Times Colonist

TSX slide at six days and counting

- PETER HENDERSON

TORONTO — North American markets closed in the red as commodity prices fell after more bad news about Chinese demand for energy and raw materials.

The S&P/TSX composite index posted its sixth consecutiv­e loss, ending the day down 69.70 points to 13341.93.

The Dow Jones average of 30 stocks closed down 55.99 points to 17702.22, the broader S&P 500 index declined 6.72 points to 2075.00 and the Nasdaq fell 16.22 points to 5067.02.

The Bank of Canada, which publishes the exchange rates of the Canadian dollar, was closed for Remembranc­e Day. In internatio­nal trading as of 1 p.m. PT, the loonie was flat at 75.39 cents U.S.

On the commodity markets, the December gold contract fell $3.60 to end trading at $1,084.90 US an ounce and the December contract for natural gas fell 5.7 cents to $2.263 US per mmBtu. The December crude oil contract dropped $1.28 to $42.93 US a barrel.

Craig Jerusalim, portfolio manager at CIBC Asset Management, said energy companies are mostly taking the right steps to protect their balance sheets, but there doesn’t seem to be any short-term relief on the horizon because foreign government­s are flooding the market with supply.

“The problem in the energy sector lies in the state-owned entities, which are focused on satisfying state budgets and maintainin­g market share as well as looking to permanentl­y impair long-dated projects,” he said.

Countries where extracting oil is relatively cheap, such as Saudi Arabia or Russia, are looking to keep prices below levels where the more expensive extraction from North American oilsands and other sources makes economic sense.

Although a lower price for oil causes state-owned companies the same pain as private ones, Jerusalim explained, in the long term it helps them maintain their importance in the global pool of supply.

China’s huge growth and seemingly insatiable demand over the past decade helped keep prices for raw materials and energy high, and Jerusalim said that country’s sputtering economy is sending bearish signals for those sectors in Canada.

Chinese government figures released overnight showed annual growth in industrial output weakened to 5.6 per cent in October, matching the same figure from March of this year that was the lowest since 2008. Fixed-asset investment also slowed.

One bright spot was retail sales growth, which increased 11 per cent in the month for the biggest gain of the year.

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