USA & Canada Intelligence Brief — Tuesday, June 23, 2026

By The Rio Times | Created at 2026-06-23 17:36:34 | Updated at 2026-06-23 18:53:59 1 hour ago

The great bet on artificial intelligence, which carried the American market for months, turned against it today. A global slide in chip shares dragged the Nasdaq lower.

The reckoning was not only on the screen but in the workforce, as one giant cut thousands of jobs to AI and another lost its top minds. The trade that powered the market now tests it.

Today’s USA & Canada Intelligence Brief covers the two economies’ finance, markets, companies, and policy. These are domestic stories, with the wider world kept to a single line of backdrop.

Wall Street — The Trade Turns

The Nasdaq Slides

A worldwide slide in chip shares reached Wall Street on Tuesday. The technology-heavy Nasdaq fell more than two percent in the session.

The broad market measure lost about one and a half percent with it. Investors began to question the sky-high prices of AI shares.

The Memory Test

Micron, a big memory-chip maker, fell about nine percent before the bell. It reports its results tomorrow, and the whole sector is watching.

Its guidance is now seen as the swing factor for the AI trade. A reassuring word could steady nerves; a weak one could deepen the fall.

Corporate America — AI Cuts The Payroll

Oracle Sheds 21,000 Jobs

The software giant Oracle disclosed it cut about twenty-one thousand jobs. That is close to thirteen percent of its entire workforce.

The company tied the reductions directly to its adoption of AI. It booked one and eight-tenths billion dollars in restructuring costs.

The Other Edge Of The Tool

It is one of the clearest signs yet of AI reshaping the payroll. The technology that lifts the share price can also shrink the staff.

For workers, the promise of AI now carries a plain warning. The same tool that builds value can quietly remove jobs.

USA & Canada Intelligence Brief — Tuesday, June 23, 2026. (Photo Internet reproduction)

Silicon Valley — The Fight For Minds

Alphabet’s Worst Day

Google’s parent company had its worst day in more than a year. Its shares fell about five percent in a single session.

The fall followed the departure of senior AI leaders to rivals. The contest for the best minds is now a real market risk.

Talent As The Prize

In the AI race, the scarcest resource is the people who build it. Losing a handful of leaders can shake a giant’s whole story.

The market now prices talent the way it once priced patents. Where the brightest go, the value tends to follow them.

United States — A Bet On Rare Earths

A $1.9 Billion Deal

A critical-minerals company struck a deal worth one and nine-tenths billion. It will buy a magnetics maker to secure rare-earth supply at home.

The aim is a reliable, domestic source of these vital materials. They run through everything from motors to defense equipment.

Building The Chain

The deal is a fresh bet on American supply-chain independence. It reaches from the mine all the way to the finished magnet.

Securing these materials at home has become a national goal. The deal is one company’s answer to a country-wide worry.

The Market — A Flight To Safety

The Dow Holds Up

Even as the Nasdaq fell, the older Dow average edged higher. Money rotated toward firms with steadier, more predictable earnings.

The veteran technology firm IBM rose about four percent on an upgrade. It stood out as a haven on a turbulent day for the sector.

The Narrow Top Tested

The split lays bare how much the market leans on a few names. When the giants wobble, the whole index feels unsteady.

A rotation to safety is the market hedging its biggest bet. The breadth beneath the leaders is being measured anew.

Canada — The Loonie Firms

A Narrowing Gap

Canada’s dollar gained ground as the rate gap with the US narrowed. Markets pared back the rate rises they had expected to come.

A firmer currency is a quiet vote of relative confidence. It eases the cost of imports for households and firms alike.

Steadier Footing

The move suggests the worst of the currency strain has passed. Stability in the dollar gives the central bank room to wait.

For an economy long buffeted by its neighbour, calm is welcome. A steadier loonie is a small but real piece of good news.

Canada — The Energy Cushion

Exporters Catch A Tailwind

As a net energy exporter, Canada draws support from firmer crude. Higher prices lift the incomes of producers and the public purse.

The boost cushions an economy that has felt softer of late. Energy revenue helps offset weakness elsewhere in the country.

A Mixed Blessing

The same higher prices, though, raise costs for many households. What helps the producer can pinch the family at the pump.

On balance, the terms of trade still tilt in Canada‘s favour. The country sells more energy than it has to buy.

Canada — Prices Stay Tame

Better Behaved Than Below

Canada’s underlying inflation has stayed milder than America’s. Its core measures have run softer over recent months.

That gives the central bank welcome room to hold rates steady. It need not chase prices the way its neighbour might have to.

Room To Wait

The contrast is a quiet advantage in an uncertain year. Tame prices are the foundation for a patient policy.

It lets Canada watch and wait rather than act in a hurry. Patience is a luxury that calmer inflation can buy.

The Read

The great bet on artificial intelligence, which carried the American market for months, turned against it on Tuesday, as a global slide in chip shares dragged the Nasdaq down more than two percent and the broad market about one and a half, with Micron falling nine percent before tomorrow’s pivotal results. The reckoning was not only on the screen but in the workforce: Oracle disclosed it had cut some twenty-one thousand jobs, close to thirteen percent of its staff, tying the reductions directly to AI, while Alphabet had its worst day in over a year as senior AI leaders left for rivals.

Yet the day was not all retreat. A critical-minerals company struck a one-and-nine-tenths-billion-dollar deal to secure rare-earth supply at home, and beneath the tech rout the older Dow average edged higher as money rotated toward predictable earnings, with IBM rising about four percent — a flight to safety that laid bare how much the market leans on a few names.

North of the border, Canada had a quieter, steadier day: its dollar firmed as the rate gap with the United States narrowed, its energy exporters drew a tailwind from firmer crude, and its underlying inflation stayed milder than America’s, giving the central bank room to wait. The thread on both sides of the border was a single one: the AI trade that powered the market is now the trade testing it.

What to Watch

  • Today · A global chip slide hits Wall Street as the Nasdaq falls ~2.3%
  • Today · Oracle cuts 21,000 jobs, about 13% of staff, citing AI
  • Today · Alphabet has its worst day in over a year on an AI-talent exodus
  • Tomorrow · Micron reports earnings, the swing factor for the AI-chip trade
  • Today · A $1.9bn deal builds a domestic US rare-earth supply chain
  • Today · The Dow holds up as money rotates to predictable earnings, IBM +4%
  • Today · Canada’s dollar firms as the US-Canada rate gap narrows
  • Today · Canada’s energy exporters catch a tailwind from firmer crude
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