Toronto Star

TSX up as oil drives dollar higher

- LINDA NGUYEN

Oil prices rallied to a five-month high Wednesday, pushing the Canadian dollar to its best finish since July as investors were encouraged by the latest data on American crude oil inventorie­s.

The loonie edged closer to the 80cent (U.S.) mark, adding 0.06 of a cent to close at 79.05 cents. The last time it ended the day higher was on July 3, 2015, when it hit 79.62 cents.

The June contract for North American benchmark crude climbed $1.71 to $44.18 a barrel, a level not seen in five months after the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion reported that crude inventorie­s rose slightly less than expected last week.

The agency said commercial crude inventorie­s increased by 2.1 million barrels last week, less than what analysts had expected.

Signs the global oil glut may be lessening helped support oil prices even as oil workers in Kuwait returned to the job after a three-day strike to protest cuts to pay and benefits.

The work stoppage had temporaril­y suspended production in that country.

Michael Greenberg, a portfolio manager at Franklin Templeton Investment­s, said oil markets will remain volatile until the price of crude stabilizes, adding that crude needs to be around $50 a barrel to make it profitable for many producers.

Meanwhile, North American stock markets also racked up gains, with the S&P/TSX composite index adding 44.01points to13,911.29, helped by energy, metals and consumer staples stocks.

The Dow Jones industrial average gained 42.67 points to 18,096.27, while the broader S&P 500 was barely changed, up 1.6 points at 2,102.40 and the Nasdaq added 7.8 points to 4,948.13.

This positive sentiment pulsing through equity markets is a sigh of relief from the doom-and-gloom at the start of the year, Greenberg said.

“It’s a continuati­on of the fact that the world didn’t end,” he said.

“That was kind of the narrative at the start of the year, with talk about China imploding, talk of a U.S. reces- sion, that the Fed will hike rates four times a year and it’s going to be a mistake and the U.S. dollar was strong, putting pressure on emerging markets.

“A lot of that has unwound a bit, at least for now. We’re seeing markets catch up now.”

Investors will turn their attention Thursday to the latest policy meeting of the European Central Bank, even though few expect the bank to announce further stimulus measures for the 19-country eurozone.

Elsewhere in commoditie­s, June natural gas was unchanged at $2.18 per mmBtu, while May copper added a penny to $2.24 a pound. June gold was flat, up 10 cents to $1,254.40 a troy ounce.

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