Canada’s main stock index closed higher in Thursday trading on strength in the technology sector. The mining and utilities sectors moved lower.


Sponsored by
RDARS Announces Major Security Technology Breakthrough


South of the border it was a downbeat start to December as stocks fell in uneven trading and bond yields pulled back.

The government reported that a measure of inflation that’s closely watched by the Federal Reserve eased in October, but fears of a recession appear to outweigh easing inflation. Analysts are reading signals of a slower pace and lower magnitude of rate increases possibly later this month.

Today in the Markets

TSX 20,525.45 +72.19 TSX
TSXV 599.18 +8.18 TSXV
CSE 291.84 +13.04 TSXV
DJIA 34,414.00 -185.00 DJIA
NASDAQ 12,066.25 +24.00 NASDAQ
S&P 500 4,082.00 +0.75 S&P 500

The Canadian dollar traded for 74.45 cents US, compared to 74.39 cents US on Wednesday.

US crude futures traded $0.84 higher at $81.39 a barrel, while the Brent contract gained $0.05 to $87.02 a barrel.

The price of gold was up US$29.05 to US$1,802.65.

In world markets, the Nikkei was up 257.09 points to 28,226.08, the Hang Seng was up 139.21 points to 18,736.44, the FTSE was down 14.56 points to 7,558.49, and the DAX was up 93.26 points to 14,490.30.


Get @ the Bell delivered to your email inbox every day!

Sign Up Here





DISCLAIMER: By viewing any material on or distributed by The Market Herald Publishing Ltd. and its Information Providers you agree to both the following disclaimer, and the full disclaimer that can be viewed here.

Any holdings, theories, speculation or trades appearing anywhere on The Market Herald network of websites should not be relied upon for purposes of transacting securities or other investments, nor should they be construed as an offer or solicitation of an offer to sell or buy any security. This applies to any material regardless of source, placement, presentation or reproduction. Any Information Providers to The Market Herald or employees of The Market Herald may from time to time have positions in the stocks or other entities mentioned anywhere on The Market Herald Network of websites. You bear responsibility for your own investment research and decisions and should seek the advice of a qualified securities professional before making any investment. The Market Herald and its contributors makes no guarantee as to the validity of any information, speculation, theories or research presented herein whether pertaining to the past, present or future. The Service and The Materials are provided by The Market Herald and other Information Providers on an “as is” basis, and The Market Herald and other Information Providers expressly disclaim any and all warranties, express or implied, including, without limitation, warranties of satisfactory quality and fitness for a particular purpose, with respect to the service or any materials and products. In no event shall The Market Herald and other Information Providers be liable for any direct, indirect, incidental, punitive, or consequential damages of any kind whatsoever with respect to The Service, The Materials, and The Products.


More From The Market Online

@ the Bell: TSX starts May flat

Utilities led the gainers on the TSX while energy led the drop on falling oil prices, followed by the mining sector.

@ the Bell: Could the TSX keep hold of recent gains?

The biggest drag on the TSX was sustained by the heavyweight energy and mining sectors, while industrials and utilities also fell.
Mandalay Resources - Mandalay's Björkdal gold mine in Sweden.

This profitable gold stock is on its way up

An attractive stock to consider under a gold-equity dislocation thesis is Mandalay Resources, whose mines are profitable and 100%-owned.

Critical raw materials pioneer drives Europe’s clean energy transition

Leading Edge Materials Corp. (TSXV:LEM) offers an exciting proposition as it stands at the forefront of the critical raw materials sector.