Toronto Star

Markets soar despite Paris violence

- DAVID FRIEND

North American stock markets closed sharply higher Monday, with traders seemingly undeterred by last week’s terrorist violence in France and disappoint­ing manufactur­ing reports on both sides of the border.

The Toronto Stock Exchange’s S&P/TSX composite index soared 242.10 points to 13,317.52, helped largely by a rebound in the price of oil.

The TSX capped energy sector was up 4.3 per cent as the December contract for benchmark crude oil rose $1 (U.S.) to $41.74 a barrel, while December natural gas added 2.4 cents to $2.39 per mmBtu.

Elsewhere on commodity markets, December gold gained $2.70 to $1,083.60 an ounce, while December copper shed five cents to $2.12 a pound.

The Canadian dollar was off 0.04 of a U.S. cent at 75.05 cents U.S.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial­s gained 237.77 points to 17,483.01, while the broader S&P 500 index added 30.15 points to 2,053.19 and the Nasdaq advanced 56.73 points to 4,984.62.

For the most part, investors appeared to be betting that Friday’s attacks in Paris, which killed 129 people, won’t have a meaningful longterm impact on the global economy.

“I think people generally thought that we would be under pressure,” said Andrew Pyle, senior adviser and portfolio manager, Scotia Wealth Management.

“Although statistica­lly and historical­ly most of the market knew that it wasn’t going to be a massive correction,” he added.

While those expectatio­ns never really developed, there are still several lingering questions for traders, including expectatio­ns the U.S. Federal Reserve will start to raise its benchmark interest rate next month.

“We’re still dealing with the overhang of uncertaint­y going into December,” Pyle said.

In economic news, Statistics Canada reported Monday that manufactur­ing sales tumbled 1.5 per cent in September following a 0.6 per cent drop in August, much worse than consensus expectatio­ns for a 0.1-percent gain. And the New York Federal Reserve’s Empire State manufactur- ing index showed factory output contracted for a fourth consecutiv­e month in November as manufactur­ers continued to battle a strong U.S. dollar and slow overseas growth. The index was at a minus 10.7 for the month, a slight improvemen­t from minus 11.4 in October.

In corporate news, Marriott Internatio­nal is buying rival hotel chain Starwood for $12.2 billion in cash and stock. If completed, the deal would make Marriott the world’s largest hotelier by a wide margin.

Shares of helicopter services company HNZ Group (TSX:HNZ.A) hit a nearly six-year low Monday after the company announced it will suspend its monthly dividend starting next year as it deals with a slowdown in the resource sector.

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