Canada Stock Market After the Bell: TSX Closes Near Record as BoC Holds Rates and Fed Cuts – December 10, 2025

Canada Stock Market After the Bell: TSX Closes Near Record as BoC Holds Rates and Fed Cuts – December 10, 2025

Canada’s stock market ended Wednesday’s session slightly higher, with the S&P/TSX Composite Index closing just below its recent all‑time high as investors digested a Bank of Canada rate hold and a fresh rate cut from the U.S. Federal Reserve.

Based on exchange and index data, the TSX finished around 31,312 points, up roughly 0.2% from Tuesday’s close near 31,244, leaving the benchmark less than 1% below record territory set earlier this month. [1] Financials and base‑metal miners led the advance, while energy and retail names lagged, in a session dominated by central‑bank headlines and volatile commodity prices. [2]


TSX Close: Modest Gain, Still Near Record Highs

After oscillating within a tight range through most of the day, the S&P/TSX Composite settled in the low 31,000s, adding about 0.2% on the session. That move builds on Tuesday’s 0.24% gain and underscores how Canadian equities have largely held on to strong year‑to‑date returns despite recent bouts of profit‑taking. TechStock²+1

Trading data from global index providers suggests the TSX is up a little over 20% year‑on‑year, with a record high just above 31,540 set in early December. TechStock² Recent history has featured a string of record closes, fuelled by:

  • Resilient bank earnings
  • A rebound in technology names, including Shopify
  • Ongoing strength in energy and materials

Today’s session fit that pattern: a calm grind higher rather than a breakout, as investors weighed how far the 2025 rally can reasonably stretch into 2026.


Central Banks in Focus: BoC Holds at 2.25% While Fed Cuts Again

Bank of Canada: Final Hold of 2025

In the morning, the Bank of Canada (BoC) confirmed it is holding its policy rate at 2.25%, in its final interest‑rate decision of 2025. [3]

Key points from the BoC and associated coverage:

  • The Bank described the current rate as “about the right level” to keep inflation near the 2% target while the economy adjusts to shifting trade patterns. [4]
  • Headline inflation is hovering around 2–2.2%, while core inflation remains closer to 2.5%. TechStock²
  • Third‑quarter GDP growth has been stronger than expected, helped by trade swings and government spending, even as domestic demand looks softer. [5]

Economists now widely expect the policy rate to remain at 2.25% well into 2026, unless there is a significant downside surprise in growth or renewed inflation pressure. [6]

U.S. Federal Reserve: A Cut South of the Border

Later in the afternoon, the U.S. Federal Reserve cut its key rate by 25 basis points, moving it to a range of 3.5%–3.75% and signalling that further hikes are unlikely in the near term. [7]

U.S. markets responded with a broad rally, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 and Nasdaq all trading sharply higher into the close and the S&P 500 on pace for a new record finish. [8]

For Canadian investors, the combination of a steady BoC and a cutting Fed has several implications:

  1. Narrower rate differentials between Canada and the U.S., which can support the Canadian dollar.
  2. A generally friendlier global liquidity backdrop, which tends to favour equities and real assets over time.
  3. Potential sector rotations within the TSX as investors rebalance for a lower‑for‑longer global rate environment.

Sector Breakdown: Financials and Miners Up, Energy and Retail Under Pressure

Intraday and sector‑level data point to a familiar pattern on the TSX:

Financials: The Day’s Workhorse

Reports from Canadian Press, Morningstar, and others highlighted financials as one of the strongest groups on the day. [9]

  • Major banks and insurers generally traded higher, supported by the BoC’s predictable policy stance and a stable yield curve.
  • VersaBank drew attention after reporting higher Q4 adjusted earnings and revenue; commentary noted pre‑market gains of around 2%, adding to a constructive tone for smaller financials. [10]

A steady policy rate and improving economic backdrop give investors more confidence in credit quality and earnings visibility, even if net interest margins are no longer expanding rapidly.

Materials and Base Metals: Cyclical Tailwind

Coverage from Canadian Press and specialty mining outlets pointed to base‑metal miners and select precious‑metal producers as another source of support for the TSX. [11]

  • Industrial‑metal names benefited from hopes that global growth can withstand trade and tariff headwinds.
  • Precious‑metal miners remain underpinned by elevated gold and silver prices, even after small pullbacks. Gold is still trading above US$4,200 per ounce, only slightly lower on the day. [12]

Energy: Oil Prices Cap the Upside

Energy was one of the main drags on the TSX:

  • Canadian Press mid‑session data showed January crude oil down around US$57.78 per barrel, weighing on oil‑sands and conventional producers. [13]
  • By later in the afternoon, benchmark WTI crude was closer to US$58.5, up modestly on the day but still well below levels seen earlier this year, reinforcing a cautious tone in the sector. [14]

Investors continue to balance ample supply and geopolitical risks against expectations for stronger global growth in 2026.

Retail and Consumer Names: North West Company in the Spotlight

The consumer space was under pressure, with The North West Company singled out as a notable decliner:

  • Dow Jones and Morningstar reporting noted that North West shares dropped roughly 4–5% after the company’s latest results showed softer Canadian sales, despite decent performance in northern and international operations. [15]

That slide weighed on the broader consumer‑staples and retail complex, reinforcing the idea that Canadian households remain cautious even as the macro data improve.


Loonie, Commodities and Macro Backdrop

Canadian Dollar: Slightly Stronger, Still Range‑Bound

The Canadian dollar firmed slightly following the BoC’s announcement:

  • Canadian Press pegged the loonie a touch above 72 U.S. cents in late‑morning trading, barely changed from Tuesday. [16]
  • The Bank of Canada’s own data show the policy rate table locked at 2.25%, implying reduced immediate volatility in rate‑differential trades. [17]

A mildly stronger but still range‑bound loonie is usually supportive for imported inflation and domestic purchasing power, though it can slightly trim translated earnings for exporters.

Oil and Gold: Mixed Signals for a Resource‑Heavy Index

  • Crude oil hovered in the high‑US$50s, with CFD prices around US$58.5, only marginally higher than Tuesday but still well below mid‑year levels. [18]
  • Gold ended the day just above US$4,200 per ounce, down roughly 0.3% from the previous session but still close to record territory. [19]

For the TSX, this mix means limited near‑term upside from energy, but continued support from precious‑metal producers, especially silver‑heavy names that have outperformed in recent weeks.

Fresh Macro Data: Canada’s External Balance

On the macro front, Statistics Canada reported that Canada’s net international investment position stood at about $1.93 trillion in Q3 2025, underscoring the country’s status as a net international creditor. [20]

That strong external balance provides some cushion against global volatility and is often cited by strategists as a structural support for Canadian assets.


Corporate and Deal News Moving TSX and TSXV Names

Beyond macro and sector themes, several stock‑specific headlines hit the tape on December 10:

  • TenX Protocols listing on TSX Venture
    • Crypto‑infrastructure firm TenX Protocols began trading on the TSX Venture Exchange under the ticker TNX, after raising roughly C$29.9 million this year. The company plans to use proceeds to buy and stake tokens across networks such as Solana and Sui. [21]
  • Nano One Materials financing
    • Nano One closed a C$6.96 million overnight marketed offering, issuing nearly 5 million units at C$1.40. The funds will support battery‑materials commercialization and general corporate purposes. [22]
  • Quorum Information Technologies arrangement
    • Quorum Information Technologies announced the closing of its previously approved arrangement and reiterated plans to delist from the TSX Venture Exchange in connection with the transaction. [23]
  • Kruger Products financing via KP Tissue
    • Kruger Products, via KP Tissue Inc. (TSX: KPT), closed a senior unsecured notes financing, another example of Canadian issuers locking in funding with policy rates expected to stay near 2.25% for some time. [24]
  • VersaBank dividend and earnings momentum
    • In addition to stronger Q4 results, VersaBank declared a cash dividend for early 2026, underscoring management’s confidence in earnings power in a low‑rate environment. [25]

On the junior side, metals explorers such as Metals Creek Resources continued to raise capital via private placements, with filings submitted to the TSX Venture Exchange for final approval. [26]


Strategy Desk: How Analysts See the TSX Heading into 2026

Although today’s move was relatively modest, strategists’ notes released in recent days help frame how professionals view the 2026 outlook for Canadian equities:

  • A new Morningstar economic piece argues that with the BoC now likely at the end of its cutting cycle, Canada enters 2026 with an “optimistic” backdrop, benefitting from resilient growth, a cooling but still healthy labour market, and inflation near target. [27]
  • AGF Investments’ 2026 outlook suggests that multiple tailwinds — including rate stability, robust commodity demand and relatively attractive valuations — should allow the S&P/TSX Composite to deliver another positive year in 2026, even if returns are more muted than in 2025. [28]
  • A separate PDF outlook from IG Wealth Management highlights the TSX’s solid earnings trajectory and frames recent volatility as a normal pause within a longer‑term uptrend, contingent on global growth staying on track. [29]

The consensus across many desks:

Canada’s market may not repeat 2025’s breakneck gains, but a constructive macro backdrop and strong balance sheets give the TSX room for more upside in 2026.

At the same time, strategists warn that high starting valuations in certain growth pockets, lingering trade tensions, and the possibility of policy missteps by major central banks could trigger sharper pullbacks along the way.


What to Watch Next

Looking beyond today’s close, Canadian investors will be watching:

  • BoC follow‑up commentary and speeches over the coming days, to see whether policymakers lean more hawkish or dovish after digesting fresh data. [30]
  • The Federal Reserve’s updated projections and press conference details, particularly any hints on the pace of further cuts in 2026. [31]
  • Upcoming Canadian releases, including inflation, jobs and retail sales, which will either validate or challenge the view that the economy can handle higher real rates.
  • Ongoing corporate news from TSX and TSXV issuers, especially in energy, mining, financials and technology, the sectors with the biggest leverage to both global growth and domestic policy.

For now, though, Bay Street ends December 10 with the TSX parked just below record highs, supported by banks and miners, cooled by energy and retail weakness, and framed by a central‑bank story that looks increasingly stable heading into the new year.


This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Always do your own research or consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.

References

1. tradingeconomics.com, 2. halifax.citynews.ca, 3. www.bankofcanada.ca, 4. www.kelownanow.com, 5. www.kelownanow.com, 6. global.morningstar.com, 7. www.investopedia.com, 8. www.investopedia.com, 9. halifax.citynews.ca, 10. www.marketscreener.com, 11. halifax.citynews.ca, 12. tradingeconomics.com, 13. halifax.citynews.ca, 14. tradingeconomics.com, 15. www.morningstar.com, 16. halifax.citynews.ca, 17. www.bankofcanada.ca, 18. tradingeconomics.com, 19. tradingeconomics.com, 20. www150.statcan.gc.ca, 21. www.coindesk.com, 22. www.morningstar.com, 23. www.globenewswire.com, 24. www.globenewswire.com, 25. www.marketscreener.com, 26. www.stocktitan.net, 27. global.morningstar.com, 28. www.agf.com, 29. www.ig.ca, 30. www.bankofcanada.ca, 31. www.investopedia.com

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