TD Bank share price chart showing stock trading above C$132 on the TSX

TD Bank Share Price Today (Feb. 9, 2026): TD Climbs Above C$132 as TSX Banks Regain Momentum

Toronto-Dominion Bank, better known to most investors as TD, traded higher in Monday’s session as Canadian financials steadied and money rotated back into large, liquid bank names. TD shares changed hands at C$132.73, up C$0.74 or 0.56% on the day, keeping the stock close to the upper end of its recent range and within striking distance of its 52-week high.

TD (TSX)

C$132.73 +0.56%

Change: +C$0.74  |  Prev close: C$131.99

Open: C$132.12  |  Day high: C$133.95  |  Day low: C$131.89

Low C$131.89 High C$133.95

Volume: 2,392,759

Market cap: C$238.44B

P/E (TTM): 11.48

Dividend yield: 3.23%

52-week range: C$89.87 to C$134.13

Intraday path (open → low → rebound → high → last)

Open 132.12 Low 131.89 Rebound High 133.95 Last 132.73

The day’s tape mattered for more than a single stock. After a choppier stretch across North American equities, the TSX bank complex found firmer footing, with investors leaning into balance-sheet strength, consistent capital returns, and the idea that Canada’s largest lenders remain the market’s “core holdings” when sentiment improves. TD’s move was measured, but the shape of the session suggested buyers were willing to defend dips and keep the stock pinned near recent highs.

The numbers help explain why TD still attracts incremental demand on modest up-days. A 3.23% dividend yield gives the stock an income “floor,” while a 11.48 trailing P/E keeps the valuation narrative alive in a market that can quickly reprice high-multiple areas. Even for readers who mainly track daily price action, those two metrics often shape how quickly dips get bought and how aggressively rallies extend.

Monday’s range also told a story. TD opened at C$132.12, held the session low near C$131.89, then pushed to a day high of C$133.95 before settling back to C$132.73. That kind of “higher high, higher low” profile is the behavior technicians like to see when a stock is leaning toward its ceiling. With the 52-week high at C$134.13, the market is effectively testing whether supply appears just above the current tape.

Volume was healthy for a large-cap Canadian bank at 2,392,759 shares, suggesting the move wasn’t just a thin, late-day flicker. In practice, that matters because TD is often used as a “proxy trade” for the sector. When institutions tilt toward Canadian banks, TD tends to be part of the first wave simply because it’s liquid, widely held, and easy to size.

The broader setup for TSX banks is also shaped by rates and expectations for economic growth. In sessions where traders think the macro backdrop is stabilizing, the sector can benefit from a familiar combination: confidence in deposit franchises, resilience in consumer credit, and the steady cadence of dividends. That’s why you’ll often see bank leaders firm up even when the overall index isn’t ripping higher — the money is moving into what feels dependable.

For TD specifically, the conversation quickly turns to “how much is already priced in” when the stock sits near a yearly peak. The range is wide — C$89.87 at the 52-week low versus C$134.13 at the high — and that gap reflects how fast sentiment can swing in big banks when the market shifts from risk-off to risk-on. Today’s price action, however, looked less like a blow-off move and more like a methodical grind, the kind investors often prefer because it tends to be more durable.

The key level to watch into the next sessions is the zone around the recent highs. A clean push through the C$134 area can change the short-term psychology quickly, because traders who sat on the sidelines may feel compelled to chase strength. On the flip side, if the stock keeps closing back below the day’s upper range after testing higher — the way it did after tagging C$133.95 — it can signal that sellers are still active overhead.

For readers tracking TD as a “today” story, the simplest takeaway is that the stock’s bid remains intact: it’s holding above C$132, it’s attracting real volume, and it’s participating in a steadier tone across TSX banks. If you want to verify the live tape and official quote details, you can follow the listing through the TMX TD quote page.

On days like this, TD doesn’t need fireworks to matter. A modest climb near a 52-week high can be enough to signal that investors are willing to pay up for quality within Canadian financials — and that’s often the first ingredient for a broader, sector-led push on the TSX.

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