Oil-share bounce helps TSX edge higher ahead of Fed
After being beaten down for months, energy shares rose, shrugging off rising crude inventories that renewed worries about a global supply glut and sent the price of US crude to a six-year low on Tuesday.
Market focus was on a two-day Federal Open Market Committee meeting as investors hoped that a Fed statement on Wednesday would provide clarification on when it might start raising interest rates.
"The market is a little undecided. You can see that the market is really split on what's going to happen tomorrow," said Marcus Xu, portfolio manager and president at M.Y. Capital Management Corp in Vancouver.
"The market will swing back and forth until there is clarity from the Fed," he added.
The Toronto Stock Exchange's S&P/TSX composite index closed up 35.77 points, or 0.24 percent, at 14,898.53. Five of the 10 main sectors on the index were higher.
The energy sector climbed 0.9 percent. Canadian Natural Resources Ltd advanced 1.4 percent at C\\$37.62, and Enbridge Inc rose 2.9 percent to C\\$61.31.
Financials, the index's most heavily weighted sector, slipped. Bank of Montreal lost 0.8 percent to C\\$76.25, and Bank of Nova Scotia slipped 0.7 percent to C\\$63.33.
Bombardier Inc's stock ended little changed, giving up early gains following news that a new privately held Malaysian airline intends to buy 20 Bombardier CS100 aircraft for \\$1.5 billion.
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