In Canada, the market dropped roughly 1.5% despite gains in energy and gold prices, reflecting broad investor caution as geopolitical uncertainty overshadowed commodity strength and raised concerns about global growth and market volatility. TD Securities sees shifting trade conditions are unlikely to significantly change Canada’s growth outlook because the manufacturing sector represents a relatively small share of GDP and investment was already weak. While prolonged CUSMA negotiations and geopolitical tensions are increasing uncertainty for businesses, rising energy prices are providing a partial offset by supporting the economy and reducing expectations for near-term interest rate cuts.
American Markets
U.S. stocks declined broadly, driven by a combination of geopolitical anxiety and unexpectedly weak labor market data that intensified fears of economic slowdown. February employment data showed the U.S. economy lost 92,000 jobs, far worse than the expected gain of about 59,000, while the unemployment rate rose to 4.4% from the expected 4.3%, suggesting a softening labor market. The decline was partly attributed to disruptions in sectors such as healthcare due to strikes, along with a wider slowdown in hiring momentum. U.S. retail sales fell 0.2% month-over-month in January 2026, marking the first decline since October, but the drop was smaller than expected. Despite the monthly slowdown, consumer spending remains up 3.2% year-over-year, indicating overall demand is still holding up. At the same time, global bond markets sold off as investors worried that rising energy prices could reignite inflation, complicating central bank policy and potentially delaying interest-rate cuts.
European Markets
European markets also declined as investors rotated out of risk assets, with surging oil prices threatening to raise energy costs and squeeze corporate margins, pushing expectations that European corporate profits could fall to a two-year low.
UK markets weakened, as data showed house prices were rising, as investors grew concerned that higher energy prices and a weakening pound could exacerbate inflation pressures and dampen consumer spending. The pound’s decline reflects fears that an escalation involving Iran could trigger stagflationary dynamics , slower economic growth combined with higher inflation across all energy-dependent economies, of which the UK is a major dependant.
Corporate Stock News
Abercrombie & Fitch Co. (NYSE: ANF) – Barclays lowered its price target to $95 from $115 after the company forecast slower sales growth, particularly due to weakening momentum at the Hollister brand.
Amazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN) – The company resolved a software deployment issue that caused an hours-long outage affecting thousands of shoppers; its website and app are now operating normally.
Blackstone Inc. (NYSE: BX), TPG Inc. (NASDAQ: TPG) & Whitestone REIT (NYSE: WSR) – Private equity firms Blackstone and TPG have expressed interest in acquiring Whitestone REIT and signed confidentiality agreements to review company documents, though a transaction is not guaranteed.
BP PLC (NYSE: BP) – The oil major plans to streamline its board as part of a strategic reset under Chairman Albert Manifold. Leadership changes include the upcoming appointment of Meg O’Neill as CEO, the first external hire for the role in more than a century.
Cooper Companies Inc. (NASDAQ: COO) – The company raised its annual profit and revenue forecasts due to strong demand for daily disposable contact lenses, and JPMorgan increased its price target to $80 from $78.
Costco Wholesale Corp. (NASDAQ: COST) – The retailer beat holiday-quarter earnings estimates, with same-store sales rising 6.7% and net income climbing nearly 14%. Jefferies raised its price target to $1,130 from $1,050, and Costco said it may lower prices if tariff refunds are received.
Ford Motor Co. (NYSE: F) – The automaker is recalling 1.74 million vehicles in the U.S. due to a rearview camera defect that could prevent images from displaying.
Gap Inc. (NYSE: GAP) – The company warned that U.S. import tariffs may pressure profits and forecast annual earnings largely below expectations; JPMorgan cut its price target to $33 from $36.
Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) – Two company units agreed to pay $65 million to settle an antitrust lawsuit alleging overcharges for the pulmonary hypertension drug Tracleer.
Marvell Technology Inc. (NASDAQ: MRVL) – The chipmaker issued strong long-term revenue guidance, forecasting revenue near $15 billion by fiscal 2028 driven by demand for AI data-center chips, and reported quarterly results slightly above expectations.
Medtronic PLC (NYSE: MDT) – Its diabetes unit MiniMed raised $560 million in a U.S. IPO, valuing the business at roughly $5.61 billion.
Nike Inc. (NYSE: NKE) – The company expects about $300 million in restructuring charges related to layoffs and cost-cutting measures aimed at improving margins and refreshing its product lineup.
Paycom Software Inc. (NYSE: PAYC) – Barclays raised its price target to $150 from $140 after the company announced plans to repurchase up to $200 million in additional shares.
Pfizer Inc. (NYSE: PFE) – A U.S. federal judge awarded $29 million to Pfizer from leftover funds tied to the SAC Capital insider-trading settlement.
South Bow Corp. (TSX: SOBO) – The pipeline operator launched an open season for long-term commitments to revive part of the Keystone XL pipeline, which could increase Canadian crude exports to the U.S. by more than 12% if approved.

