Friday, June 1, 2012

Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate: CANADA STOCKS-TSX sinks as growth fears intensify

Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
CANADA STOCKS-TSX sinks as growth fears intensify
Jun 1st 2012, 20:42

Fri Jun 1, 2012 4:42pm EDT

  * TSX ends down 152.01 pts, or 1.3 pct, at 11,361.20      * Energy, financial shares lead losses      * Gold miners gain from safe-haven buying        By Jon Cook       TORONTO, June 1 (Reuters) - Canadian stocks tumbled on  Friday, led by energy and financial issues as economic data on  both sides of the Atlantic raised fears of a global slump and  sent investors out of riskier assets into gold and other safe  havens.       After one of the worst Mays in recent years for equity  markets, June began badly on a backdrop of euro zone debt  worries, a tentative recovery in the United States and more  moderate growth in China.             Markets extended losses after U.S. jobs growth in May was  the weakest in a year, suggesting a faltering U.S. economic  recovery.             "Today's jobs number was just the tipping point and the  markets just went into full pessimism mode," said Philip  Petursson, managing director of the portfolio advisory group at  Manulife Asset Management.            Nine of Canada's 10 main sectors finished in the red. Losses  were sharpest among the oil and gas group, which dropped 3.3  percent as U.S. crude oil futures settled at its lowest level in  nearly eight months.          Declines were led by Canadian Natural Resources,  down 3.7 percent to C$28.56, Cenovus Energy, off 4.7  percent at C$31.03, and Enbridge Inc, which sank 3  percent to C$39.60.           Petursson said Canada's energy index, down almost  15 percent since the beginning of May, has been hurt by  speculators getting out of the oil trade as prices fall.              The Toronto Stock Exchange's S&P/TSX composite index   closed down 152.01 points, or 1.3 percent, at  11,361.20. It was down 1.9 percent for the week.              The sell-off was compounded by dreary global manufacturing  data. China's slowdown worsened in May as its factories saw a  further deterioration in demand at home and abroad. In Europe,  the euro zone manufacturing index reached its lowest level since  June 2009, and British manufacturing activity shrank at its  fastest pace in three years.          A U.S. manufacturing gauge showed national factory activity  slipped to 53.5 from 54.8 in April.           The declines spurred speculation the European Central Bank  and U.S. Federal Reserve may be forced to implement additional  stimulus measures to calm investors on both sides of the  Atlantic.             "It's pretty dramatic times," said Paul Hand, managing  director at RBC Capital Markets. "A policy response is probably  going to be called for here, including concerted action with the  Fed and quantitative easing."         Data on Friday showed the Canadian economy grew less in the  first quarter than the Bank of Canada had expected. The soft GDP  data tempered speculation of an interest rate  hike.         Canadian financials, which have far less exposure to risky  euro zone debt holdings than their global counterparts, still  tumbled 2.8 percent on Friday. Despite solid second-quarter bank  earnings, Canada's top lenders led the slide.         Royal Bank of Canada sank 3 percent to C$49.99,  Toronto-Dominion Bank was down 2.8 percent at C$76.88  and Bank of Nova Scotia shed 3 percent to C$51.40.            The negative global news was a boon to gold stocks, which  jumped nearly 7 percent as bullion rallied above $1,600 an ounce  on safe-haven buying. Gains were led by top gold  producers Barrick Gold, up 7.5 percent at C$43.65 and  Goldcorp Inc, which rose 8.6 percent to C$40.93.              "On a day like today you're either buying U.S. Treasuries or  you're buying gold," said Petursson.  
  • Link this
  • Share this
  • Digg this
  • Email
  • Reprints

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions

0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Great HTML Templates from easytemplates.com.