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TSX Opens Higher as Mining Gains Offset Energy Losses

March 10 (Reuters) - Canada's main stock index edged higher on Tuesday, after U.S. President Donald Trump's hints that the Middle East conflict could end ​soon sent gold prices and mining shares up even as ‌plunging crude oil rates weighed the energy sector down.

At 11:03 a.m. ET, the S&P/TSX Composite Index was up 0.85% at 33,473.03 points, with four of the 10 major ​sectors in the green.

TSX's materials index, which includes precious metal miners, ​jumped 1.6% supported by elevated gold prices and was set ⁠for its best day in more than a week.

Spot gold was ​up around 1.4%.

Energy stocks, meanwhile, were down 0.2%, pressured by a nearly 10% ​drop in oil prices.

While Trump said on Monday that the conflict could end sooner than his earlier four- to five-week timeline, U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and top general ​Dan Caine said on Tuesday that U.S. strikes on Iran were ​intensifying.

Analysts at BofA Global Research said in a note they now expect the Bank of ‌Canada ⁠to hold rates at 2.25% through 2026, scrapping their earlier call for two 25-basis-point cuts this year.

The surge in oil prices linked to the Iran conflict could lift both growth and inflation, leaving policymakers with little room ​to ease rates, ​they said.

"While we ⁠do not expect rate hikes given anchored expectations and weak growth, the bar for cuts has risen meaningfully."

Meanwhile, ​in other notable moves, the technology index fell 2.4%, dragged ​down ⁠by a near 5% fall in supply chain technology provider Descartes Systems Group.

The industrials sector fell 1.5%, with Thomson Reuters declining 6.5%.

Air Canada was down 2% ⁠after ​Scotiabank downgraded the stock to "sector perform" from "sector outperform".

Canadian ​investment firm Fairfax Financial rose 2% after agreeing to a $1.91 billion sale of part of its ​stake in Poseidon Corp.

Reporting by Rashika Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Jonathan Ananda

Source: Reuters


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