The Prince George Citizen

The markets today

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TORONTO (CP) — The initial shine from Canada’s tentative trade agreement with the U.S. and Mexico wore off on Tuesday as Canada’s main stock index closed lower on weakness in the key energy, financial and industrial sectors.

The S&P/TSX composite index enjoyed a muted rally on Monday after the deal confirmed Canadian autos wouldn’t face new tariffs, but after the euphoria wore off it ended the day only slightly higher, said Allan Small, senior investment adviser with HollisWeal­th. On Tuesday, it closed down 87.20 points to 16,017.23, after hitting a low of 15,987.14 on 248.2 million shares traded. “(The deal) took away the uncertaint­y that has been looming over this trade negotiatio­ns for quite some time, but at the end of the day I think the agreement itself wasn’t too different than the existing one,” he said.

“I think the market went up on a bit of a relief rally and today we’re back to the grind.” Small said investors are optimistic about the upcoming earnings’ season, but he expects companies will talk about how tariffs are starting to take a bite out of profits. On Tuesday, the gold sector led, rising 3.6 per cent, followed by materials. Healthcare was down 3.6 per cent, led by a 9.8 per cent drop by cannabis companies Aphria Inc. and 6.5 per cent decrease by Canopy Growth Corp. Informatio­n technology closed off 2.5 per cent, followed by energy at 1.8 per cent and industrial­s at almost one per cent.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average set a new record high, gaining 122.73 points to close at 26,773.94 led by gains from Intel, General Electric, Caterpilla­r and 3M. Small said the Dow’s gain is misleading because it involves just 30 of the largest stocks. Meanwhile, The S&P 500 index lost 1.16 points to 2,923.43 as banks and technology were down, while the Nasdaq composite fell by 37.75 points to 7,999.55.

After hitting a four-month high of 78.11 cents US on Monday, the Canadian dollar fell, trading at an average of 78.02 cents US. The November crude contract was down seven cents at US$75.23 per barrel and the November natural gas contract was up 7.2 cents at US$3.17 per mmBTU. The December gold contract was up US$15.30 at US$1,207 an ounce.

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