The Toronto Stock Exchange closes lower

(Toronto) The Toronto Stock Exchange’s flagship index retreated more than 150 points on Thursday, dragged down by losses in the energy and telecommunications sectors, while the major American indices ended the day in scattered order. .



The Toronto Stock Exchange’s S&P/TSX Composite Index fell 153.61 points to close the session at 19,774.08 points.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average fell 35.27 points to 32,764.65 points, while the broader S&P 500 index gained 36.04 points to 4151.28 points. The NASDAQ composite index for its part appreciated by 213.93 points to 12,698.09 points.

Continued uncertainty over the US debt ceiling remains in the picture as talks continue, weighing further on markets when there wasn’t much other news to sway investors, observed Mike Archibald, vice-president and portfolio manager at AGF Investments. But on Thursday, the debt ceiling talks had less of a direct impact, he said.

“Today there’s a whole host of other things that I think are getting investors’ attention,” Archibald noted.

The biggest talking point in the US on Thursday was Nvidia, the analyst continued. The company saw its stock jump more than 24% the day after it reported better-than-expected earnings results. The computer chip maker also forecast a surge in revenue.

“Nvidia’s numbers […] were so much above expectations that they really surprised a lot of people,” Archibald explained.

Thursday’s NASDAQ rally was part of a recurring theme this year, Archibald continued, in which big tech stocks — especially those exposed to artificial intelligence — recouped their losses from last year and rebounded. outperformed the market as a whole.

“If you haven’t been in big-cap tech, it’s been a really tough year,” he said.

North of the border, the quarterly results of four of the five major Canadian banks disappointed analysts’ expectations this week. Only CIBC did better than expected. Royal Bank of Canada, CIBC and TD Bank all released their latest results Thursday.

Royal and TD saw their shares decline, while those of Scotia and Bank of Montreal advanced, recouping losses recorded on Wednesday after the publication of their results. CIBC’s stock rose.

As a result, the Toronto trading floor’s financials sector retreated just 0.6%, while larger losses in other sectors, including energy, weighed on the benchmark.

Mr. Archibald pointed to an increase in expenses and provisions for bad debts explaining the bank results.

“It shouldn’t surprise anyone that there is a slowdown here,” he said.

The price of oil has given back some of its recent gains, but remained in the range it has held for some time, Archibald noted.

On the New York Commodities Exchange, crude oil fell US$2.51 to US$71.83 a barrel, while natural gas fell US9 cents to US$2.48 a million. of BTUs.

The price of gold cleared US$20.90 to US$1943.70 an ounce and that of copper rose 3 cents US to US$3.59 a pound.

In the currency market, the Canadian dollar traded at an average rate of 73.38 cents US, down from 73.63 cents US on Wednesday.


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