TSX Flat Amid US-Iran Tensions and Rising Inflation
2026-04-20 14:15
By
Isabela Couto
1 min. read
The S&P/TSX Composite Index traded near flat around the 34,000 mark on Monday, as fears of a unraveling US Iran ceasefire and elevated inflation kept markets cautious.
The US seized an Iranian vessel, prompting Tehran to retaliate and reimpose its blockade on the Strait of Hormuz, with Iran ruling out further talks before the ceasefire expires April 21.
Oil prices surged on renewed shipping disruptions, reigniting stagflation concerns and pressuring banks’ outlook due to higher rates and weak credit demand.
Higher credit costs were also owed to the surge in the domestic inflation rate, which rose to 2.4% in March as the Middle East conflict lifted transportation costs.
Still, major banks such as TD and BMO held steady.
Gold miners fell as US Treasury yields rose, Agnico Eagle lost over 2.5%, and Barrick was down 2%.
Energy producers rebounded with global oil prices: Canadian Natural and Suncor each gained about 1%, Cenovus added nearly 2%.