Markets

Market Update

Foreign Markets Update

TSX Sector Watch

Most Actives

New Listings – TSX

New Listings – TSX-Venture

Currencies

Triple-Digit Gains for TSX

Badger, Whitecap in Spotlight

Equities in Canada’s largest centre gained ground Monday, with resource stocks leading the way.

The TSX zoomed 107.96 points to close Monday to 19,474.65.

The Canadian dollar gained 0.31 cents Monday to 82.87 cents U.S.

Gold was the champion of the day, with Equinox Gold triumphing 88 cents, or 8.7%, to $10.97, while Iamgold picked up 29 cents, or 7.2%, to $4.34.

In other resource issues, Endeavour Silver charged ahead 79 cents, or 10.9%, to $8.02, while First Majestic Silver improved $1.51, or 7.8%, to $20.92.

In energy, Whitecap Resources ballooned 32 cents, or 5.7%, to $5.93, while Vermilion Energy gained 48 cents, or 5.1%, to $9.85.

Industrials cast the biggest pall on the market, with Badger Daylighting sliding $1.41, or 3.4%, to $40.30, while Canadian Pacific dumped $3.02, or 3.1%, to $93.99.

Tech issues also finished negative, with Hut 8 Mining descending 58 cents, or 10.4%, to $5.01, while Absolute Software down 75 cents, or 4.3%, to $16.90.

In communications, AcuityAd Holdings forked over 14 cents, or 1.3%, to $11.01, while Cogeco Communications weakened $1.32, or 1.1%, to $118.25.

On the economic calendar, Statistics Canada revealed Canadian investment in foreign securities totalled $21.2 billion in March, mainly from purchases of U.S. shares. Meanwhile, foreign investment in Canadian securities was $3.2 billion, mostly in acquisitions of Canadian shares.

Also, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation tells us that housing starts the trend in housing starts was 279,055 units in April, up from 272,164 units in March. This trend measure is a six-month moving average of the monthly seasonally adjusted annual rates of housing starts.

ON BAYSTREET

The TSX Venture Exchange gained 11.59 points, or 1.2%, to end Monday at 942.97.

Seven of the 12 subgroups were lower on the session, with industrials falling 0.7%, information technology down 0.4%, and communications slipping 0.3%.

The five gainers were led by gold, up 4.5%, materials, charging 3%, and energy, better by 2.8%.

ON WALLSTREET

Persistent weakness in technology stocks led the major indexes lower on Monday after last week’s hotter-than-expected inflation readings sparked a downturn in equity markets.

The Dow Jones Industrials came off its lows of the day, but still finished behind Friday’s finish by 54.34 points to 34,327.79,

The S&P 500 fell 10.56 points to 4,163.29, as the tech sector pulled back 0.7%

The NASDAQ slipped 50.93 points to 13,346.52.

Big Tech came under pressure to start the week, with Apple and Netflix each down 0.9%. Microsoft shed 1.2%, while Tesla dropped more than 2% as famed investor Michael Burry revealed a big short position on the electric carmaker.

Traders have punished the technology sector in recent weeks amid a broader shift out of growth stocks and into cyclical, reopening trades in energy, financials and materials.

Communication services stock Discovery bucked that trend, up big after AT&T announced Monday that it would merge WarnerMedia, which includes HBO, with Discovery. The new entity will trade as its own public company. Discovery’s Class B stock jumped nearly 14%, while AT&T ended the day slightly lower after hitting a record high earlier in the session.

Bitcoin was taken for a wild ride overnight Sunday. Earlier, the price tumbled below $43,000 after Elon Musk implied in a Twitter exchange that Tesla may have dumped its bitcoin holdings. Last week, Tesla said it would no longer accept bitcoin for car purchases due to environmental concerns.

Bitcoin then rebounded some after Musk later clarified in a tweet that the electric vehicle maker "has not sold any Bitcoin." The price was last at $45,505. Tesla stock lost 1.5%.

Elsewhere, the first-quarter earnings season is wrapping up with more than 90% of the S&P 500 companies having reported their results. So far, 86% of S&P 500 companies have reported a positive EPS surprise, which would mark the highest percentage of positive earnings surprises since 2008 when FactSet began tracking this metric.

Walmart, Home Depot and Macy’s will deliver earnings on Tuesday.

Prices for 10-Year Treasurys fell, raising yields to 1.65% from Friday’s 1.63%. Treasury prices and yields move in opposite directions.

Oil prices surged 97 cents to $66.34 U.S. a barrel.

Gold prices gained $28.20 to $1,886.30 U.S. an ounce.