FINWIRES · TerminalLIVE
FINWIRES

TSX Closer: Index Back To Winning Ways as It Posts the Seventh Rise In Eight Sessions

-- The Toronto Stock Exchange returned to winning ways Friday, rising for the seventh session in the last eight, as investors seem to still see fundamental value in the broader market, even amid the noise created by continuing tariff disputes and lingering geopolitical tensions.

The resources-heavy S&P/TSX Composite Index closed up 218.05 points, or 0.65%, to 33,695.76. Ironically, perhaps, the index was led higher by Base Metals, up near 1.7%, and Energy, up 1.5%, even with commodity prices lower and with Rosenberg Research flagging a bearish bias on WTI Crude Oil possibly continuing into August and only a short-term relief rally in gold "within a still-developing medium-term downtrend".

BMO Capital Markets chief economist Douglas Porter, in his regular 'Talking Points' note, noted the Middle East conflict began nearly six weeks ago. He said "despite the wild swings in oil prices over that period, perhaps the big surprise is what little impact the war made on other financial markets." Porter noted the gold-heavy TSX was down about 2% from six weeks ago, but added "that's barely a ripple", given that bullion prices are down more than 9%, "shattering gold's reputation as a safe harbour".

On the economic front today, most focus here was on the release of employment data for March. But Derek Holt, Head of Capital Markets Economics at Scotiabank, published a note entitled 'Markets Rightly Ignored Canadian Jobs' after the data released early Friday showed Canada added 14,000 jobs, with "mixed details". Among highlights to his note, Holt noted "sickies and weather remained as drag factors" for the month, which "may point to later gains". Holt also noted wages "exploded" but with "two-sided interpretations" as Statistics Canada said wages were distorted by compositional shifts.

According to Holt, Bank of Canada watchers should continue to fade backward data. "Markets largely ignored Canadian jobs numbers as they should. They're backward looking and peering into the abyss where surging commodity prices in a commodity producing country dominate attention alongside the outlook for the US economy and trade policy," Holt said.

On commodities, this week's issue of 'Technicals with Dave' from Rosenberg Research focuses on commodities. Author Walter Murphy notes the 14-commodity S&P GSCI Equal Weight Select Index continued to post multi-year highs since the last Rosenberg Research commentary. But, he says, its weekly Coppock Curve is leading that for the S&P GSCI Commodity Index, and he adds it would "not be surprising to see it move into a confirmed downtrend either this week or next". As a result, Murphy says, last week's rally through 592-630 resistance could prove to be a "last gasp". That range is expected to provide initial support for a coming pullback. Additional support areas of note are the recent 566-551 gap and the 521 breakout point, he notes.

On WTI Crude Oil, Murphy notes in its March commentary, the research noted there was important resistance in the US$87.64 to US$95.03 per barrel range and that the weekly Coppock Curve had the potential to continue higher over the next four to five weeks. In the five weeks since then, he says, oil initially rallied above resistance intra-day but quickly settled back and has had a difficult time pulling away from resistance on a daily closing basis. "While we could easily make the case that oil decisively left that range behind late last week, Wednesday's reversal casts doubt on the decisive nature of the breakout," he adds.

Murphy says the Coppock indicator "still has some life left in it, but probably not much". His sense is that it could peak within the next two to four weeks and be in a confirmed downtrend by late May. "From there, it would not be a surprise to see the resulting bearish bias continue well into July, and potentially into August," he adds.

Murphy notes previous US$87.64 to US$95.03 per barrel resistance is now support. Below that, Rosenberg Research would look to the US$84 area and then the US$78.40 breakout point. He says there is a "decent amount of chart and Fibonacci resistance" in the US$113 to US$129 area on an "arithmetic chart". The US$129 level is the point where the current rally from December's low will be 61.8% of the 2020-2022 uptrend, he adds.

On gold, "what a difference a couple of weeks makes", says Murphy. He noted the early-March comment noted gold, which was then at US$5,149 per ounce, had been on a point-and-figure "buy" since September, but the weekly Coppock Curve was positioned to be in a confirmed downtrend by the end of that month. Murphy noted the resulting bearish bias could continue into June, and gold subsequently broke down below US$5,000 and continued to as low as US$4,098 before recovering. He says that decline generated a point-and-figure "sell;" the Coppock indicator has continued its downtrend.

Murphy adds: "The overbought and deteriorating Coppock Curve is still on pace to be weak into late May or early June. At the same time, the oversold and improving daily indicator could begin a topping process by the middle of this month. This combination is an indication that any further strength in the days immediately ahead will prove to be a short-term relief rally within a still-developing medium-term downtrend."

Murphy notes previous US$5,064 to US$4,700 per ounce support will likely act as strong resistance to the relief rally. Second resistance is on the order of US$5,419 to US$5,608.

He says gold's recent decline to US$4,098 per ounce was only a brief break of US$4,550 to US$4,275, adding that breach is not regarded as decisive, and US$4,550 to US$4,275 is still important support. "That said, a decline back through $4,098 would be a trigger for further weakness to the $3,885 area, and potentially beyond."

Of commodities today, West Texas Intermediate crude oil closed lower amid doubts over the state of the ceasefire between Iran and the United States as Israel continues its attacks on Lebanon and the Strait of Hormuz remains closed. WTI crude oil for May delivery closed down US$1.30 to settle at US$96.57 per barrel, while June Brent oil was down US$0.60 to US$95.32.

Gold futures had eased by midafternoon on Friday even as the dollar weakened after a report showed U.S. inflation surged in March on higher gasoline prices, cutting hopes for a cut to interest rates from the Federal Reserve. Gold for May delivery was down US$40.00 to US$4,778.00 an ounce.

Related Articles

Mining & Metals

Stifel Canada Previews Gildan Activewear's Q1

Stifel Canada is maintaining its first-quarter forecasts for Gildan Activewear (GIL.TO), which is scheduled to publish its fiscal first-quarter results on April 30th.Analyst Martin Landry is expecting earnings per share to fall 42% to $0.34, inline with consensus of $0.35. He is maintaining a buy rating and US$80.00 on the shares of the company.Landry noted that since Gildan introduced its 2026 guidance, several headwinds have emerged: cotton and polyester prices have risen significantly and may begin to weigh on Gildan's cost of goods sold in Q4/26. Energy and freight costs have also increased rapidly following outbreak of the war in Iran, creating further unexpected pressure on Gildan's cost structure."While we do not believe Gildan's 2026 financial guidance is at risk yet, it could come under pressure if elevated energy and commodity prices persist," he adds. However, Landry still sees value in Gildan's shares at current levels, which is down 9% in the last three months compared with the S&P/TSX Consumer Discretionary Index which is up 1.5% during the same period.Price: $83.19, Change: $+0.44, Percent Change: +0.53%

$GIL.TO
Oil & Energy

EMEA Oil Update: Crude Rises as Hormuz Attacks Overshadow Iran Ceasefire Extension

EMEA crude futures climbed in after-hours trading on Wednesday as Iran's seizure of two commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz, shortly after President Trump extended the ceasefire, reignited fears of a prolonged global energy supply disruption.Brent crude futures rose by 3.37% to $101.73 per barrel, while Murban oil futures were up 4.88% to $100.99/bbl.Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards said on Wednesday that their naval forces stopped two ships attempting to cross the Hormuz and directed them to Iranian territorial waters. MarineTraffic said the two vessels are both operated by MSC.The UK Maritime Trade Operations said that at least three vessels were targeted by gunfire in the Strait, as the Revolutionary Guards warned that any disruption to order and safety in the strategic waterway would be considered a "red line"."With supply losses effectively locked in for now, the market is set to face increasing strain if a resolution is delayed, and some caution that transit through the Strait may not fully return to normal," Saxo Bank strategists said in a note Wednesday.The attack by the Revolutionary Guard follows the extension of the US-Iran ceasefire, while Washington maintains a naval blockade of the Hormuz after planned talks between the two sides fell apart.On Tuesday, Trump said in a social media post that if the US lifted its blockade to open the Strait, "there can never be a deal with Iran, unless we blow up the rest of their country, their leaders included!""Iran doesn't want the Strait of Hormuz closed, they want it open so they can make $500 million dollars a day," Trump said in a post on Truth Social.Meanwhile, the US President said that a ceasefire would stay in effect until a "seriously fractured" Iranian leadership can come up with a unified proposal for a permanent resolution.Iranian officials have accused the US of breaching its commitments under a 10-point framework that Iran offered at the start of a fragile ceasefire, with Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi calling the US blockade of Iranian ports an "act of war".Soojin Kim, research analyst at MUFG, said despite the temporary pause in military escalation, peace talks have faltered, and tensions remain high as both sides continue to clash over shipping access and broader geopolitical issues.On the supply side, Russia will divert oil previously intended for Germany via the Druzhba pipeline from Kazakhstan to other routes starting from May 1, Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak reportedly said on Wednesday.The move came a day after Ukraine said it had completed repairs to the Druzhba oil pipeline and was ready to pump Russian oil to Europe.

Commodities

EMEA Natural Gas Update: Futures Rise on Hormuz Escalation, Reduced Norwegian Production

European natural gas futures climbed in after-hours trading on Wednesday following renewed geopolitical disruption in the Middle East after Iran seized vessels in the Strait of Hormuz, escalating tensions around a critical global energy chokepoint.Front-month Dutch TTF contracts rose 5.769% to 44.35 euros ($51.94) per megawatt hour, while UK NBP futures gained 4.642% to 110.00 British pence ($1.49) per therm.Prices were supported by heightened supply concerns as the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively constrained after more than seven weeks of disruption, removing an estimated 20% of global LNG flows from regular transit routes. Market sentiment was further pressured by continued instability, including reports that Iranian forces attacked three vessels in the Strait early Wednesday, with Iran's Revolutionary Guard confirming the seizure of two ships.Late Tuesday, US President Donald Trump announced an extension of the ceasefire framework with Iran, stating Washington would delay further military action to allow Tehran additional time to present a conflict resolution proposal. However, diplomats report little tangible progress in setting up negotiations.On the supply side, European storage levels stood at 30.61% of capacity on Wednesday, more than seven percentage points below year-ago levels, as the region enters the restocking season with structurally tighter inventories.Norwegian output, Europe's primary gas supply source, added further pressure. March production fell to 12.34 billion cubic feet per day, down 1.6% from February and 0.8% year-on-year, according to preliminary data from the Norwegian Offshore Directorate. Output came in 0.5% below forecast. It marked the second consecutive monthly decline on both a sequential and annual basis.Norway's total gas sales in March 2026 were 10.8 billion cubic meters, down 0.9 Bcm from the previous month.