Canada’s main stock index rose to a one-week high on Thursday, helped by gains for the energy and materials sectors as well as a rebound in financials after positive earnings from some large domestic banks. The S&P 500 gained 58.35, or 1.4%, to 4,199.12 for its best day in nearly two weeks.
The Toronto Stock Exchange’s S&P/TSX composite index ended up 150.96 points, or 0.75%, at 20,172.34, its third straight day of gains and its highest closing level since Aug 18.
The index has rebounded 11% from its July trough.
“The TSX, it’s like a boxer that goes down and comes right back up,” said Barry Schwartz, portfolio manager at Baskin Financial Services.
“Just when you think commodity prices are going to roll over and the growth names of the Nasdaq and the S&P are going to dominate, the TSX says ‘no way buddy ... we’re still in charge’.”
Resource shares account for 29% of the TSX’s market capitalization, while the index has a much lower weighting in technology than major U.S. benchmark the S&P 500.
The materials group, which includes precious and base metals miners and fertilizer companies, added 1.1% as gold and copper prices rose. Energy ended 0.6% higher.
Toronto-Dominion Bank and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce posted better-than-expected third-quarter profits as lending grew strongly.
That helped lift the financials group by 0.9% after it was pressured earlier in the week by some disappointing bank earnings reports.
Investors awaited a speech on Friday by Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell for clues on how aggressive the central bank may need to be as it raises interest rates to battle inflation.
Both the Fed and the Bank of Canada are expected to tighten further in September.
“The real concern will be what happens with interest rates after September,” Schwartz said.
Much of the lift in U.S. stocks Thursday came late in the day as traders made moves ahead of Friday morning’s speech by Powell, which has long been circled on Wall Street’s calendar.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 322.55, or 1%, to 33,291.78, and the Nasdaq composite climbed 207.74, or 1.7%, to 12,639.27. All three indexes trimmed their losses for the week, caused by Monday’s tumble that was the worst for stocks in months.
Treasury yields eased to let off some of the pressure on Wall Street following the release of several reports on the economy. Fewer workers applied for U.S. jobless claims last week than expected, an encouraging sign for a jobs market that has been the main pillar for an economy struggling under high inflation.
A revised reading on the overall economy, meanwhile, suggested that its contraction during the spring wasn’t quite as bad as earlier thought. It shrank 0.6% on an annualized basis, according to the government’s second preliminary reading, milder than the 0.9% given in its initial estimate.
The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield, which affects mortgage rates, fell to 3.03% from 3.11% late Wednesday.
That helped stocks that tend to benefit the most from lower interest rates, such as internet and technology companies. Businesses whose profits closely track the strength of the economy, such as producers of raw materials, also helped to lead the market.
Telehealth services providers were strong after Amazon shut down its in-house telemedicine service for employees. Teladoc gained 4%.
On the losing end were several companies that trimmed their financial forecasts for the year. Software company Salesforce fell 3.4%, and discount retailer Dollar Tree fell 10.2%.
Several retailers have cut their outlooks recently, even after reporting stronger profit for the latest quarter than expected. They’re struggling with swelling inventories and higher costs, while their customers likewise get squeezed by inflation, particularly lower-income ones.
Wall Street’s focus, though, remains on Jackson Hole, Wyoming, where economists from around the world are gathering for an annual symposium.
It’s been the setting for market-defining announcements by the Federal Reserve in past years, and investors are hoping Powell will offer some clarity about where interest rates are heading.
The Fed has already raised rates four times this year in its efforts to halt high inflation, with most of them bigger than the usual hike, and investors want to hear how it’s leaning for future increases. Powell will begin speaking at 10 a.m. Eastern time Friday, a half hour after trading begins on Wall Street.
Besides what the Fed will do with its key overnight interest rate, Powell may also talk about how the central bank is putting into reverse the " money printer " it used during the pandemic to goose the economy.
Stocks had jumped through the summer on hopes the Fed may go easier on rate hikes than feared, because investors were seeing signs the nation’s high inflation may be peaking. The hope was that the Fed could downshift the size of its rate increases sooner than expected and may not ultimately raise them as far as earlier thought.
But recent comments from a spate of Fed officials have pushed back on that narrative, leading to the hopes for more clarity from Powell on Friday.
Expectations have built among some investors for Powell to sound “hawkish,” which is Wall Street’s euphemism for a bias toward raising rates aggressively. But some investors at the same time are speculating the Fed could turn around quickly and actually begin cutting interest rates in 2023 given mounting pressures on the economy.
“The market is looking for a consistent policy,” Andy Sparks, head of portfolio management research at MSCI, said in a statement. “Raising rates and then allowing the market to believe it may soon begin lowering rates could undermine Fed credibility with market participants.”
Higher interest rates slow the economy in hopes of undercutting inflation. But they also risk choking off the economy if done too aggressively, and they pull down on prices for all kinds of investments.
Reuters, The Associated Press
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