Vancouver Sun

Commoditie­s oust financials as Canadian heavyweigh­ts

- STEFANIE MAROTTA

Canada's resources sectors have overtaken financials as the heavyweigh­ts of its main equity index for the first time since August 2020 as oil and metal prices rally and global banks slump.

Energy and materials companies now constitute about 31.07 per cent of the S&P/TSX Composite Index, surpassing Canada's banks, insurers and asset managers, which have a 30.9 per cent weighting. Enbridge Inc., which has gained 18 per cent this year, has the third-biggest weighting on the benchmark, while Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. ranks in sixth place.

“It's good news for the TSX,” said Greg Taylor, chief investment officer at Purpose Investment­s. “The energy companies that survived the days of ESG are coming out with better balance sheets and as much better operators, and they're set up to do really well in this high commodity price environmen­t.”

Oil and metals stocks have been on a tear this year as investors sought haven assets with markets reeling from a tight oil market, economic growth uncertaint­y and a rising interest-rate environmen­t. That propelled the TSX to several record highs in March.

Bank stocks, on the other hand, have been held back for all the same reasons as the U.S. Federal Reserve, Bank of Canada and other central banks plan to aggressive­ly tighten monetary policy to temper surging inflation.

The S&P/TSX Energy Sector Index has rallied 34 per cent this year and the S&P/TSX Materials Index climbed 26 per cent, while financials have dropped 1.4 per cent. Financials erased their strong start to the year, with four of the Big Six banks turning negative this month. CI Financial Corp. is leading losses in the sector, tumbling 31 per cent.

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