Friday, June 8, 2012

Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate: CANADA STOCKS-China growth worry hits commodity-heavy TSX

Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate
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CANADA STOCKS-China growth worry hits commodity-heavy TSX
Jun 8th 2012, 21:29

Fri Jun 8, 2012 5:29pm EDT

  * TSX down 91.49, or 0.79 pct, at 11,500.63      * Energy, financial shares hurt by growth fears      * China rate cut seen foreshadowing soft data          By Cameron French         TORONTO, June 8 (Reuters) - Canada's main stock index fell  on Friday, diverging from rising U.S. equities, as fears about  Chinese economic growth hit commodity issues, while weak jobs  data prompted investors to take a cautious stance heading into  the weekend.          Financial and energy issues led the drop, but the weakness  was broad with all but one subgroup of the benchmark TSX index  retreating on the day.        "There's a little bit of speculation out there that the Bank  of China rate cut (on Thursday) was a precursor to what could be  weaker-than-expected economic data that they're going to  report," said Craig Fehr, a Canadian market strategy at Edward  Jones         Canada's employment report for May on Friday only narrowly  missed market estimates with a tepid 7,700 jobs gain, but the  data did little to ease investor nervousness about both global  growth and the deepening debt crisis in Europe.       Concerns about Chinese demand and the continuing euro zone  jitters ate into oil prices, pulling the heavily-weighted TSX  energy index down 1.4 percent. Base metals prices also fell.          Among oil companies, Nexen Inc dropped 2.0 percent  to C$16.39, while Husky Energy retreated 1.4 percent to  C$23.83.              Copper miner Inmet Mining led base metals miners  lower, dropping 4.0 percent to C$43.41, but the index's  materials sector ended the session up 0.1 percent as gold-mining  stocks were boosted by a late-session rally in the precious  metal.        Kinross Gold rose 2.5 percent to C$8.51, while  Iamgold Corp gained 1.4 percent to C$12.44.           The financial sector slid 1.3 percent following three  straight gaining sessions, led down by Bank of Montreal  , which fell 1.9 percent to C$54.02.          All told, the S&P/TSX composite index fell 91.49  points, or 0.79 percent, to finish at 11,500.63.              Adding to the pall caused by the jobs data, Canadian housing  starts slowed in May to 211,400 at a seasonally adjusted  annualized rate, down from 243,800 in April.          For the week, the TSX index rose 1.2 percent despite a sharp  drop on Monday, when it touched an eight-month low. Analysts  said developments in Europe will likely outweigh domestic news  in near-term market movements.        "Investor are still very much on the fence, still waiting  for clues as to what might happen in the rest of the world,"  said Elvis Picardo, an strategist at Global Securities in  Vancouver.             Spain is expected to request European aid for its ailing  banks over the weekend to forestall worsening market turmoil,  becoming the fourth and biggest country to seek assistance since  the euro zone's debt crisis began.            Optimism over Spain's move helped drive U.S. markets higher  on Friday.             Among individual Canadian stocks, shares of Genivar Inc.   tumbled 4.7 percent to C$23.87 after the engineering  firm received a green light to acquire British consulting firm  WSP Group Plc in a cash deal valued at about C$442 million  ($431.5 million).  
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