(Recasts with fresh quotes, analyst comments)
By Nikhil Sharma and Promit Mukherjee
Nov 18 (Reuters) - Canada's main stock index rose on
Monday, boosted by mining and energy companies that gained on
the back of higher gold and oil prices respectively.
The S&P/TSX composite index .GSPTSE closed up 74.51
points, or 0.3%, at 24,965.19.
Gold prices rose sharply on Monday as investors looked for a
safe haven to park money after the Russia-Ukraine war escalated.
The stalled U.S. dollar, which has been rising for the past few
weeks, added to the bullion demand.
Spot gold XAU= jumped 1.84% to $2,608.57 per ounce,
helping basic materials or mining companies .GSPTTMT post an
increase of 2.32%. GOL/
"Gold is performing strongly, and with the Canadian economy
being heavily resource-driven, it's providing a boost to the TSX
today," said Shiraz Ahmed, senior portfolio manager and founder
of Sartorial Wealth at Raymond James.
The U.S. decision to authorize long-range Ukrainian strikes
into Russia pushed crude oil prices higher, with the Brent crude
price LCOc1 rising 3.15% to $73.28 per barrel.
The energy sector .SPTTEN , which accounts for over 17% of
the total composite-index weight, advanced by 0.8% due to higher
oil prices.
The TSX has risen almost 20% this year due to a raft of
factors such as expectations of lower interest rates,
geopolitical concerns and anticipation of the U.S. elections.
Many analysts see the valuations over-stretched and expect
the market to fall to a more reasonable level but see the timing
as uncertain.
"I don't know when it's going to happen but certainly we are
going to have a correction at some point," said Michael Sprung,
president at Sprung Investment Management.
The boost markets received from the anticipation of
interest-rate cuts is fading away, he said.
Canada will release consumer-price data on Tuesday and
economists expect the numbers could help determine the size of
the expected rate cut by the Bank of Canada next month.
Canadian housing starts rose 8% in October, compared with
the previous month, as groundbreaking increased on multi-unit
and single-family detached homes.
The Nasdaq and S&P 500 closed higher, recovering some
losses as investors anticipated quarterly earnings from AI
leader Nvidia NVDA.O , while Tesla TSLA.O jumped on the
prospect of favorable policy changes from the incoming U.S.
administration.
(Reporting by Nikhil Sharma in Bengaluru; Editing by Shreya
Biswas and Rod Nickel)
((Nikhil.Sharma@thomsonreuters.com;))