Times Colonist

TSX lifted in broad rally led by energy, materials

- ROSS MAROWITS

TORONTO — A broad rally pushed Canada’s main stock index up more than 200 points as the energy and materials sectors gained on strong quarterly reports from key players.

Energy increased 3.9 per cent as natural gas prices hit their highest level since 2008. The materials sector, which includes mining, forestry and fertilizer companies, rose 2.3 per cent as gold prices moved higher.

Corporate results supported the gains as shares of MEG Energy Inc. and fertilizer producer Nutrien Ltd. increased 6.0 and 4.9 per cent, respective­ly in reaction to strong quarterly results. NuVista Energy Ltd. increased 7.4 per cent to lead a good day for Canadian producers.

MEG Energy says higher energy prices contribute­d to it earning a $362-million profit in its latest quarter as revenues surged 68 per cent. Nutrien reported a record $1.4 billion US in firstquart­er profits as the war in Ukraine drove up commodity prices and raised concerns about global food security.

The heavyweigh­t financials sector was up nearly one per cent with Canadian banks seeing their share prices climb.

The S&P/TSX composite index closed up 213.06 points to 20905.28.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average was up 67.29 points at 33128.79. The S&P 500 index was up 20.10 points at 4175.48, while the Nasdaq composite was up 27.74 points at 12563.76.

“With little in the way of any marketmovi­ng economic data, it would appear that investors are stepping in to buy the dip ahead of [today’s] highly anticipate­d Federal Reserve meeting, where officials are widely expected to raise interest rates by 50 basis points,” said Candice Bangsund, portfolio manager for Fiera Capital.

She said economical­ly sensitive sectors led Tuesday’s advance. They typically do well in an environmen­t of rising interest rates and accelerati­ng inflation, while growth sectors such as technology underperfo­rm.

This trend has resulted in the TSX outperform­ing the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq. Canada’s technology sector was up one per cent with Shopify Inc. up 2.4 per cent.

Bangsund said markets have largely priced in the hawkish move by the U.S. central bank, with some traders on the cusp of pricing in a 75 basis point move at the June meeting.

“If the Fed goes ahead and raises interest rates by 50 basis points, that will largely be in line with what was expected going into the meeting,” she said.

“As long as the Fed produces that 50-basis-point rate hike and a QT or a quantitati­ve tightening announceme­nt, I think that market response should be fairly muted.”

The June crude contract was down $2.76 US to $102.41 US per barrel, and the June natural gas contract was up

47.9 cents at $7.95 US per mmBTU after hitting a high of $8.17.

Bangsund said oil prices softened on worries about demand stemming from COVID-19 lockdowns in China that offset lingering supply concerns stemming from the Russia-Ukraine conflict that shows no end in sight.

“So I think the geopolitic­al conflict will ultimately place the floor under prices, though the focus is largely on the outlook for demand given the deteriorat­ing growth backdrop in China.”

The Canadian dollar traded for 77.84 cents US compared with

77.55 cents US on Monday.

The June gold contract was up $7.00 US at $1,870.60 US an ounce, and the July copper contract was up 1.5 cents at $4.28 US a pound.

Health care was one of four sectors that lagged. Industrial­s dipped even though Air Canada shares were up

3.7 per cent.

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