Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Roger Biduk - Recession Hits Bay Street

Roger Biduk writes:

The Toronto stock market dropped more than 150 points Tuesday as the Bank of Canada declared the economy was moving into a recession and cut its main interest rate by three-quarters of a point to 1.5 per cent.
Bank stocks led the way down as Toronto's S&P/TSX composite index fell 169.56 points or two per cent to 8,397.56.
The TSX Venture Exchange closed down 12.16 points to 686.02.

The big interest rate cut by the central bank and a new equity issue by the Royal Bank (TSX:RY) pushed the financial sector down more than five per cent.
The banks also held back from passing the whole three-quarter-point policy rate cut along to their customers, trimming the prime lending rate by half a point.
RBC lost $2.21 to $35.29 after announcing a new issue up to $2.3 billion worth of common stock. TD was down $3.40 to $42.10 and CIBC shed $2.96 to $50.31.

The loonie closed down 0.66 cents at 79.08 cents U.S., after dropping more than a cent shortly after the central bank cut its key rate to the lowest level since 1958 and added that "the global recession will be broader and deeper than previously anticipated."

In Toronto, the telecom sector was off 2.25 per cent as BCE Inc. (TSX:BCE) fell $2.15 to $22.50 after the company said it has hired accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers to help make its case to KPMG auditors who ruled it did not meet a key condition of its deal to be acquired by a group led by the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan.

The industrial sector gave back 1.4 per cent as Canadian National Railway (TSX:CNR) declined $1.56 to $42.75.

The energy sector was flat as oil prices flattened on expectations of weakening demand. The January crude contract in New York declined $1.64 to US$42.07 a barrel after rising almost US$3 Monday.
On the TSX, Canadian Natural Resources (TSX:CNQ) lost $1.30 to $40.90 while Suncor Inc. (TSX:SU) improved 67 cents to $23.97.
Crescent Point Energy Trust (TSX:CPG.UN) was up 78 cents to $21.59 as it set its 2009 capital budget at $225 million and said it expects to boost oil production by four per cent.
Major Drilling Group International Inc. (TSX:MDI) eased 97 cents to $9.99 after an August-October profit of $29.3 million, up from $22.6 million a year ago, as revenue rose 22 per cent. However, the global provider of mine-drilling services warned of a slowdown next year, especially in base metals.

The gold sector rose 1.45 per cent with the February bullion contract ahead $4.90 to US$774.20. Barrick Gold Corp. (TSX:ABX) faded 75 cents to $35.10.

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Roger Biduk - Bay Street Lower at Midday

Roger Biduk writes:

Blue chips in Toronto were sinking Tuesday afternoon, led by a drop in financial stocks after the Bank of Canada unexpectedly cut its key interest rate on Tuesday by three-quarters of a percentage point to a 50-year low of 1.50 percent and declared the Canadian economy to be in a recession.

The S&P/TSX composite index was off 79.87 points to 8,487.25.
The Canadian dollar, meanwhile, was trading 0.59 cents lower at 79.19 cents US.
Six of the TSX sub-groups traded higher this afternoon -- health-care stocks were up 3.05 percent followed by a 1.34 percent gain in gold issues and 0.95 percent rise in energy stocks.
Gold was gaining 40 cents to $769.70 US an ounce.

On the downside -- financial stocks fell 3.76 percent; telecom issues shed 2.18 percent and consumer discretionary stocks dipped 1.75 percent.

Meanwhile, the TSX Venture Exchange slipped 8.55 points to 689.63 and the NASDAQ Canada was off 5.32 points at 406.11.

On the corporate front -- Canada's largest bank Royal Bank of Canada says it plans to issue up to $2.3 billion in common shares to beef up its regulatory capital ratio.
Davie Yards Inc. has announced an agreement to get a US$10-million financial injection from shipbuilder Bergen Group of Norway and Davie client Cecon ASA, a Norwegian subsea installation contractor.
Major Drilling Group International Inc. climbed 15 cents to $11.11 after an August-October profit of $29.3 million, up from $22.6 million a year ago, as revenue rose 22 per cent. However, the global provider of mine-drilling services warned of a slowdown next year, especially in base metals.

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