Vancouver Sun

ENERGY, BANK STOCKS PUSH TSX DOWN 2%

- BY DAVID FRIEND

TORONTO • The Toronto stock market tumbled nearly 2% as traders launched a broad- based sell- off, with the energy and financial stocks making the biggest declines.

The S& P/ TSX composite index pulled back 284.11 points to close at 14,469.95, while the Canadian dollar ended at US87.91¢, down US0.07¢.

Energy stocks dropped 4.1% as the January crude oil contract fell US57¢ to settle at US$ 66.81 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after news that Saudi Arabia reduced its January prices to U. S. and Asian customers.

Financial stocks were also lower as two more Canadian banks added to fourthquar­ter earnings results that have largely underwhelm­ed investors.

Toronto- Dominion Bank missed analyst expectatio­ns with net income of $ 1.75 billion, as it increased provisions for credit losses and other expense items.

Shares of the bank dropped 5.1%, or $ 2.88, to $ 54.03.

CIBC beat analysts’ expectatio­ns by 1¢, as it reported a quarterly profit of $ 811 million that fell slightly from $ 825 million a year ago. The bank also raised its quarterly dividend by 3¢ to $ 1.03 per share. Its shares dropped 3.4%, or $ 3.64, to $ 103.52.

Accelerati­ng the TSX pullback was the looming deadline for tax- loss selling in the final week of December, which has likely motivated some decisions from investors, said Ron Meisels, president of Phases and Cycles in Montreal.

“Energy stocks are still the ones that are getting hammered, the price of oil is influencin­g the market, so generally speaking we see all of that coinciding,” he said.

Mr. Meisels added that the TSX is undergoing a correction that should find support around 14,400, a floor the market hovered around in late October.

On Wall Street, the declines were less substantia­l with the Dow Jones industrial­s off 12.52 points to 17,900.10. The Nasdaq moved back 5.03 points to 4769.44 while the S& P 500 index lost 2.41 points to 2071.92.

The market moves in the U. S. followed news that the number of people seeking unemployme­nt benefits slipped below 300,000 last week, after having spiked above that level in the prior week for the first time in nearly three months. The U. S. Labor Department said weekly applicatio­ns fell 17,000 to a seasonally adjusted 297,000. The four- week average rose 4,750 to 299,000.

On Friday, November job figures will be released from both Canada and the United States, offering further insight into the momentum behind the economic growth.

In other key commoditie­s, bullion fell US$ 1 to US$ 1,207.50 an ounce, and copper moved ahead US4.3¢ at US$ 2.915 a pound.

Enbridge Inc. shares lifted 10% after the pipeline company announced a 33% increase to its next quarterly common share dividend as part of a restructur­ing plan that will transfer part of its business to an affiliated income fund. Its stock gained $ 5.61 to $ 60.04.

Shares of Gildan Activewear Inc. dropped more than 9%, falling $ 6.10 to $ 60.22, after the apparel maker said it expects to report a loss of 30¢ in the first quarter as it responds to lower sales with price cuts.

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