National Post

Financials lift TSX, U.S. stocks surge

- ROSS MAROWITS

TORONTO • Canada’s main stock index got a lift from the heavyweigh­t financials sector, while U. S. markets surged to their highest levels in more than two months on improving sentiment from economic reopenings.

That prompted a rotation by investors on Tuesday towards beaten up cyclicals and away from stocks that benefited from COVID-19, including technology and those that got a lift from the shift to working from home, said Sid Mokhtari, executive director of institutio­nal equity research at CIBC.

That rotation has benefited financials and energy while some of the value names in Canada also performed well.

“This is typically a good, healthy sign of a market that is trending,” he said.

Similar moves within the equity markets were seen off lows in 2016 and 2011.

Economic reopenings have led the shift in sentiment with markets pricing in the possibilit­y of additional infection flare-ups.

“This market, to some extent, is digesting all that,” said Mokhtari.

The S& P/ TSX composite index closed up 72.70 points at 15,148.12.

Financials gained nearly five per cent as shares of the country’s largest banks increased between 5.1 and 9.2 per cent.

The Bank of Nova Scotia rose 7.4 per cent as it was the first Canadian bank to report results this quarter. Although COVID-19 prompted a more than doubling of provisions for credit losses, its adjusted profit exceeded analyst forecasts.

Heading into the quarter, the banking sector wasn’t expected to perform well amid anticipate­d increases in provisions and very low interest rates.

The sector has lagged and is among the TSX’S “weakest links,” said Mokhtari, but a lot of the bad news has already driven down bank share prices.

Consumer discretion­ary was helped by an 11 per cent increase from BRP Inc., while energy gained 1.3 per cent with Vermilion Energy Inc. up 8.3 per cent.

The July crude contract was up US$1.10 at US$34.35 per barrel and the July natural gas contract was up 6.4 cents at US$1.945 per mmbTU.

The Canadian dollar traded for US72.44 cents compared with US71.51 cents on Monday.

The June gold contract was down US$ 29.90 at US$ 1,705.60 an ounce and the July copper contract was up 3.2 cents at nearly US$2.42 a pound.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average was up 529.95 points, or 2.2 per cent, at 24,995.11 as trading resumed following the Memorial Day holiday.

The S& P 500 index was up 36.32 points at 2,991.77. Meanwhile, the Nasdaq composite was up 15.63 points at 9,340.22.

 ?? DARREN CALABRESE / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Financials gained nearly five per cent on the TSX on Tuesday as shares of the country’s
largest banks increased between 5.1 and 9.2 per cent.
DARREN CALABRESE / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Financials gained nearly five per cent on the TSX on Tuesday as shares of the country’s largest banks increased between 5.1 and 9.2 per cent.

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