Despite an eventful week domestically, the TSE/S&P index slipped just 92.56 points over the May 29-June 4 report period to finish 1.2% lower, at 7,568.02.
On June 2, Finance Minister Paul Martin was relegated to the backbenches after years of infighting with the boss. The Feds moved quickly to dissipate any fallout by assuring markets that economic prudence would remain the norm.
Subsequently, at the period’s end, the Bank of Canada increased its overnight lending rate by 25 basis points to prompt the major chartered banks to follow suit. An unexpectedly strong economic recovery and inflationary fears were the driving factors.
Gold slipped US70 over the holiday-shortened London trading session, stopping at a morning fix of US$324.50 on June 5. Palladium was down as well, but silver and platinum both marched forward.
With gold tarnished, the Toronto gold issues saw 2.54 points stripped from their group. The TSX gold index finished the period at 226.47 points.
The ever-fashionable mid-tier producers were luckier, with
Most of the base metal complex saw higher prices over the period. Often vulnerable and always volatile, nickel rose US12 to finish at US$3.18 per lb., copper was US2 higher at US76, and zinc added US1 for a price of US35. Only lead was down a penny, at US20.
The Toronto base metal stocks reacted to the brightening price picture by surging 3.7% over the same period. The TSX Mining and Metals index finished at 151.91 points, up 5.36 points over the five trading days. The volume champion was
On the junior board,
Be the first to comment on "Benchmark slips as domestic turmoil erupts"