 2.3% in the previous month,9 while the unemployment rate rose to 6.7% from 6.5% in the previous month.10 Canada’s trade deficit widened to C$3.6 billion in January 2026 from a C$1.3 billion deficit in December. Exports fell 4.7% month over month to C$62.48 billion, with motor vehicle and parts exports down 21.2% as production stoppages affected passenger car shipments. These declines were partly offset by a 4.1% increase in energy product exports, driven by natural gas. Canada’s surplus with the U.S. narrowed to C$5.4 billion, while the deficit with countries other than the U.S. widened to C$9.0 billion.11 

February was a challenging month for U.S. equities as growing scrutiny of AI-related capital expenditures and their associated impact on business models took a toll on large-caps, with the S&P 500 closing down 0.8% for the month. Market leadership shifted toward smaller companies, with the S&P Mid Cap 400 and the S&P Small Cap 600 up 4.1% and 2.2% respectively. Major Canadian equity indices finished the month with positive results. The S&P/TSX Composite increased 7.7%. Canadian sectors posted mixed performance for the month, with the S&P/TSX Global Gold Index climbed 23.6%. The S&P Europe 350 had its second consecutive month of strong gains, rising 3.9% in February. Asia Pacific equities extended their positive momentum and outperformed global peers in February, with the S&P Pan Asia BMI rising 6.8% to an all-time high.

In March we maintained exposure to U.S. and Canadian Equities. We continue to believe that Canada is managing the U.S. tariff uncertainty relatively well, replacing some U.S. exports with contracts in Europe and abroad. Gold is held across all models as a long-term strategic asset, playing a role as an effective hedge against the heightened geopolitical uncertainty and market volatility. Gold has historically been negatively correlated with the dollar. Gold has become more tightly linked to reserve accumulation by central banks, sovereigns and sovereign wealth funds than to traditional portfolio flows. The major sell-off over the last three week occurred against a backdrop that, under traditional frameworks, should have been supportive: elevated geopolitical risk, a major energy shock, rising volatility across asset classes, and growing concerns about global growth. Gold’s decline was triggered by liquidity-driven deleveraging, not by a change in fundamentals.

The global system is moving deeper into a regime defined by energy scarcity, fiscal strain, and elevated inflation risk. Debt levels are high; deficits are widening and central banks face increasingly constrained policy choices. If the energy shock persists and growth deteriorates, the probability of renewed large-scale liquidity support (QE or quantitative easing) rises materially.  For the U.S. economy, stagflation risk is higher because of limited policy flexibility from the Federal Reserve. Our approach to portfolio management is nimble, opportunistic, and deliberate in identifying asset classes that are best placed to generate returns in a new world order. Our focus is on protecting portfolios from downside risk, and we believe that our investment process is working to achieve that goal.

Deborah Frame, President and CIO

Drew Millard, Portfolio Manager

1 Trading Economics. China Inflation. March 9, 2026.

2 Trading Economics. China Unemployment. March 16, 2026.

3 Trading Economics. China Trade. March 10, 2026.

4 Trading Economics. EU GDP. March 6, 2026.

5 Trading Economics. EU Inflation. March 18, 2026.

6 Trading Economics. U.S. GDP. March 13, 2026.

7 Trading Economics. U.S. Inflation. March 6, 2026.

8 Trading Economics. U.S. Trade. March 12, 2026.

9 Trading Economics. Canada Inflation. March 16, 2026.

10 Trading Economics. Canada Unemployment. March 13, 2026.

11 Trading Economics. Canada Trade. March 12, 2026.

Index return data from Bloomberg and S&P Dow Jones Indices Index Dashboard: U.S., Canada, Europe, Asia, Fixed Income. February 28, 2026. Index performance is based on total returns and expressed in the local currency of the index.

As the U.S. economy adjusts to global tariffs, disruption and uncertainty impact the entire globe. The U.S. attack on Iran on February 28th put 3.3 million barrels per day of Iranian oil at risk, amounting to 3.5% of global supply. A disruption to the Strait of Hormuz, which borders Iran and accounts for 20% of global oil and LNG transits, further heightens the global impact. Iran’s retaliation has rained missiles on Israel, its Arab neighbours and American bases in the region.  Iran’s leadership may see dragging its Gulf neighbours further into the crisis as one of its few means of forcing America back to the negotiating table. Market mayhem could just be the start of it if the war drags on and spreads farther into the Middle East. A protracted and messy conflict will push energy prices upward around the world, raising inflation and grinding growth to a halt, prolonging stagflation. In February we maintained our twelve-month forward outlook of three months of Stagnation (U.S. Real GDP growth less than 2.5%) followed by nine months of Recession (negative GDP growth) over the next twelve- month period.

China’s annual inflation eased to 0.2% in January 2026 from 0.8% a month earlier.1 The Euro Area economy expanded by 1.3% year-on-year in the final quarter of 2025. Ireland posted the strongest growth at 6.7%, followed by Spain (2.6%), Lithuania (2.5%), Portugal (1.9%) and the Netherlands (1.8%).2 Annual inflation in the Euro Area was confirmed at 1.7% in January,3 while the unemployment rate in the Euro Area decreased to 6.2% in December.4

The U.S. economy expanded an annualized 1.4% in Q4 2025. Exports fell 0.9% after surging 9.6% in Q3, and imports declined (-1.3% vs -4.4%). For 2025, the U.S. economy expanded 2.2%.5 The annual inflation rate in the U.S. slowed to 2.4% in January,6 while the U.S. unemployment rate ticked down to 4.3%.7 The U.S. trade deficit widened to $70.3 billion in December 2025. Exports were down 1.7%, led by a fall in nonmonetary gold. Imports were up 3.6%. For 2025, the U.S. recorded a $901.5 billion trade deficit. Deficits narrowed with the E.U. and China, but widened with Mexico, Vietnam, and Taiwan.8 Canadian GDP declined by 0.2% in the fourth quarter of 2025. The contraction was driven by a withdrawal of business inventories. Increased capital investment was driven by government investment in weapons systems. On an annual basis, the Canadian GDP grew by 1.7% in 2025.9 The headline inflation rate in Canada eased to 2.3% in January. Deflation picked up for transportation due to the 16.7% plunge in gasoline prices,10 while the unemployment rate in Canada fell to 6.5%.11 Canada’s trade deficit narrowed to C$1.31 billion in December.  Exports rose 2.6% month over month. These gains were partly offset by a 1.0% decline in energy product exports. Canada’s surplus with the U.S. narrowed to C$5.7 billion, while the deficit with countries narrowed to C$7.0 billion.12

It was a rollercoaster start to the year for U.S. equities. The S&P 500 closed the month up 1.5%, despite a pullback during the final two trading days of the month. The S&P Mid Cap 400 and S&P Small Cap 600 advanced 4.1% and 5.6%, respectively. Major Canadian equity indices finished the month with mixed results. The S&P/TSX Composite increased 0.8%. Canadian sectors posted mixed performance for the month, with Energy leading, up 10.6%, while Information Technology fell 17.6%. The S&P Europe 350 rose 3.3% to start the year. Asia Pacific equities began the year on a strong footing, with the S&P Pan Asia BMI up 7.2% in January.

In February we reduced exposure to U.S. Equities in the Moderate Growth, Growth, and Aggressive Growth models and added that exposure to Canadian Equities. We continue to believe that Canada is managing the U.S. tariff uncertainty relatively well, replacing some U.S. exports with contracts in Europe and abroad. Gold is held across all models as a long-term strategic asset, playing a role as an effective hedge against the heightened geopolitical uncertainty and market volatility. Gold has historically been negatively correlated with the dollar. 

For the U.S. economy, stagflation risk is higher because of limited policy flexibility from the Federal Reserve. During an energy shock, the Fed may lower short-term interest rates to mitigate inflationary pressures. But significant rate cuts this year, as inflation has remained above the Fed’s preferred 2% target, remain unlikely.  We continue to monitor the global selloff of U.S. treasuries and the growing holdings of gold. Our approach to portfolio management is nimble, opportunistic, and deliberate in identifying asset classes that are best placed to generate returns in a new world order. Our focus is on protecting portfolios from downside risk, and we believe that our investment process is working to achieve that goal.

Deborah Frame, President and CIO

Drew Millard, Portfolio Manager

1 Trading Economics. China Inflation. February 11, 2026.

2 Trading Economics. EU GDP. February 13, 2026.

3 Trading Economics. EU Inflation. February 25, 2026.

4 Trading Economics. EU Unemployment. January 30, 2026.

5 Trading Economics. U.S. GDP. February 20, 2026.

6 Trading Economics. U.S. Inflation. February 13, 2026.

7 Trading Economics. U.S. Unemployment. February 11, 2026.

8 Trading Economics. U.S. Trade. February 17, 2026.

9 Trading Economics. Canada GDP. February 27, 2026.

10 Trading Economics. Canada Inflation. February 17, 2026.

11 Trading Economics. Canada Unemployment. February 6, 2026.

12 Trading Economics. Canada Trade. February 19, 2026.

Index return data from Bloomberg and S&P Dow Jones Indices Index Dashboard: U.S., Canada, Europe, Asia, Fixed Income. January 31, 2026. Index performance is based on total returns and expressed in the local currency of the index.

The United States is reliant on global capital markets to fund its budget deficits and relies on the premise that the U.S. is a predictable and reliable steward of the world’s financial system. U.S. efforts to rewrite the rules of international trade, to pressure allies, and to treat economic relationships as instruments of coercion all increase uncertainty. The U.S. economy’s growth forecast has been downgraded by the OECD to 2% for 2025 and 1.7% for 2026, with inflation expected to rise to 3% in 2026.1 The US dollar declined against global currencies in January as foreign official accounts continue to diversify away from America’s government while gold bullion hit record highs in January. In January we maintained our twelve-month forward outlook of three months of Stagnation (U.S. Real GDP growth less than 2.5%) followed by nine months of Recession (negative GDP growth) over the next twelve- month period.

China’s economy expanded 4.5% year over year in Q4 2025, slowing from 4.8% in Q3.2 China’s annual inflation rate edged higher to 0.8% in December from 0.7% in the prior month,3 while surveyed urban unemployment stood at 5.1%.4 China posted a record USD 1.189 trillion trade surplus in 2025, with exports rising 5.5% while imports were flat. Faced with Trump’s tariffs, Chinese exporters shifted away from the U.S. market and toward alternative destinations, particularly the EU and Southeast Asia.5 Eurozone consumer price inflation eased to 1.9% in December, down from 2.1% in November,6 while the unemployment rate decreased to 6.3%.7 The Eurozone’s trade surplus narrowed to €9.9 billion in November 2025 from €15.4 billion a year earlier, as exports fell 3.4% while imports decreased 1.3%. Exports decreased 20.3% to the U.S. while imports from the U.S. declined 7.1%.8

The U.S. economy expanded at an annualized rate of 4.4% in Q3 2025.9 The annual inflation rate in the U.S. remained at 2.7% in December,10 while unemployment edged down to 4.4%.11 The trade deficit in the U.S. widened sharply to $56.8 billion in November 2025, compared to a $29.2 billion gap in October. The figure underscores pronounced monthly swings amid President Trump administration’s frequently changing tariff stance. Imports increased 5% to $348.9 billion, while exports were down 3.6% to $292.1 billion, led by a decline in nonmonetary gold. The deficit widened with Vietnam, China, and the European Union, while it narrowed slightly with Mexico and Taiwan.12 The headline inflation rate in Canada rose to 2.4% in December of 2025 from 2.2%,13 while the unemployment rate rose to 6.8% from 6.5% in the previous month.14 Canada’s trade swung to a deficit of C$0.58 billion in October 2025 from a C$0.24 billion surplus in September. Exports rose 2.1% month over month. Exports to the U.S. fell 3.4%. As a result, Canada’s surplus with the U.S. narrowed from C$8.4 billion to C$4.8 billion, while the deficit with non-U.S. partners narrowed to C$5.4 billion.15 

U.S. equity markets capped 2025 with double-digit gains, up 17.9% amid geopolitical, tariff, and inflation -related tensions, coupled with a government shutdown and labor market concerns. The market’s comeback was powered by mega-cap strength and AI-related optimism. The S&P Mid Cap 400 and S&P Small Cap 600 gained 7.5% and 6.02%, respectively. Canadian equity indices finished the year with the S&P/TSX Composite up 31.7%. The S&P/TSX Global Gold Index climbed 146.2%. The S&P Europe 350 yearly gain of 20.5% outperformed the euro-denominated S&P 500 by 16%. Due to the 5% outperformance of its country-specific benchmark, the U.K. was the primary driver of the S&P Europe 350’s positive performance. Asia Pacific outperformed, as the S&P Pan Asia BMI (USD) gained 27.3%. Greater China posted solid results, with the S&P Hong Kong BMI and Taiwan BMI both up 31% and the S&P China 500 rising 26.6%.

In January we maintained all exposures established in December. We continue to believe that Canada is managing the U.S. tariff uncertainty relatively well, replacing some U.S. exports with contracts in Europe and abroad. Gold is held across all models as a long-term strategic asset, playing a role as an effective hedge against the heightened geopolitical uncertainty and market volatility. Gold has historically been negatively correlated with the dollar. The combined effect of heightened geopolitical risk and US dollar weakness contributed to Gold’s January record high.

We continue to monitor the global selloff of U.S. treasuries and the growing holdings of gold. Our approach to portfolio management is nimble, opportunistic, and deliberate in identifying asset classes that are best placed to generate returns in a new world order. Our focus is on protecting portfolios from downside risk, and we believe that our investment process is working to achieve that goal.

Deborah Frame, President and CIO

Drew Millard, Portfolio Manager

1 OECD Economic Outlook. December 2, 2025.

2 Trading Economics. China GDP. January 19, 2026.

3 Trading Economics. China Inflation. January 9, 2026.

4 Trading Economics. China Unemployment. January 19, 2026.

5 Trading Economics. China Trade. January 14, 2026.

6 Trading Economics. EU Inflation. January 19, 2026.

7 Trading Economics. EU Unemployment. January 8, 2026.

8 Trading Economics. EU Trade. January 15, 2026.

9 Trading Economics. U.S. GDP. January 22, 2026.

10 Trading Economics. U.S. Inflation. January 13, 2026.

11 Trading Economics. U.S. Unemployment. January 9. 2026.

12 Trading Economics. U.S. Trade. January 29, 2026.

13 Trading Economics. Canada Inflation. January 19, 2026.

14 Trading Economics. Canada Unemployment. January 9, 2026.

15 Trading Economics. Canada Trade. January 8, 2026.

Index return data from Bloomberg and S&P Dow Jones Indices Index Dashboard: U.S., Canada, Europe, Asia, Fixed Income. December 31, 2025. Index performance is based on total returns and expressed in the local currency of the index.