Penticton Herald

Energy stocks weigh on TSX

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TORONTO — Canada’s main stock index nose dived Wednesday as oil and gas company stocks fell sharply and shares of Valeant Pharmaceut­ical Internatio­nal, Inc. tumbled on low guidance.

The S&P/TSX composite index was down 228.57 points to 15,442.68, led by a more than three per cent decline in the energy sector amid falling oil prices.

The April crude contract was down US$1.37 to US$61.64 per barrel after a report showed that the amount of oil in American inventorie­s rose more than analysts expected last week.

The health-care sector was another major decliner on the TSX after Valeant said it won’t return to growth for another year. Its shares were down $2.74 or 11.54 per cent to $21.01 at the closing of markets.

“Valeant forecasted weaker than expected revenue for 2018 and said that they expect it to be another year before a significan­t turnaround is expected,” said Kathryn Del Greco, an investment adviser with TD Wealth.

Much of the Quebec-based company’s decrease follows the sale of several companies, continued loss of patent exclusivit­y on some drugs and currency fluctuatio­ns.

South of the border, stocks slumped on Wall Street, breaking the longest streak of positive monthly returns in the history of the Standard & Poor’s 500 index.

The S&P 500 index was down 30.45 points to 2,713.83. The Dow Jones industrial average was down 380.83 points to 25,029.20 and the Nasdaq composite index was down 57.34 points to 7,273.01.

Del Greco attributed the U.S. selloff to remarks made Tuesday by Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, who told Congress that he’s more optimistic about the economy. That led some investors to anticipate four rate increases for 2018, up from the three of last year.

“He really did open the door to another rate hike,” she said. “The market didn’t initially react negatively but I think after further evaluation sold off . ... And I think we’re seeing a continuati­on of that today.”

Higher rates make bonds more attractive as investment­s and can divert buyers away from stocks. Worries that rates will rise higher and more quickly than the market expected helped trigger a 10 per cent tumble for stocks worldwide earlier this month.

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