Penticton Herald

TSX posts biggest gain in 2 months

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TORONTO — Canada’s main stock market posted its largest daily gain in more than two months on Tuesday as trade optimism produced a relief rally.

There is anecdotal evidence from the United States and Canada that they are closer to some sort of deal even though there is no concrete evidence, said Sid Mokhtari with CIBC Capital Markets.

“The market does have some element of optimism for maybe the U.S. is going to have cooler heads and be able to come to some sort of resolution with Canada in particular, some sort of a NAFTA deal,” he said in an interview.

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland travelled to Washington to resume efforts to forge a new version of the continenta­l trade pact.

Mokhtari figures the TSX could gain three to five per cent if a deal is reached.

The two sides are approachin­g a deadline this week to have a deal signed by the Mexican president before he leaves office. There are some signals from Canada, however, that a deal may take longer, which prompted a congressio­nal ally of U.S. President Donald Trump to suggest that Canada was dragging out the talks for its own political purposes.

The S&P/TSX composite index closed up 113.73 points to 16,196.04, the largest daily gain since July 12. The index reached a high of 16,198.67 on 228.9 million shares traded.

All sectors but consumer discretion­ary, utilities and real estate closed up. Health care led, rising 6.1 per cent, primarily due to gains from cannabis company stocks including Aurora Cannabis Inc., Aphria Inc. and Canopy Growth Corp.

The important energy sector rose 2.6 per cent as the November crude contract was up 91 cents to US$69.59 per barrel, its highest level in two weeks.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average was up 184.84 points to 26,246.96. The S&P 500 index was up 15.51 points to 2,904.31, while the Nasdaq composite was up 60.35 points at 7,956.11.

Investors appeared unfazed by China’s move to increase tariffs on US$60 billion worth of U.S. goods, in retaliatio­n to the U.S. saying it will impose tariffs on an additional US$200 billion of Chinese goods starting next Monday.

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