TSX positive after rebound on Shanghai market; N.Y. higher despite jobs data

Thu Aug 20, 10:43 AM
Malcolm Morrison, The Canadian Press

TORONTO - The Toronto stock market was positive as the main Chinese index bounced back from a sharp selloff.
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(The Canadian Press)

By Malcolm Morrison, The Canadian Press

TORONTO - The Toronto stock market was positive as the main Chinese index bounced back from a sharp selloff.

The S&P/TSX composite index gained 58.2 points to 10,745 after the main Shanghai index ran up five per cent, reversing Wednesday's four per cent retreat.

The showing in Toronto comes during a volatile week with huge intraday swings in indexes as investors worry about the strength of an economic recovery and how much of a role the debt-laden U.S. consumer and Asian economies can play.

Before Thursday's advance, the Shanghai index was down more than 20 per cent from its early August peak, officially putting it into bear market territory, having rallied 60 per cent since the start of the year.

Shares in aerospace company Bombardier Inc. (TSX: BBD-B.TO) were down 20 cents to $3.94 after it said its Aerospace division has terminated an order for Lear jets from Jet Republic that was worth up to US$1.5 billion.

The termination came as the business jet provider declared insolvency, just over a week after Bombardier cancelled an order from Italy's My Air for 15 of its CRJ1000 aircraft because the carrier faces financial uncertainty.

Toronto gains were led by the financial and commodities sector.

The energy sector was ahead 0.4 per cent as crude prices moved slightly higher lower after data showing a big drawdown in U.S inventories last week sent oil up more than US$3 a barrel. On Thursday, the September crude contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange was up 14 cents to US$72.56. EnCana Corp. (TSX: ECA.TO) advanced 59 cents to $57.43.

The Canadian dollar moved down 0.21 cent to 91.06 cents US as wholesale sales rose for the first time in nine months in June. Statistics Canada reports sales in current dollars rose 0.6 per cent to $40.4 billion.

The TSX Venture Exchange climbed 4.07 points to 1,181.02.

U.S. indexes were ahead slightly as employment data disappointed.

The Dow Jones industrials moved 28.3 points higher to 9,307.5.

The Nasdaq composite index advanced 11.74 points to 1,980.98 while the S&P 500 points edged up 6.15 points to 1,002.6 after the number of newly laid-off workers filing claims for unemployment benefits rose unexpectedly for the second straight week.

The Labour Department says the number of first-time jobless claims rose to a seasonally adjusted 576,000 last week, from a revised figure of 561,000.

Wall Street economists expected a drop to 550,000, according to a survey by Thomson Reuters.

"The weekly rise was disappointing, but we know how volatile these data are," said BMO Capital Markets economist Jennifer Lee.

"The pace of job losses has improved from what we saw earlier this year but it still looks like the U.S. economy shed another 300,000 jobs or so this month."

Investors were getting more earnings reports from retailers and other companies that directly serve the consumer, and hoping for more insight into whether Americans might increase their spending and help fuel an economic recovery. The news from Sears Holdings Corp. wasn't good; the company lost money in its second quarter - missing expectations - as it was dragged down by lower sales, store closings, and severance and pension plan costs.

The retailer that owns Sears and Kmart stores lost US$94 million while revenue fell 10 per cent to US$10.55 billion. The retailer said it lost money in the second quarter as its sales fell and it closed stores and its shares fell $8.72 or 11.8 per cent to US$65.04.

Shares in Hormel Foods, maker of Spam, Dinty Moore stews and Chi-Chi's Mexican products, rose 37 cents to US$37.61 after it said Thursday that its third-quarter profit rose 49 per cent to beat estimates as costs fell.

Apparel retailer Gap Inc. also reports earnings Thursday.

The base metals sector advanced 1.67 per cent while September copper was down one cent at US$2.75 a pound. Teck Resources (TSX: TCK-B.TO) gained 73 cents to $28.39.

Mining giant Rio Tinto said sharp falls in metals and mineral prices were behind first-half profit dropping by nearly two thirds to US$2.5 billion. The world's third-largest miner was cautious about whether recent gains in commodity prices would be sustained and its shares slipped 17 cents to US$58.03 in New York.

The financial sector was up 0.67 per cent with Royal Bank (TSX: RY.TO) ahead 80 cents to $51.38.

The December bullion contract moved down $3.20 to US$941.60 an ounce and the gold sector was ahead 0.6 per cent.

In other corporate news, Enerplus Resources Fund (TSX: ERF-UN.TO) units declined 91 cents to $21.68 as it grabbed a toe-hold in the northeastern United States' promising Marcellus shale gas play, paying US$406 million to three private U.S. natural gas companies for a stake in their properties.

The Calgary-based oil and gas trust said Wednesday it has struck agreements with Chief Oil & Gas LLC and its affiliates Chief Exploration & Development LLC and a limited partnership managed by Tug Hill Inc., to acquire part of their interests in the Marcellus play.

Overseas, Shanghai's main index surged 4.5 per cent while Japan's Nikkei 225 stock average advanced 1.8 per cent, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng rose two per cent.

London's FTSE 100 index gained 1.18 per cent, Frankfurt's DAX was ahead 1.21 per cent and the Paris CAC 40 rose 1.2 per cent.