The TSX, which is heavily weighted with energy stocks, has been hit by the slide in crude prices and was caught up in the global market rout earlier this week that was fueled by concerns about China.

Despite faltering during the day, Toronto stocks were able to rally in the final hours of trading, helped by a nearly 4 percent surge in stocks on Wall Street. [.N]

The utilities sector <.GSPTTUT>, typically seen as a safe haven, fared the best, rising 3.4 percent, while tech shares <.SPTTTK> jumped 2.9 percent.

"The sentiment seems to be changing hour to hour," said Bryden Teich, associate portfolio manager at Avenue Investment Management, in Toronto. "The moves that we saw early in the week were pretty violent."

"A lot of those more long-term defensive names that snapped down early in the week, you're seeing bounce back up today, that's what's helping push the market up," Teich said.

The Toronto Stock Exchange's S&P/TSX composite index <.GSPTSE> closed up 230.66 points, or 1.75 percent, to 13,381.59. It was the biggest percentage gain since late January.

Financial shares also contributed to gains despite a drop in Royal Bank of Canada (>> Royal Bank of Canada) after quarterly earnings that showed a sharp spike in bad loans to the energy sector. RBC was among the biggest drags on the index, down 0.4 percent to C$72.1.

But Bank of Montreal (>> Bank of Montreal) rose 4.8 percent to C$71.05 the day after its earnings topped estimates. The sector as a whole <.SPTTFS> climbed 2.4 percent.

The materials sector was the only main group to decline as gold producers dropped alongside the price of gold. Goldcorp Inc (>> Goldcorp Inc.) fell 5.3 percent to C$17.46, while Barrick Gold Corp (>> Barrick Gold Corp.) declined 7.1 percent to C$8.72.

Although the end of the summer can exacerbate moves because there is lower volume in the market, September will bring some potentially important events, including interest rate decisions from the Bank of Canada and the U.S. Federal Reserve, Teich said.

"We're near-term in this little window of bouncing up and down until things stabilize," he said, though any uncertainty around those factors will add to volatility.

(Editing by Leslie Adler)

By Solarina Ho and Leah Schnurr