Toronto Star

Oil’s gains push up markets, loonie

- LINDA NGUYEN THE CANADIAN PRESS

Positive sentiment continued to run high in Toronto and New York on Tuesday, where both the TSX and the Dow finished with healthy threedigit gains and the Canadian dollar bounced to levels not seen in nearly nine months.

The loonie advanced for a third consecutiv­e trading day, climbing 0.85 of a cent (U.S.) to 78.38 cents. The last time the loonie closed above this level was July14, when it finished at 78.49 cents.

John O’Connell, chairman and chief executive at Davis Rea Investment Counsel, said a weakened U.S. dollar coupled with higher commodity prices are the main reasons the currency — up more than two cents in the last three days — is enjoying its recent boost.

He said traders have been too bullish on the greenback and now that it is declining amid burgeoning oil prices, the loonie is reaping the benefits. “We actually think the Canadian dollar is getting a cyclical bounce here based on commoditie­s.”

It is “mildly overvalued here because Canada still has problems. But it’s a country that is viewed as a safe haven from a geopolitic­al perspectiv­e and so currencies, when they move, they can move rather dramatical­ly.”

The May contract for North American benchmark crude rose $1.81 to $42.17 a barrel, ending the day at a level not seen since November.

Investors were encouraged after Russia’s Interfax news agency reported that there was a possible deal between Russia and Saudi Arabia to freeze oil output. The news comes days ahead of a highly anticipate­d meeting between OPEC ministers on Sunday in Doha, Qatar.

The aim of the meeting is for a deal between the oil-producing countries to freeze production in hopes of boosting prices. Crude has fallen sharply since trading at more than $100 a barrel in 2014.

O’Connell said the “shift in sentiment” on oil prices is helping drive up the Canadian dollar, but some factors need to change if positive energy prices are to be sustained.

“What you need for the oil price to improve on a fundamenta­l basis is a continuing trend of declining pro- duction in North America, which is occurring, and at an accelerati­ng pace, and a continuing trend of gasoline and energy demand,” he said.

Energy stocks were also credited with helping provide support to the S&P/TSX composite index in Toronto, as it rocketed 158.66 points to 13,581.42.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average also enjoyed a strong triple-digit gain, up 164.84 points at 17,721.25, while the broader S&P 500 also rose 19.73 points to 2,061.72. The Nasdaq composite added 38.69 points to 4,872.09.

Elsewhere in commoditie­s, May natural gas rose nine cents to $2 per mmBtu, May copper advanced six cents to $2.15 a pound and June gold rose $2.90 to $1,260.90 a troy ounce.

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