Canada's equity benchmark finished in positive territory on Wednesday, with the S&P/TSX Composite registering a 0.16% gain to close at a one-month high in Toronto. Sector leadership came from information technology, healthcare and financials, which collectively helped lift the index.
Leading individual gainers on the TSX included Curaleaf Holdings Inc (TSX:CURA), which climbed 8.43% - an increase of 0.28 points - to finish at 3.60. Shopify Inc (TSX:SHOP) also posted a strong session, rising 8.12% or 13.16 points to settle at 175.19. Energy Fuels Inc. (TSX:EFR) was up 6.83%, an increase of 1.84 points, closing at 28.77 in late trade.
Not all names participated in the rally, and notable declines were sharp. BRP Inc (TSX:DOO) fell 35.37% or 38.21 points to close at 69.83. Linamar Corporation (TSX:LNR) declined 12.64% or 11.24 points to end at 77.67, while Orla Mining Ltd (TSX:OLA) lost 9.28% or 2.27 points to finish at 22.20.
Market breadth on the Toronto Stock Exchange was positive but closely contested: 508 stocks advanced versus 470 that fell, and 69 issues ended unchanged.
Volatility, as measured by the S&P/TSX 60 VIX, moved lower. The index slipped 5.17% to 16.33, marking a one-month low in implied volatility for S&P/TSX Composite options.
Commodities traded with mixed results. Gold futures for June delivery retreated 0.71%, a decline of 34.56, to $4,815.54 a troy ounce. West Texas Intermediate crude for May delivery fell 0.07% or 0.06 to $91.22 a barrel, while the June Brent contract inched up 0.14% or 0.13 to $94.92 a barrel.
Currency moves were modest. The Canadian dollar versus the U.S. dollar was recorded as unchanged 0.21% to 0.73, and the CAD/EUR rate was listed as unchanged 0.20% to 0.62. The U.S. Dollar Index Futures ticked down 0.03% to 97.88.
Overall, Wednesday's session produced a modest upward move for the TSX, accompanied by lower measured option volatility and a handful of pronounced single-stock moves across sectors.