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Canada Plans To Close Free Trade Deals With The Philippines And ASEAN In 2026

Published May 12, 2026
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Summary:
  • Canada is going after two Asian free trade deals in 2026, one with the Philippines and one with the wider ASEAN bloc.
  • A Canada-ASEAN deal would add over $1.5 billion to Canada's economy and open up nearly 700 million buyers in a $5 trillion market.
  • About 75% of Canada's exports now go to the United States.

Canada sends three of every four export dollars to one buyer: the US. With Trump tariffs back in play, Ottawa is in a hurry to find new buyers.

That hurry is driving two big trade pushes in Asia this year.

Two Asian Deals In One Year

Canada is going after two free trade deals in Asia in 2026. The first is a one-on-one deal with the Philippines. The second is a wider pact with ASEAN.

ASEAN is the 10-country bloc that covers most of Southeast Asia. It includes Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, and others.

The Philippines chairs ASEAN this year. Manila is pushing both deals along and pitching itself as Canada's entry point to the region.

For Canada, the math is simple. ASEAN has nearly 700 million people. Its economy is over $5 trillion. It is on track to be the world's fourth-biggest by 2030. A done Canada-ASEAN deal would add over $1.5 billion to Canada's GDP.

Want to know which trade shifts really move markets? Market Briefs breaks it down in five minutes a day, with a free class on investing when you join.

Why The Push Is Happening Now

Canada has a one-customer problem. Roughly three of every four export dollars come from the US. That worked for decades, but Trump tariffs have changed the math.

Spreading the risk used to be a slow goal. Now it is an active scramble. Trade talks that crawled for years are racing to year-end deadlines.

Think of it like a small shop that just noticed 75% of its sales come from one big buyer. The first move is to land a second.

Critical Minerals Are In The Mix

The Philippines side has a second angle. The country is the world's second-biggest seller of raw nickel. Canada wants its capital chasing local mining and processing.

A separate critical minerals deal is also on the table. It would mirror a memo Manila signed with the US on supply lines for clean energy gear.

The Canada-ASEAN team closed two chapters last September. They cover rules and customs steps. The harder chapters are still open.

For investors, the sectors most likely to feel the impact are mining, farming, banks, and clean energy.

What To Watch

Whether either deal really wraps in 2026 is still an open question. But a Canadian government in a hurry to spread its risk means more cash chasing Asia-tied names.

Want a daily read that links shifts like this to your money? Sign up for Market Briefs and get a 45-minute course on investing as a bonus.

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