Banks Boost TSX by Noon Hour

Aug 26, 2025 - 17:00
Banks Boost TSX by Noon Hour

Equities in Toronto rose on Tuesday, boosted by financial shares, as investors greeted strong results from Bank of Montreal.

The TSX Composite Index surged 70.51 points to pause for noon hour of Tuesday’s session at 28,240.45.

The Canadian dollar climbed 0.17 cents to 72.32 cents U.S.

Shares in the “First Canadian Bank” rocketed $5.39, or 3.4%, to $163.17, while those for Scotiabank grew $3.67, or 4.6%, to $83.20.

Canada has stepped up its pursuit to reach a potential deal with Washington, most recently being the removal of several retaliatory import tariffs on U.S. goods.

ON BAYSTREET

The TSX Venture Exchange re-stocked 5.24 points to 808.31.

Seven of the 12 TSX subgroups were in the plus column, as gold, industrial and financials each gathered 0.6%.

The five laggards were weighed most by health-care, ailing 0.9%, consumer staples, down 0.5%. and telecoms, off 0.4%.

ON WALLSTREET

U.S. stocks were relatively unchanged on Tuesday as Wall Street looked beyond President Donald Trump’s removal of Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook from the central bank’s board and awaited quarterly figures from chip giant Nvidia.

The Dow Jones Industrials sank 0.4 points to observe noon EDT at 45,282.07.

The S&P 500 eked ahead 8.41 points to 6,447.51.

The NASDAQ gained 57.02 points to 21,506.31.

Shares of the artificial intelligence chip darling were about 1% higher Tuesday, extending their meaningful gains seen in the prior two sessions.

Long-term Treasury yields rose after the Trump move, while short-term yields declined as investors steepened the yield curve on the notion rates may go lower in the short-term, but eventually go higher as a politicized Fed becomes less attentive to inflation.

Trump’s unprecedented move adds to the pressure the president has been putting on the central bank’s independence. By law, a president may only remove Fed governor “for cause.” As a result, it is possible the matter will be challenged in the courts.

There are currently six members on the Fed’s board, with one seat vacant after the resignation of Adriana Kugler earlier this month. Removing Cook would leave five members, with non-Trump appointees still holding a majority.

However, if Stephen Miran is cleared for the Kugler vacancy and the president is successful in removing Cook, it would give Trump a 4-3 majority.

If Fed Chair Jerome Powell leaves his seat voluntarily after his term expires in May, it would give the president a fifth vote.

Prices for 10-year Treasury regained lost ground Tuesday, lowering yields to 4.27% from Monday’s 4.28%. Treasury prices and yields move in opposite directions.

Oil prices docked $1.35 to $63.45 U.S. a barrel.

Gold prices hiked $17.60 at $3,435.10 U.S. an ounce.