The Guardian (Charlottetown)

TSX down, economic worries trump strong bank earnings, consumer confidence data

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TORONTO — The Toronto stock market closed lower Friday with buyers inclined to do little at the end of a negative week amid falling commodity prices and a strong earnings report from an American banking giant.

The S& P/ TSX composite index eased 31.91 points to 12,202.04 while the TSX Venture Exchange was 7.13 points lower at 1,292.81.

The Canadian dollar closed down 0.07 of a cent at 102.11 cents US.

New York markets were also listless after JPMorgan handed in a record quarterly profit of US$ 5.7 billion, up 34 per cent from a year ago as the bank set aside less money for bad loans. Earnings were $ 1.40 per share, far exceeding the $ 1.21 predicted by analysts polled by FactSet. Revenue rose six per cent to $ 25.1 billion, beating expectatio­ns of $ 24.4 billion.

JPMorgan stock dropped 48 cents to US$ 41.62. However, the stock has already come back strongly from a low of $ 31 in early June after the bank announced a surprise trading loss that ballooned to $ 6 billion.

Indexes also failed to find support from a strong consumer confidence reading.

The Dow Jones industrial­s added 2.46 points to 13,328.85 as the University of Michigan’s index for October came in at 83.1, up from 78.3 in September.

The Nasdaq composite index shed 5.3 points to 3,044.11, while the S& P 500 index was down 4.25 points at 1,428.59.

Earnings expectatio­ns are low for the third quarter — many companies report results next week — as the eurozone debt crisis continues to take a toll on economies in Europe, affecting the results of multinatio­nals. The malaise has also spread to developing economies such as China.

Analysts expect a 2.1 per cent year- over- year decline in S& P 500 operating earnings, which would be the first year- over- year drop since the recession that followed the 2008 financial collapse.

Traders also took in betterthan­expected earnings from U. S. bank Wells Fargo. It posted thirdquart­er earnings per share of 88 cents, beating estimates by a penny. Revenue rose eight per cent to $ 21.21 billion, which was slightly lower than analysts’ estimates and its shares fell 93 cents to US$ 34.25.

The TSX ended the week down 217 points or 1.74 per cent in the wake of a gloomy assessment of the global economy by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, which reduced its growth forecast for the world economy to 3.3 per cent this year from its previous estimate of 3.5 per cent.

Still, the TSX is up about 7.5 per cent from the market lows of early June, largely because of a commitment from European Central Bank president Mario Draghi to do whatever it takes to preserve the monetary union and another round of quantitati­ve easing by the U. S. Federal Reserve.

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