February 13, 2026 | portfolio managers' brief

Portfolio Managers’ Brief: February 2026

BY: Jason Ayres
February 2026 Key Takeaways The Starting Point Markets entered January with three dominant assumptions: rate cuts were coming, AI would continue to lead, and safe-haven assets remained in favor. January tested how durable those assumptions were when confronted with stronger economic data, shifting policy expectations, and crowded positioning. Market Performance Snapshot Canadian and U.S. markets finished 2025 with strong returns. Early 2026 performance reflects a more mixed and selective environment. Leadership is no longer broad-based, particularly within technology. Rates: Expectations Were Repriced

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February 2026 Key Takeaways

The Starting Point

  • Markets entered January with three dominant assumptions: rate cuts were coming, AI would continue to lead, and safe-haven assets remained in favor.
  • January tested how durable those assumptions were when confronted with stronger economic data, shifting policy expectations, and crowded positioning.

Market Performance Snapshot

  • Canadian and U.S. markets finished 2025 with strong returns.
  • Early 2026 performance reflects a more mixed and selective environment.
  • Leadership is no longer broad-based, particularly within technology.

Rates: Expectations Were Repriced

  • The most important driver in January wasn’t an actual policy move — it was expectations.
  • Economic resilience pushed out the timing and pace of rate cuts.
  • Policy remains data-dependent, not automatic.
  • Rates are moving lower over time, but the path matters.

Federal Reserve Leadership: Why It Matters

  • Markets reacted to the focus on Federal Reserve leadership.
  • Kevin Warsh is viewed as less inclined toward prolonged accommodative policy.
  • The U.S. dollar firmed and rate-cut probabilities were pushed out.
  • Markets move as much on who may set policy as on the policy itself.

Equity Markets: Rotation, Not Breakdown

  • Despite macro headlines, equity markets remained mostly resilient.
  • January was characterized by sector rotation.
  • Investors focused on owning leaders rather than entire sectors.
  • Leadership is rotating internally, not collapsing.

AI: Demand Is Real, Discipline Is Being Tested

  • The AI theme remained intact.
  • Markets became more selective.
  • Investors differentiated between companies monetizing AI today and those investing for longer-dated payoffs.
  • This reflects a shift toward earnings and balance-sheet discipline.

Precious Metals: From Outperformance to Reversal

  • Gold and silver were among the strongest performers in 2025.
  • By late January, positioning had become crowded.
  • Gold pulled back from record highs but remains positive year to date.
  • The reversal was driven by profit-taking, rate and dollar repricing, and technical pressures.

The Role of Precious Metals

  • The pullback does not invalidate their role in a diversified portfolio.
  • It reinforces the need for discipline and rebalancing after extreme moves.
  • Crowded trades can unwind quickly, even when the long-term thesis remains intact.

Why Markets Held Up Overall

  • Broader markets held their footing despite volatility.
  • Earnings growth remains solid.
  • Central banks are cautious but not restrictive.
  • Pullbacks are being absorbed rather than cascading.
  • This is characteristic of a late-cycle expansion.

How We’re Positioned

  • Equities: Fully invested, but selective — emphasizing quality and balance-sheet strength.
  • Fixed income: Defensive tilt, adding selectively where yields are compelling.
  • Diversification remains central as leadership rotates.
  • Participating in upside while managing concentration risk.

What We’re Watching Looking Ahead

  • Inflation trends and central bank messaging.
  • Earnings quality, particularly in AI-exposed sectors.
  • Market breadth and participation.
  • Commodity trends and their inflation impact.
  • Signs of stress in crowded trades.
  • The environment favors selectivity over speculation.

Closing Summary

  • Markets are transitioning from broad optimism to more selective
  • The backdrop remains supportive.
  • Returns will increasingly be driven by positioning, discipline, and fundamentals rather than themes alone.

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