Canada's TSX Hits Record High, Gold & Tech Stocks Surge
Canada's TSX Composite index soared to a new record high of 32,407.02, driven by strong gains in materials and tech sectors. Discover the market drivers and what's next for investors.
Canada's TSX Composite index soared to a new record high of 32,407.02, driven by strong gains in materials and tech sectors. Discover the market drivers and what's next for investors.
Canada's TSX composite index started 2026 with a 0.5% gain, led by surging uranium and energy shares, despite weak manufacturing data. Read the full market analysis.
Canada's main stock index edged lower on Tuesday, hurt by tech stocks, but is poised to end 2024 roughly 29% higher—its strongest annual performance since 2009. Discover the key drivers and market outlook.
Canada's main stock index closed lower as gold and silver prices fell, pausing a phenomenal yearly rally. The TSX still posted an 8th straight monthly gain and a 29% annual rise, its best since 2009. Read more.
Canada's TSX index surged 1% to a record high of 31,755.77, driven by tech and materials stocks. Investors bet on rate cuts and government stimulus to boost earnings. Read more.
Canada's main stock index retreated from a record high, closing down 0.5% at 31,311.41. However, strong jobs data showing 53,600 new positions in November boosted economic optimism. Read the full analysis.
Canada's S&P/TSX Composite index surged 1% to a record close of 31,477.57, driven by stronger-than-expected earnings from major banks like CIBC and TD. Read the full analysis.
Canada's TSX index reached a record high of 31,382.78, gaining 3.7% in November. Gold and silver prices surged, boosting materials stocks. Discover market insights and banking sector outlook.
Canada's TSX surged 0.9%, clawing back weekly losses as financial and tech stocks rallied on rising expectations of a December Fed rate cut. Discover the market movers.
Canada's main stock index dropped to 29,906.55, its lowest since November 6, as materials and technology sectors declined. Copper prices fell and Nvidia's earnings failed to reassure investors about AI spending returns.
Canada's main stock index recorded its steepest decline in seven months, falling 573.94 points as technology shares led broad-based selling. Discover what triggered the market correction.