Stocks Continue Negative with Gold, Energy

Equities in Toronto fell on Tuesday as energy stocks lost ground with lower oil prices, while miners also weighed as gold prices fell and the Philippine government ordered the suspension of 20 more mines for environmental violations.

The S&P/TSX Composite dropped 45 points to greet noon at 14,574.46.

The Canadian dollar eked lower 0.07 cents at 75.48 cents U.S.

The energy group retreated, with Canadian Natural Resources down 1.6% to $38.47 and Suncor Energy off 1.2% to $34.26. Both are among the most influential movers on the index.

The materials group, which includes precious and base metals miners and fertilizer companies, lost some of their strength.

The TSX-listed shares of Australia-based OceanaGold Corp fell 10.4% to $4.22 as it faced a suspension of operations in the Philippines.

Barrick Gold Corp fell 1.8% to $23.30. Smaller producer B2Gold Corp fell 9.7% to $3.46.

On the positive side, Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd rose 1.4% to $752.44 and Valeant Pharmaceuticals International advanced 1.8% to $34.85. It had slipped ahead of Monday night's presidential debate.

ON BAY STREET

The TSX Venture Exchange fell 7.83 points at 797.97

Seven of the 12 TSX subgroups had rallied midday, as information technology moved 0.4% upward, while industrials and health-care each gained 0.2%.

The four laggards were weighed most by gold, off 2.3%, materials, down 1.9%, and energy, sinking 1.8%.

ON WALL STREET

Stocks traded higher on Tuesday, despite a sharp fall in oil prices, following the first presidential debate between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump.

The Dow Jones Industrials strengthened 82.18 points to 18,177.01, with IBM leading advancers and ExxonMobil the top decliner.

The S&P 500 moved up 7.98 points to 2,154.09, with consumer discretionary leading seven sectors higher and energy the biggest laggard.

The NASDAQ Composite stayed buoyant 28.67 points to 5,286.16

Also on market watchers' radars was Deutsche Bank, which saw its shares hit a fresh all-time low on Tuesday, weighing on European equities.

Deutsche's U.S.-listed shares plunged more than 7% Monday after German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the German government would not help the bank with its U.S. legal troubles.

Economically speaking, the Consumer Confidence Index hit 104.1 in September, according to figures released by the U.S. Conference Board Tuesday. Economists expected the Consumer Confidence Index to hit 99.0 in September, down from August's revised reading of 101.8, according to Thomson Reuters consensus estimate. The read was also the highest since the recession.

Also on the data front, the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller 20-City Composite index rose 5% year over year, slightly below the expected 5.1% increase. The September Markit Flash U.S. Services PMI was also released, showing expansion. Meanwhile, the Richmond Federal
Reserve Manufacturing index for September showed a read of minus eight.

Many pundits gave a slight edge to Clinton Monday night, but admitted there is still a lot of campaigning left to do. The next debate is set for Sunday, Oct. 9.

Prices for the 10-year Treasury gained, lowering yields to 1.56% from Monday’s 1.58%. Treasury prices and yields move in opposite directions.

Oil prices dropped $1.48 to $44.45 U.S. a barrel

Gold prices faded $15.20 at $1,328.90 U.S. an ounce.


Related Stories