Stock Markets June 22, 2026 04:30 PM

Canadian equities close higher as materials, clean tech and energy lead gains

S&P/TSX Composite edges up 0.42% as select miners and industrials post strong moves; volatility and commodity prices diverge

By Sofia Navarro
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AGI

Canada's benchmark S&P/TSX Composite finished the Monday session up 0.42%, driven by advances in the Materials, Clean Technology and Energy sectors. Alamos Gold, Atkinsrealis Group and DPM Metals ranked among the top performers, while 5N Plus, Parex Resources and MDA Ltd recorded the largest declines. Trading breadth was negative as decliners outnumbered advancers, and market-implied volatility ticked higher.

Canadian equities close higher as materials, clean tech and energy lead gains
AGI
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Key Points

  • S&P/TSX Composite closed up 0.42%, led by Materials, Clean Technology and Energy.
  • Top gainers were AGI (+7.87% to 45.22), ATRL (+6.11% to 92.09) and DPM (+4.85% to 47.60); top decliners were VNP (-5.38% to 41.52), PXT (-5.24% to 24.78) and MDA (-5.23% to 56.02).
  • Decliners outnumbered advancers 532 to 448, with the S&P/TSX 60 VIX rising to 14.89.

Canadian equities closed modestly higher on Monday, with the S&P/TSX Composite rising 0.42% at the Toronto close. Gains were concentrated in the Materials, Clean Technology and Energy sectors, which helped offset weakness elsewhere.

The session's strongest individual performers on the S&PTSX Composite included Alamos Gold Inc (TSX:AGI), which climbed 7.87% - a 3.30-point gain that brought the stock to 45.22 at the close. Atkinsrealis Group Inc (TSX:ATRL) added 6.11%, or 5.30 points, finishing at 92.09. DPM Metals Inc (TSX:DPM) also posted a solid advance, up 4.85%, or 2.20 points, to 47.60 in late trading.

On the downside, 5N Plus Inc. (TSX:VNP) led decliners, slipping 5.38% or 2.36 points to close at 41.52. Parex Resources Inc (TSX:PXT) fell 5.24%, a 1.37-point drop to 24.78, and MDA Ltd (TSX:MDA) decreased 5.23% or 3.09 points to finish at 56.02.

Market breadth on the Toronto Stock Exchange favored decliners: 532 stocks fell versus 448 that advanced, while 66 issues ended unchanged. The S&P/TSX 60 VIX, which measures the implied volatility of options on the S&P/TSX Composite, rose 1.15% to 14.89, indicating a modest uptick in option-implied volatility.

Commodities showed mixed moves. Gold Futures for August delivery declined 0.88%, a drop of 37.56 to $4,208.34 a troy ounce. Crude oil for August delivery fell 2.40% or 1.82 to $74.03 a barrel, while the September Brent contract was down 3.01% or 2.41 to trade at $77.64 a barrel.

In foreign exchange, the Canadian dollar was effectively flat versus major peers. CAD/USD was unchanged, moving 0.07% to 0.71, and CAD/EUR was unchanged at 0.62, a 0.30% change as reported.

Elsewhere, the US Dollar Index Futures was up 0.17% at 100.79. Intraday ticker-level performance and selected index moves were reflected across the market, highlighting a session where sector leadership was uneven but sufficient to push the benchmark modestly higher.


Key points

  • Benchmark performance - The S&P/TSX Composite rose 0.42% at the close in Toronto.
  • Top and bottom movers - Alamos Gold (AGI), Atkinsrealis (ATRL) and DPM Metals (DPM) were the session's best performers; 5N Plus (VNP), Parex Resources (PXT) and MDA (MDA) were the weakest.
  • Market breadth and volatility - Decliners outnumbered advancers 532 to 448, with 66 unchanged, and the S&P/TSX 60 VIX increased to 14.89.

Risks and uncertainties

  • Market breadth skew - With more stocks falling than rising, broader market participation was limited despite the headline gain, which could signal uneven sector momentum, particularly outside Materials, Clean Technology and Energy.
  • Commodity volatility - Declines in benchmark crude contracts and gold futures may affect energy and materials-linked issuers and could introduce earnings or cash-flow risks for commodity-sensitive companies.
  • Elevated implied volatility - The uptick in the S&P/TSX 60 VIX suggests option markets are pricing slightly higher short-term uncertainty, which can influence hedging costs for institutional portfolios.

This report summarizes market moves and sector-level drivers based on closing prices and intraday data. No forward-looking claims or additional projections are made beyond the figures and outcomes reported at the close.

Risks

  • Market breadth skew could indicate uneven leadership beyond Materials, Clean Technology and Energy, potentially limiting a broader rally.
  • Falling crude and gold futures prices may pressure earnings and cash flows for energy and materials companies.
  • Higher implied volatility (VIX at 14.89) could raise hedging costs and reflect increased short-term market uncertainty.

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