Times Colonist

Gold, energy sectors propel TSX to loss

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Commodity prices dragged the Toronto stock market lower Wednesday, while the loonie also dipped as the Bank of Canada held its benchmark interest rate steady.

The S&P/TSX composite index ended the day down 98.82 points at 13,531.85, with the gold and energy sectors the leading decliners. In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average closed 239.11 points lower at 16,253.57 after a 390-point gain on Tuesday, while the broader S&P 500 index fell 27.37 points to 1,942.04 and the Nasdaq retreated 55.40 points to 4,756.53.

On the commodity markets, October crude oil ended the day down $1.79 at US$44.15 a barrel, while October natural gas slid 5.9 cents to US$2.651 per thousand cubic feet and December gold fell $19 to US$1,102 an ounce.

Hollisweal­th senior investment adviser Allan Small said that while falling commodity prices have been a drag on the Canadian market, it’s not as clear what’s weighing on American markets.

“We’re still in this funk of market sentiment to the downside and nobody seems to want to get positive,” he said.

Small said investors are holding their breath before the outcome of the American central bank’s next policy meeting that begins Sept. 16.

Recent volatility in Chinese stock markets and the price of oil are also not helping to add value, he said.

“You have this uncertaint­y in the marketplac­e right now and that’s just causing investors, if they want to get into the market, to buy cautiously,” he said.

The loonie fell 0.26 of a U.S. cent to 75.47 cents US after the Bank of Canada announced it was keeping its trendsetti­ng overnight rate at 0.5 per cent, noting the economy continues to face headwinds despite the recent pickup in exports.

The central bank said the country is still adjusting to lower energy prices and added increased uncertaint­y about growth in China and other emerging markets is raising questions about the pace of global recovery. “Money is leaving our country because we’re looked at as a petro-currency, as a commoditie­s-based country,” Small said.

Earlier in the day, Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 soared 1,343.43 points or 7.7 per cent to 18,770.51, its biggest one-day gain since October 2008. The surge followed comments from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that raised expectatio­ns of more measures by the Japanese government to shore up economic growth.

Meanwhile, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang reassured investors by saying there are no plans to further devalue China’s currency. The country’s No. 2 leader also said growth was in the “proper range” and that the government would stick to plans for marketopen­ing reforms despite recent “fluctuatio­ns” in economic performanc­e.

Bombardier shares surge

MONTREAL — Shares in Bombardier soared more than 22 per cent in heavy trading as investors reacted to reports that a Chinese company had made an offer to buy the Quebec-based company’s rail division.

After falling this summer to two-decade lows, Bombardier shares closed up 27 cents at $1.46. Volume of 34.5 million shares, more than three times the issue’s daily average, made it by far the most active issue on Canada’s main index.

Bombardier declined to comment on a Reuters report that Beijing Infrastruc­ture Investment had proposed buying up to 100 per cent of Bombardier Transporta­tion for between US$7 billion and US$8 billion, including debt. “We are studying various options, including a potential participat­ion in the industry consolidat­ion taking place in the [rail] industry,” Bombardier said.

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