The Prince George Citizen

The markets today

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TORONTO (CP) — Canada’s main stock index set a new intraday record Monday and indices south of the border continued their streak as markets were buoyed by increasing investor confidence a U.S. tax bill would soon pass. The S&P/TSX composite index surged 89.66 points to 16,131.64 after spiking as high as 16,200.81 earlier in the session. It fell less than five points shy of breaking its all-time high of 16,136.59, reached just last week, on Dec. 13. In New York, three major indices finished the trading day with a second consecutiv­e day of record highs. The Dow Jones industrial average gained 140.46 points to 24,792.20 and the S&P 500 index rose 14.35 points to 2,690.16. The Nasdaq composite index advanced 58.18 points to 6,994.76. It briefly hovered above the 7,000-mark for the first time earlier in the day. “The real backbone for that, today, is again enthusiasm coming out of the United States that a tax reform bill... looks like it’s going to make it through Congress and potentiall­y get signed by the President later this week,” said Craig Fehr, a Canadian market strategist with Edward Jones in St. Louis. “(It) offers the hope for improving corporate fundamenta­ls,” he said. On Bay Street, the biggest gains came from the health care sector, where stocks gained an average of 3.81 per cent of their worth, though that was mostly a onestock story, said Fehr. Valeant Pharmaceut­icals Internatio­nal Inc. led not only the sector, but also the index. Shares jumped $1.89 or 7.44 per cent to $27.28.

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