Markets End Mixed as Rising Oil Prices Trigger Mild Pullback in Major Indexes
The Canadian Vanguard Stock Market Report Tuesday May 12, 2026 Edition
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The Toronto Market
Monday’s Toronto Market Index
The S&P/TSX Composite Index rose 151.85 points, or 0.44%, to close at 34,290.73 on Monday. The index has now advanced for three consecutive sessions. However, despite the gain, it closed well below Friday’s intraday highs, though it still managed to finish above Friday’s closing level.
Trading volume was lower than the previous session, while the index closed notably higher — a generally positive technical sign, as it suggests buying interest remained firm despite lighter activity.

Tuesday’s TSX Market Internals
On the S&P/TSX Composite Index, declining issues outnumbered advancing issues. There were 1,227 decliners and 921 advancers, resulting in a decliner-to-advancer ratio of 1.33-to-1 — or roughly four decliners for every three advancers. Meanwhile, 133 issues closed unchanged.
The exchange recorded 124 new 52-week highs and 38 new 52-week lows, compared with 348 new highs and 59 new lows in the previous session. The sharp drop in new highs suggests that market momentum weakened considerably from yesterday’s strong breadth reading.
Total trading volume on the TSX reached 488,824,732 shares, down 4% from the 507,067,474 shares traded yesterday. While today’s activity was close to the 50-day average daily volume, it remained below the prior session’s level.
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The US Markets
Tuesday’s U.S. Market Indexes
Monday’s session produced a mixed performance across the major U.S. equity indexes. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 56.09 points, or 0.11%, to close at 49,760.56. In contrast, the S&P 500 declined 11.88 points, or 0.16%, ending the session at 7,400.96, while the Nasdaq Composite fell 185.92 points, or 0.71%, to finish at 26,088.20.
Small-cap stocks experienced even heavier selling pressure, with the Russell 2000 Index dropping 27.81 points, or 0.97%, to close at 2,842.83.
The widening performance gap between large-cap and smaller-cap stocks appears to be re-emerging. The Dow, which is heavily weighted toward large-cap blue-chip companies, advanced for a third consecutive session and was the strongest-performing major index of the day. Meanwhile, small-cap stocks struggled significantly, with the Russell 2000 notably underperforming the broader market.

Tuesday’s U.S. Market Statistics
On the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), declining issues outnumbered advancing issues by a wide margin. There were 2,825 decliners, 1,576 advancers, and 385 unchanged issues, resulting in a decliner-to-advancer ratio of 1.79-to-1 — or roughly two declining stocks for every advancing stock.
The exchange recorded 199 new 52-week highs and 125 new 52-week lows, compared with 567 new highs and 144 new lows in the previous session. The sharp decline in new highs points to weakening upside momentum across the broader market.
Total NYSE trading volume reached 5,755,745,713 shares, down 4% from the 5,987,068,528 shares traded yesterday.
On the NASDAQ, market breadth was also negative, with declining stocks nearly doubling advancing stocks. The exchange reported 3,193 decliners and 1,623 advancers, producing a decliner-to-advancer ratio of 1.96-to-1, while 355 issues closed unchanged.
NASDAQ posted 113 new 52-week highs and 194 new 52-week lows, compared with 451 new highs and 197 new lows the previous session. The deterioration in new highs, combined with new lows exceeding new highs, reflects increasing weakness in technology and growth-oriented shares.
Total NASDAQ trading volume amounted to 10,012,734,461 shares, down 20% from yesterday’s volume of 12,427,042,150 shares traded. The lighter volume suggests reduced trading participation compared with the previous session.
Tuesday’s U.S. Market Wrap-Up Report
Tuesday’s session reflected a more defensive tone beneath the surface, even though several major sectors managed to finish higher. Market breadth weakened noticeably, with declining stocks outnumbering advancing stocks on both the New York Stock Exchange and the NASDAQ, suggesting that institutional money flow remained selective rather than broad-based.
Five of the major sectors closed in positive territory. Healthcare led the market, advancing 1.64%, as investors rotated toward defensive and lower-volatility names. Energy gained 0.92%, supported by continued strength in commodity-related stocks, while Telecommunications Services rose 0.43% and Financials added 0.16%. On the downside, Industrials slipped 0.41%, while Technology fell 1.00%, making it the weakest-performing major sector of the session.
The divergence between large-cap defensive stocks and growth-oriented technology shares continues to widen. The Dow Jones Industrial Average has now advanced in five of the past six sessions, indicating improving momentum in blue-chip value-oriented stocks. Leadership within the Dow came from UnitedHealth Group, Apple Inc., Cisco Systems, and NVIDIA Corporation.
From a technical perspective, traders should continue monitoring relative strength in large-cap names as money rotates away from speculative growth stocks into higher-quality companies with stronger earnings visibility.
In company-specific developments, Oracle Corporation moved back above its 200-day moving average, an important long-term technical signal that could attract institutional buyers if the breakout holds. Tesla, Inc. is also approaching a critical technical zone, and traders will be watching closely to determine whether the current rebound can develop into a sustained uptrend. Meanwhile, Palantir Technologies remains below its key moving averages, indicating that momentum continues to weaken despite periodic short-covering rallies.
Within the optoelectronics segment, volatility remained elevated following Monday’s sharp advances. Lumentum Holdings Inc., which surged 16.51% on Monday, reversed course and declined 5.77% Tuesday on volume of 9.55 million shares. Applied Optoelectronics, Inc. gained 1.83% to close at $188.28 with heavy volume of 16.4 million shares, suggesting speculative momentum remains active in selected AI infrastructure and networking plays. Corning Incorporated fell 4.39% on volume of 23.1 million shares as traders locked in profits following recent strength.
The memory and disk-drive sector, one of the market’s strongest-performing groups over the past year, experienced a broad pullback after becoming technically overextended. Profit-taking pressure emerged across the group after several sessions of aggressive upside momentum. SanDisk Corporation declined 6.17%, Micron Technology, Inc. fell 3.61%, and Western Digital Corporation dropped 5.25%.
At this stage, the weakness appears more consistent with a normal technical correction rather than a major trend reversal. However, traders should closely monitor whether institutional support returns over the next several sessions or whether selling pressure broadens further. Extended stocks often require consolidation periods before attempting another advance.
For active traders and investors, this environment reinforces the importance of disciplined risk management. When a stock becomes significantly extended after gains of 20% or more in a short period, scaling out partial profits can help protect capital while still maintaining exposure if the longer-term uptrend continues.
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(c) This article is published by The Canadian Vanguard on May 12, 2026