CANADA STOCKS-TSX kicks off 2026 with a gain as energy shares rise

Reuters01-03
CANADA STOCKS-TSX kicks off 2026 with a gain as energy shares rise

TSX ends up 0.5% at 31,883.37

Energy adds 1.8%

Shares of Denison Mines DML.TO jump 13.7%

Technology loses 1%

Updates at market close

By Avinash P and Fergal Smith

Jan 2 (Reuters) - Canada's main stock index began 2026 on a positive note on Friday despite downbeat domestic manufacturing data, as shares of uranium producers climbed.

The S&P/TSX Composite Index .GSPTSE ended up 170.61 points, or 0.5%, at 31,883.37, rebounding after declines in the previous four sessions.

For the week, the TSX was down 0.4%. It posted a 2025 gain of 28.25%, its biggest annual advance in 16 years, as surging gold prices, lower borrowing costs and optimism around technology companies offset headwinds for the domestic economy.

The Canadian manufacturing sector contracted for an 11th consecutive month in December, as trade uncertainty contributed to a steeper decline in output and new orders.

"As we think about global market drivers, AI will remain a dominant theme, but we see solid reasons why markets are going to broaden both within tech and beyond tech," said Angelo Kourkafas, senior global investment strategist at Edward Jones.

Technology .SPTTTK was one of just two major sectors to end lower, falling 1%.

The advancing sectors were led by energy .SPTTEN, which rose 1.8% even as the price of oil CLc1 settled 0.2% lower at $57.32 a barrel.

Shares of Denison Mines DML.TO jumped 13.7% after the uranium miner said it was ready to launch its flagship Phoenix ISR project. Energy Fuels UUUU.A shares were up 15.4%.

Industrials .GSPTTIN added 0.7%, heavily weighted financials .SPTTFS were up 0.6%, while the materials group .GSPTTMT, which includes metal-mining shares, ended 0.2% higher as gold XAU= prices rose.

Hundreds of miners began a strike on Friday at Capstone Copper's CS.TO Mantoverde copper and gold mine in northern Chile after talks between the main union and the company on new labor contracts broke down. Shares of Capstone were down 1.5%.

(Reporting by Avinash P in Bengaluru; Editing by Jonathan Ananda and Bill Berkrot)

((Avinash.P@thomsonreuters.com))

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