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TSX Steadies After Bond Rout | Canadian Money Brief — May 19, 2026

  TSX Steadies After Bond Rout — But Iran Uncertainty Keeps a Lid on Gains Canadian equities attempt a cautious bounce this morning after last week's sharp sell-off. Oil near US$100 props up energy shares, while gold cools in Canadian-dollar terms and the loonie holds a fragile grip at 72–73 cents US. Canadian Money Brief  ·  moneysavings.ca  ·  May 19, 2026 TSX ~34,020 ▲ Recovering CAD/USD $0.727 → Flat WTI Oil ~US$100 ▲ Elevated Gold (CAD) ~$6,243/oz ▼ Pullback BoC Rate On Hold → Patient Overview Canadian markets opened cautiously higher this Tuesday after the S&P/TSX Composite suffered its worst single-session drop in weeks on Friday, closing at 33,833 — a decline of 1.27% — as a global bond-market selloff combined with stalled US–Iran negotiations hammered sentiment. Today's session opened around 34,027 , with the index trading in a tight range of roughly 33,745 to 34,175, suggesting investors are rebuilding positions but remain wary. The dominant story...

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Small Steps, Big Growth — How to Begin Investing with Limited Funds



Starting your investment journey doesn’t require thousands of dollars up front. In fact, with today’s tools and strategies, you can grow your wealth steadily even if you begin with a modest amount. The key is to focus on consistency, smart choices, and patience.

1. Start with What You Can Afford
You don’t need a huge lump sum. Even $20–$50 a month can get the ball rolling. The habit of investing regularly matters more than the amount when you’re starting out.

2. Use Low-Cost Platforms
Online brokerages and investing apps now allow you to buy fractional shares. This means you can own part of a stock like Apple or Tesla without paying for a whole share. Many platforms have no account minimums and low or zero trading fees.

3. Consider Index Funds or ETFs
Index funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) let you invest in a broad range of companies at once, spreading your risk. They’re known for low fees and reliable long-term performance compared to picking individual stocks.

4. Automate Your Investments
Set up automatic transfers from your bank account so investing becomes effortless. Over time, you’ll benefit from dollar-cost averaging—buying more shares when prices are low and fewer when prices are high.

5. Think Long-Term
Wealth building is a marathon, not a sprint. Reinvest your dividends, stay the course during market dips, and avoid impulsive decisions based on short-term news.


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