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TSX gains over 1% as miners benefit from US-Iran Peace Deal Hopes

The main stock index of Canada edged up on Wednesday as mining stocks gained in value. Investors were encouraged by reports that the United States and Iran are close to an agreement over a one-page document ending their war.

At 10:38 am. The S&P/TSX Composite Index of the Toronto Stock Exchange was up 1.3% to 34,005.40 at 10:38 a.m. ET.

According to an Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson, quoted by Iran's ISNA News Agency, the country will soon communicate its response via Pakistan, the country that has been the main channel for messages between both sides since?hosting the only peace talks.

Gold prices rose over 3% after the news, and heavy-weight mining stocks gained 6.2%, their biggest gain in a single day since April 2025.

SSR Mining, American Gold and Silver?and IAMGOLD each gained 15.8%-17% and were amongst the top gainers in the index.

The energy index fell by 4.3% to cap gains as oil prices plunged to two-week-lows amid expectations that the Middle East, a key region for producing oil, could restart its supply.

Oil and gas companies' shares fell. Vermilion Energy dropped 10.4% following its first-quarter earnings, and Cenovus Energy declined 4.2%, despite a 83% increase in first-quarter profits, tagging along with a "slide" in oil prices.

The TSX benefited from the rise in oil prices when the Middle East war began. Today, however, the effect is opposite, according to Allan Small. Senior investment advisor at Allan Small 'Financial Group, iA Private Wealth.

The TSX may stay higher but gains could be capped due to oil?stocks."

The benchmark index is nearly 2% lower than its March 2,?peak. Geopolitical uncertainties and volatility in the energy and materials sector since the outbreak of war have tempered gains.

Eight out of eleven TSX sectors traded in the green.

Loblaw's earnings fell by 2.5% as the retailer missed Wall Street expectations for the first-quarter revenue. Consumers tightened their spending due to the macroeconomic uncertainty. (Reporting by Tharuniyaa Lakshmi in Bengaluru; Editing by Joyjeet Das)

(source: Reuters)