Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Roger Biduk - Financials & Metals Tank Bay Street

Roger Biduk:

North American stock markets fell sharply again Wednesday as investor confidence was eroded by bad economic data and pessimism over the prospects of a U.S. bailout for the Big Three automakers.
Wall Street stocks were slammed the hardest, hitting levels not seen since 2003.
In Toronto, all of the sectors were lower, led by diversified metals and financials stocks.
The main S&P/TSX composite index fell by 345.17 points to 8,490.56, a drop of nearly four per cent.
The Canadian dollar was at 79.83 cents US, down 1.48 cents, and the TSX Venture Exchange lost 20.16 points to 730.09.

TSX financials stocks took a beating, down 4.9 per cent, after the Bank of Nova Scotia (TSX:BNS) warned Tuesday of a bigger-than-expected $595-million hit to its quarterly earnings caused by financial-market upheaval.
The other banks are expected to suffer similarly to Scotiabank when they issue their fourth-quarter results, starting next week. Scotia's shares were down $1.93 to $35.24.

Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney strongly indicated Wednesday that the central bank will cut interest rates further next month in an effort to stimulate the economy. Carney told a luncheon in London that the economy is slowing more than previously thought, and inflation is less of a concern.

The TSX diversified metals sector slid 11.5 per cent, and Teck Cominco Ltd. (TSX:TCK.B) slid 15 per cent to $5.22.

Energy stocks were down 3.8 per cent as crude oil lost 77 cents to close at US$53.62 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The gold sector trekked 2.8 per cent lower as gold futures ended ahead for the first session this week on U.S. dollar weakness.
The December bullion contract closed up $3.30 to US$736 an ounce.

In economic news, Statistics Canada's composite leading index - an indicator of future activity - fell 0.4 per cent in October. It was the biggest decline since the early-1990s recession, after a 0.3 per cent drop in September.

In earnings news, supermarket operator Metro Inc. (TSX:MRU.A) rang up $72.3 million in summer-quarter profit, up 25.5 per cent from year-ago earnings that were reduced by the integration of A&P stores. Sales were up 1.8 per cent from a year ago. Metro shares were at $33.
The Resolve Business Outsourcing Income Fund (TSX:RBO.UN) is suspending distributions to investors. The trusts units plunged 55 per cent, or $1.94, to $1.56.
Norsemont Mining Inc. (TSX:NOM) says its board has set up a special committee to deal with "recent unsolicited expressions of interest to acquire the company" and shares were ahead 15 per cent, or 25 cents, to $1.95.
Forestry company Tembec Inc. (TSX:TMB) fell to a quarterly loss of $4 million from year-earlier profit of $22 million, as sales declined to $629 million from $675 million. Shares dropped a penny to $1.56.

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