×

TSX futures edge up as gold gains counter sharp pullback in oil prices

By Thomson Reuters Mar 10, 2026 | 5:03 AM

March 10 (Reuters) – Canadian stock index futures edged higher on Tuesday, as a rally in gold cushioned the falling oil prices after President Trump ​suggested the Middle East war may soon wind ‌down, keeping investors wary in the resource-heavy market.

March futures on S&P/TSX composite index gained 0.4%, as of 5:57 a.m. ET.

U.S. stock futures edged up Tuesday as hopes for a quicker Middle ‌East ​conflict resolution eased energy-driven inflation fears.

Toronto’s ⁠benchmark index closed higher ⁠yesterday after briefly hitting its lowest intraday level since February 6.

Trump said on Monday the conflict with Iran could end soon, leading to crude prices falling ​below $100 after jumping as high as $119 a day earlier.

Oil remains volatile, with crude slumping as much as ⁠11% in the day after ⁠over 20% gains on Monday, filtering through ​Canada’s commodity-heavy market.

G7 nations said on Monday that they’re ready ​to take “necessary measures” to curb surging oil prices ‌but avoided committing to an emergency reserves release.

Spot gold was trading marginally up at $5,182.85 per ounce, as of 0954 GMT. U.S. gold futures for April delivery rose 1.9% ⁠to $5,199.70.

Traders will be watching U.S. inflation data and Canada’s jobs report due later this week for signals on the monetary ⁠policy outlook.

The ‌timing comes as the Bank of Canada ⁠faces mounting geopolitical and supply‑side risks ahead ​of ‌its March 18 policy decision.

Scotiabank downgraded Air ​Canada to “sector ⁠perform” from “sector outperform” and cut its target price to C$21 from C$27.

FOR CANADIAN MARKETS NEWS, CLICK ON CODES:

TSX market report [.TO]

Canadian dollar and bonds report [CAD/] [CA/]

Reuters global stocks poll for Canada

Canadian markets directory

(Reporting by Rashika Singh in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Vijay Kishore)