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TSX gains as investors evaluate tariff concerns

Investors are waiting for updates on trade and tariffs. The main Canadian stock index rose on Wednesday.

After two consecutive days of decline, the S&P/TSX Index in Toronto rose 0.1% to 26,938.86 after a fall.

The U.S. president Donald Trump announced on Tuesday steep tariffs on copper and threatened to impose levies against semiconductors and pharmaceuticals. This is a further extension of the trade war which has affected markets around the world.

Trump has also extended the deadline for tariff agreements to August 1.

Canadian government data revealed that Canadian firms have increased trade with allies including smaller markets in an effort to minimize the economic damage caused by U.S. Tariffs.

Colin White, CEO of Verecan Capital Management and Portfolio Manager, said that the announcements about trade negotiations would continue to "cause movement in the market on a short-term basis."

The information we'll receive this month about jobs will give us a good idea of what to expect in the coming months.

Investors will be closely examining key Canadian job data due Friday to see how the economy is faring under tariff pressures.

Healthcare shares gained 0.7%, while technology shares rose by 0.4%.

H&R rose 4.7%, while real estate stocks gained 0.5%. The Globe and Mail reported asset manager Blackstone and U.S. Equity funds were in discussions to buy H&R's assets.

Energy shares dropped 0.4% while mining shares remained flat.

Copper prices dipped. Copper prices fell.

EQB rose by 1.6% following the announcement that former finance director Chadwick W. Westlake would return as CEO. He had left the company just months earlier to become chief financial officer of software company OpenText. OpenText shares fell by 4.8%. Reporting by Twesha dikshit in Bengaluru and Sukriti gupta; editing by Shreya biswas

(source: Reuters)