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TSX Finishes Friday, Week in Minus Territory

Cronos, HUT 8 Weigh on Markets

Stocks in Canada’s largest marketplace wailed to a stop Friday, as issues in health-care and tech weighed things down.

The TSX Composite let go of 59.27 points to end Friday at 20,402.66, a loss on the week of nearly 88 points, or 0.43%.

The Canadian dollar inched up 0.04 cents to 79.02 cents U.S.

The TSX was set to end September in losses after seven months of gains as worries around a slowdown in the post-pandemic economic recovery and concerns over the property developer's potential default rattled investors.

Health-care let the side down, as Cronos Group slid 41 cents, or 5.4%, to $7.19, while Canopy Growth handed back 85 cents, or 4.6%, to $17.58.

In tech issues, HUT 8 Mining was pounded 57 cents, or 5.1%, to $10.68, while Nuvei Corp. settled $5.45, or 3.5%, to $!50.83.

Consumer discretionary stocks also stumbled, with Dollarama listing lower 66 cents, or 1.1%, to $57.24, while Gildan Activewear skidding 39 cents to $48.51.

Energy surged, most notably, Whitecap Resources, up 54 cents, or 9.2%, to $6.93, while Enerplus gained 43 cents, or 5%, to $9.10.

Anong consumer staples, Alimentation Couche-Tard picked up 84 cents, or 1.7%, to $49.12, while Premium Brands boosted $1.84, or 1.4%, to $135.55.

ON BAYSTREET

The TSX Venture Exchange dumped 5.85 points to 876.13, falling into the red 10.7 points, or 1.2%.

All but two of the 12 TSX sectors ended lower Friday, with health-care waning 2.9%, information technology faltering 1.2%, and consumer discretionary stocks off 0.6%.

The two gainers were energy, advancing 1.4%, and consumer staples, climbing 0.5%.

ON WALLSTREET

The S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average were near flat on Friday, wrapping up a volatile week on Wall Street. A move by China to ban cryptocurrencies weighed on the technology sector and Nike shares fell as supply chain issues stemming from the pandemic hit the sneaker giant.

The blue-chip index pulled away from breakeven by the closing bell, however, rallying 33.18 points to 34,798 on the day, pushing into the green 46.68 points, or 0.1% on the week.

The S&P 500 nosed ahead 6.5 points to 4,455.48, gaining 114 points, or 2.63%, on the week.

The NASDAQ Composite erased 4.54 points on the day to 15,047.70, but picked up 3.73 points, or 0.03%, on the week.

Meanwhile, Nike validated the fears of investors worried about the pandemic wreaking havoc with supply chains and raising costs for companies, especially multinationals. Nike shares fell over 6% after the sneaker giant lowered its fiscal 2022 outlook because of a prolonged production shutdown in Vietnam, labour shortages and lengthy transit times.

Nike expects full-year sales to rise at a mid-single-digit pace, compared to low double-digit growth it forecast before.

The "Just-do-it" company also reported quarterly revenue that missed analysts’ expectations due to softening demand in North America as the delta variant flared up. Other apparel makers and retailers fell. Under Armour shed about 2%.

Within the S&P, Nike’s decline was offset by gains in reopening stocks. Carnival Corp led the index with a 4% increase after reporting quarterly earnings, while other cruise lines and air carriers rose about 3%. Energy and industrial stocks were also leaders. Mosaic and Nucorp added about 3%. Diamondback Energy rose 3% and Cabot Oil & Gas gained 2.5%.

It was a topsy-turvy week for markets. Stocks staged a two-day relief rally beginning on Wednesday after the Federal Reserve signaled no imminent removal of its ultra-easy monetary policy. Investors also bet that the debt crisis of China’s real estate giant Evergrande wouldn’t trigger a ripple effect across global markets.

A crackdown on bitcoin by China was hurting market sentiment overnight, especially with technology shares that depend on crypto-related revenue. China’s central bank declared all cryptocurrency related activities illegal on Friday. Overseas crypto exchanges providing services in mainland China are also illegal, the PBOC said.

Prices for 10-Year Treasurys faded, boosting yields to 1.46% from Thursday’s 1.43%. Treasury prices and yields move in opposite directions.

Oil prices gained 68 cents to $73.98 U.S. a barrel.

Gold prices lost $2.80 to $1,747.00 U.S. an ounce.