TSX slides for third week as commodities sag

15 May, 2011

Toronto's main stock index reversed early gains to finish slightly lower on Friday as volatile commodity prices weighed on the market. Canadian Natural Resources led the blue chip decliners, giving back 1.48 percent to finish at C$39.41. Nexen slid 2.34 percent to C$21.70. Gold miners were mixed, with Kinross Gold down 0.58 percent at C$13.81 and Goldcorp up 1.03 percent at C$46.28. Diversified miner Teck Resources fell 2.03 percent to C$44.85.
The overall energy group slipped 0.35 percent, while the materials group, home to mining firms, was up a moderate 0.15 percent. "We've just been basically going sideways for a while and until we actually break out of the recent range, it's probably more of the same," said Levente Mady, a market strategist at Union Securities.
"If anything, maybe a slightly negative bias due to all the upheaval we're seeing on the commodities front." The Toronto Stock Exchange's S&P/TSX composite index finished down a modest 12.26 points, or 0.09 percent, at 13,377.16 in its fourth straight day of declines.
The index was down 1.4 percent on the week, and marked its third straight week of declines. Commodity prices had been steady early in the day and helped lift the market. But oil retreated and gold dropped about 1 percent as the US dollar rose on safe-haven buying.
Crude prices rose late in the session in short-covering, following European economic worries and news that Libyan leader Muammar Qadhafi may have been wounded. Eight of the TSX's 10 main sectors ended lower. Bucking the negative trend, alongside materials, was the utilities group, which rose 0.25 percent.
Manulife Financial was one of the biggest drags on the index, ending down 1.26 percent at C$17.25. The overall financial group, which make up about 30 percent of the index, slipped 0.07 percent. Major market in the United States and elsewhere also finished lower on economic concerns. "There's clearly some massive positions being closed. Risk is being unwound," said Francis Campeau, broker at MF Global Canada, in Montreal "We're finishing the week similar to how it started."
In corporate news, TMX Group, which reported first quarter results that beat analyst expectations, advanced 1.83 percent to finish at C$41.75. Tim Hortons shares were up 1.05 percent at C$46.40. Chief Executive Donald Schroeder told Reuters on Friday Canada's biggest restaurant chain was eyeing more strategic alliances south of the border and said the US could rank as its No 1 market someday.

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