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TSX futures fall as oil prices rise, Middle East tensions remain a focus

The short-lived relief that came from President Donald Trump's five day pause in strikes against Iran's infrastructure for energy has faded, and investors are still gripped by the uncertainty surrounding the 'war' in the Middle East.

As of 6:02 a.m. ET, June futures for the S&P/TSX Composite Index were down by 0.5%. ET (1002 GMT).

Oil prices rose on Friday on concerns about supply after Iran denied having talks with the U.S. on ending the Gulf War, contradicting Trump’s statements that a deal might be reached soon.

The war, now in its fourth week has brought the Strait of Hormuz to a near standstill and crippled the energy infrastructure throughout the Middle East.

The Canadian stock market is particularly vulnerable to changes in oil prices because crude is one of the country's most important exports.

Investors remained on edge due to the conflict. Gold pared some of its losses as well. After reaching its lowest level since November 24, spot gold fell 0.2%. The TSX is dominated by gold miners.

The benchmark index posted its largest?gains in five weeks on Monday. This was boosted by hopes that Middle?East tensions would ease. This optimism was short-lived.

TransAlta Corp., which is a Canadian company that owns power-generation assets, will be the focus of corporate news after National Bank of Canada upgraded its stock from "sector performance" to "outperform". Jamieson Wellness Inc. also attracted attention when CIBC began?coverage of the company with an "outperformer' rating and a?price target of C$43 (31.27).

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Canadian Markets Directory ($1 = 1.3750 Canadian Dollars) (Reporting and editing by Sahal Muhammad in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)