Investors took profits after the Bank of Canada cut its principal lending rate on Nov. 27, leaving the Toronto Stock Exchange playing catch-up for the report period Nov. 28-Dec. 4.
The TSE 300 composite index fell fractionally, closing 12.47 points lower at 7,450.09, with most sectors showing a slow climb back after large losses on Nov. 28. The mining groups were the exception, though, with the metals and minerals index falling 141.89 points (or 3.5% of value) to 3,970.44 and the golds outpacing most of the rest of the market, adding 111.04 points (2.3%) to finish the period at 4,839.33.
The good news in the gold sector was a modest bump in bullion prices, coming after a Bank of England auction on Nov. 27 that many gold-watchers described as “disappointing.” Gold was up US$1.15 at US$275.75 per oz. in the Wednesday morning fix in London on Dec. 5, but it was far from the star performer among the precious metals. That title went to palladium, which surged US$37 to US$370 per oz., carrying platinum (which was up US$15 at US$453) along with it.
The big gold producers made respectable gains, with
Base metal prices were mostly flat over the report period, even though the collapse of derivatives trader Enron, which operated a large metal-trading house, caused short-lived spikes in the base metal prices on both sides of the weekend. Copper was down US1 at US67 per lb., and zinc lost a penny to finish the period at US34.
Investors hardly responded at all to news coming out of the
In contrast, the smaller miners did well on the week.
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