Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Toronto Stock Market's Main Index Hits Record High, Buoyed By Bank, Energy Stocks

10 Feb, 2017 12:29 PM
    TORONTO — The Toronto Stock Exchange's main index soared to a new record high Friday, driven by strength in bank and energy stocks.
     
    At one point, the S&P/TSX composite index surged to 15,736.64 points, beating an intraday record high of 15,685.13 set on Sept. 3, 2014.
     
    In mid-afternoon trading, the benchmark index was up 110.46 points at 15,727.76.
     
    The growth was fuelled by the three largest sectors of the market — materials, financials and oil, said Allan Small, a senior adviser at Holliswealth.
     
    "You have all those three higher," he said. "Usually, it's a recipe for success at the Toronto stock market."
     
    The TSX's all-time closing high is 15,657.63, set on Sept. 3, 2014.
     
    The momentum in Toronto builds upon optimism in New York, where the major U.S. market indices continued to add gains after a trifecta of record highs Thursday.
     
    Shortly after 2 p.m. ET, the Dow Jones industrial average added 115.19 points at 20,287.59, the S&P 500 advanced 10.29 points at 2,318.16 and the Nasdaq composite index rose 24.62 points at 5,739.80.
     
    The rally comes after U.S. President Donald Trump promised on Thursday that he'd soon reveal a business-friendly tax plan that the markets have been waiting for since his Jan. 20 inauguration.
     
    The loonie, meanwhile, was at 76.36 cents US, up 0.25 of a U.S. cent.
     
    The March crude contract was up 86 cents at US$53.86 per barrel and the April gold contract fell US$3.90 at $1,232.90 an ounce.
     
    March natural gas was down 9.8 cents at US$3.04 per mmBtu and March copper contracts were up 11.7 cents to US$2.77 a pound.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Weather Warnings Issued As Snow Hits B.C.'s South Coast And Vancouver Island

    Weather Warnings Issued As Snow Hits B.C.'s South Coast And Vancouver Island
      Environment Canada issued a weather warning early Monday predicting up to five centimetres of snow for much of the Lower Mainland, as well as southeastern Vancouver Island.

    Weather Warnings Issued As Snow Hits B.C.'s South Coast And Vancouver Island

    'I Delivered Him Myself:' Mom Who Treated Son With Holistic Remedies Testifies

    'I Delivered Him Myself:' Mom Who Treated Son With Holistic Remedies Testifies
    CALGARY — A Calgary woman who treated her son with dandelion tea and oil of oregano before he died says she delivered the boy herself with an unregistered midwife.

    'I Delivered Him Myself:' Mom Who Treated Son With Holistic Remedies Testifies

    Solving The Legacy Of Indigenous Sexual Abuse: Think Globally, Act Nationally

    Solving The Legacy Of Indigenous Sexual Abuse: Think Globally, Act Nationally
    Fred Kejick Thomas remembers the exact day — April 14, 2005 — when he confronted the uncle who had sexually molested him out on a trap line when he was four years old.

    Solving The Legacy Of Indigenous Sexual Abuse: Think Globally, Act Nationally

    Montreal Man Kidnapped In Libya Happy To Be Home After Seven-Week Ordeal

    Montreal Man Kidnapped In Libya Happy To Be Home After Seven-Week Ordeal
    Lying on the ground, surrounded by armed gunmen, he thought, "OK, this is where they're going to kill us, something didn't go right," Poccia recalled.

    Montreal Man Kidnapped In Libya Happy To Be Home After Seven-Week Ordeal

    Four Life Sentences For Man Who Shot Two Former Co-workers, Injured Two Others

    Four Life Sentences For Man Who Shot Two Former Co-workers, Injured Two Others
    NANAIMO, B.C. — A man who fatally shot two former co-workers and injured two others at a sawmill in Nanaimo, B.C., has been handed four life sentences.

    Four Life Sentences For Man Who Shot Two Former Co-workers, Injured Two Others

    Cops Trying To Save Lives With CPR Or Naloxone Won't Be Investigated: Watchdog

    Cops Trying To Save Lives With CPR Or Naloxone Won't Be Investigated: Watchdog
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's police watchdog will no longer investigate police officers who have provided life-saving measures resulting in someone's death.

    Cops Trying To Save Lives With CPR Or Naloxone Won't Be Investigated: Watchdog