Canadian Stocks Firmly Down In Negative Territory On Growth Worries

RTTNews | hace 894
Canadian Stocks Firmly Down In Negative Territory On Growth Worries

(RTTNews) - The Canadian market is down firmly in negative territory Tuesday afternoon, weighed down by losses in energy, technology and financial sectors.

Worries about rising inflation and looming interest rate hikes continue to prompt investors away from riskier assets. The focus is on the Federal Reserve's monetary policy announcement, due on Wednesday.

The benchmark S&P/TSX Composite Index is down 210.37 points or 1.07% at 15,532.19.

Utilties stocks are among the major losers. Transalta Renewables Inc (RNW.TO) is down more than 5% and Northland Power (NPI.TO) is declining nearly 4%, while Algonquin Power (AQN.TO), Boralex (BLX.TO), Fortis (FTS.TO) and Altagas (ALA.TO) are down 2.7 to 3.5%.

Communications shares BCE Inc (BCE.TO), Corus Entertainment (CJR.B.TO) and Rogers Communications (RCI.B.TO) are down 3.6%, 2.2% and 2%, respectively. Telus Corp (T.TO) is down nearly 2%.

In the energy section, Birchcliff Energy (BIR.TO) is down 8%, Advantage Oil & Gas (AAV.TO) is declining 6.3%, Peyto Exploration (PEY.TO) and Tourmaline Oil Corp (TOU.TO) both are down nearly 6%, while Topaz Energy (TPZ.TO), Parex Resources (PXT.TO) and Crescent Point Energy (CPG.TO) are lower by 3 to 5%.

Among technology stocks, Kinaxis Inc (KXS.TO), Softchoise Corp (SFTC.TO), Absolute Software Corp (ABST.TO) and Shopify Inc (SHOP.TO) are down 3 to 4%.

On the economic front, data from Statistics Canada said car registrations in the country decreased to 143,148 units in April from 144,597 units in the previous month.

Another data from Statistics Canada showed manufacturing sales in Canada rose by 1.7% from a month earlier to C$ 72.3 billion in April of 2022, slowing from an upwardly revised 3.5% advance in the previous month but faster than a preliminary estimate of 1.6%. It was the seventh straight month of growth in manufacturing sales.

read more
TSX Closes At New Record High

TSX Closes At New Record High

The Canadian market closed modestly higher on Friday, lifted by gains in industrials and energy stocks. Positive reaction to the nation's retails data and the recent announcement of a mini stimulus package contributed to the upside.
RTTNews | hace 1
Swiss Stocks Close On Strong Note

Swiss Stocks Close On Strong Note

Swiss stocks closed on a bright note on Friday, in line with markets across Europe, as weak manufacturing and services sector data from major European countries such as the U.K., Germany and France raised hopes that central banks will cut interest rates further to help revive growth.
RTTNews | hace 2
Canadian Market Modestly Higher In Cautious Trade

Canadian Market Modestly Higher In Cautious Trade

The Canadian market is modestly higher a little past noon on Friday with stocks turning in a mixed performance in cautious trade. Investors are digesting the latest economic data from Canada and the U.S., while continuing to follow the developments on the geopolitical front.
RTTNews | hace 2
U.S. Consumer Sentiment Improves Less Than Previously Estimated In November

U.S. Consumer Sentiment Improves Less Than Previously Estimated In November

Consumer sentiment in the U.S. improved less than previously estimated in the month of November, according to revised data released by the University of Michigan on Friday. The University of Michigan said its consumer sentiment index for November was downwardly revised to 71.8 from the preliminary reading of 73.0.
RTTNews | hace 2
Bay Street Seen Opening Higher

Bay Street Seen Opening Higher

The Canadian market may open higher on Friday, with materials shares finding some support on firm metal prices. Investors will also be reacting to Canadian retails sales data and U.S. producer prices report.
RTTNews | hace 2
Regulator CFPB To Consider Apple Pay, Other Digital Payment Apps As Banks

Regulator CFPB To Consider Apple Pay, Other Digital Payment Apps As Banks

The US Consumer Financial Protection Bureau or CFPB has finalized a rule to supervise Apple Inc. and other major technology firms that offer digital funds transfer and payment wallet apps, and treat them more like banks. In a statement, the US consumer watchdog said the rule on federal oversight of popular digital payment apps by the largest non-bank companies is aimed to protect personal data...
RTTNews | hace 2