Times Colonist

Healthcare sector gains, loonie slips

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Toronto’s main stock index moved up on the strength of its health-care sector as Valeant Pharmaceut­icals Internatio­nal Inc. rose nearly seven per cent.

The Toronto Stock Exchange’s S&P/TSX composite index advanced 44.02 points to 15,619.65.

Valeant was the third best performing stock of the index, rising 6.73 per cent or 89 cents to $14.11 for a second straight day of gains. The day before, the Quebec-based drugmaker’s shares jumped 4.51 per cent after it announced it trimmed its hefty debt by an extra $220 million US. Since the first quarter of 2016, Valeant said it has reduced its $32-billion US debt by $3.6 billion US.

On Tuesday, CEO Joseph Papa told shareholde­rs at the company’s annual general meeting that the gathering marked the first day of a new era for Valeant. He said he remained committed to cutting the company’s remaining debt by $5 billion US by next February.

The growth from the health-care sector was offset by weakness in the financial and energy sectors.

While embattled alternativ­e mortgage lender Home Capital Group Inc. rebounded with a 11.35 per cent or 79 cent jump in shares to $7.75, many other financial institutio­ns — including some of Canada’s biggest banks — saw their shares slip in worth.

Shares in the energy sector were the worst performing, losing on average 0.42 per cent of their worth, as the June crude contract lost $1.18 to US$47.66 per barrel.

“I think until that OPEC meeting at the end of the month, we’re going to see ebb and flow (in oil prices),” said Colum McKinley, a manager on the Canadian equities team at CIBC Asset Management.

Members of the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries will meet in Vienna on May 25 to decide whether or not they will extend their agreement from last November to curb crude production.

The loonie continued to move in line with the price of oil, said McKinley.

The average value for the Canadian dollar was 72.89 cents US, down 0.32 of a cent from Monday.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 36.43 points to 20,949.89, the S&P 500 index advanced 2.84 points to 2,391.17, and the Nasdaq composite index added 3.77 points to a record-high 6,095.37.

Elsewhere in commoditie­s, the June gold contract rose $1.50 to US$1,257 an ounce, the June natural gas contract fell two cents to about $3.20 per mmBTU and the July copper contract declined 2.5 cents to roughly US$2.64 a pound.

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