The
S&P/TSX composite index lost 65.71 points to 12,707.41, led by lower energy
and mining stocks, while the TSX Venture Exchange was off 22.91 points to
1,097.17.
Expansion
in China’s services sector slowed last month to its lowest level since
September. The non-manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index fell to 54.5 in
February from 56.2 in January.
“(China)
is not the only engine of global growth but it is a very, very important engine
of global growth,” observed Craig Fehr, Canadian markets specialist at Edward
Jones in St. Louis.
Also
depressing buying sentiment Monday was a move by the Chinese government to cool
surging housing prices. The government said it will raise required minimum down
payments in areas where prices are deemed to be rising too fast and crack down
on efforts to evade limits on how many properties each buyer can acquire.
Any
move to tighten China’s economy is usually taken as a negative because the
world’s second biggest economy has played a huge role in helping the overall
global economy recover from the 2008 financial collapse and subsequent
recession.
The
data and moves to dampen the housing market sent China’s main Shanghai
Composite tumbling 3.7 per cent in its worst percentage drop since August 2011.
The
Canadian dollar moved down 0.06 of a cent to 97.3 cents US two days before the
Bank of Canada makes its next announcement on interest rates. The bank could
signal that interest rate hikes are even further down the road than thought
because of persistent economic weakness.
The
tepid pace of the economy was highlighted Friday when data showed fourth
quarter growth came in at an annualized rate of 0.6 per cent, with growth
actually contracting during December.
In
New York, where indexes aren’t nearly so resource dominated, stocks advanced
despite concerns that the US$85 billion in across-the-board cuts that went into
effect Friday could slow the economic recovery.
The
Dow Jones industrials gained 38.16 points to 14,127.82, the Nasdaq was up 12.29
points to 3,182.03 while the S&P 500 index edged up seven points to
1,525.2.
Both
Democrats and Republicans cast blame on the other for the cuts, known as the
sequestration. Republicans insist there can be no new taxes and Democrats
refuse to talk about any bargain without them.
“The
reality is, sequestration represents a hatchet and one would have liked to see
something more delicate,” Fehr said.
“We
think you have to raise taxes and you have to cut spending and both of those
need to happen over a protracted period of time and need to be logical and at
the end of the day that’s the only way the fiscal situation in the U.S. will
ultimately be fixed.”
Commodity
prices were weak on top of losses on Friday.
Miners
led TSX declines, with the base metals component down 2.7 per cent as May
copper gave up early gains in the wake of the Chinese data and was unchanged at
US$3.50. China is the world’s biggest consumer of copper. Teck Resources
(TSX:TCK.B) declined 86 cents to $30.25.
There
was also major acquisition activity in the resource sector.
Aurizon
Mines Ltd. (TSX:ARZ) has received a friendly $796-million takeover offer from
U.S.-based silver, gold and metals producer Hecla Mining Co. Hecla’s offer
values the Vancouver-based miner at C$4.75 per share, 40 cents per share above
Aurizon’s closing stock price on Friday. Aurizon shares gained 14 cents to
$4.49.
The
gold sector also fell about 2.7 per cent as April bullion inched up a dime to
US$1,572.40 an ounce. Barrick Gold Corp. (TSX:ABX) was down 81 cents to $29.29.
The
energy sector was down 1.23 per cent while worries about demand from China
helped push the April crude contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange down
56 cents to US$90.12 a barrel, its lowest close this year. Canadian Natural
Resources (TSX:CNQ) dropped 79 cents to $31.26.
Gains
were led by the industrials sector, rising 0.53 per cent with Canadian National
Railways (TSX:CNR) up $1.70 to $105.57.
In
other corporate developments, Bank of Montreal was off 18 cents to $46.75 after
it lowered its posted rate for a five-year fixed mortgage to 2.99 per cent from
the current 3.09 per cent. The move prior to the major spring buying season
comes after Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. warned of a slowdown in the
housing sector, saying new housing construction is expected to be lower this
year due to moderate economic and employment growth.
U.S.
discount giant Target (NYSE:TGT) is set to open its first stores in Canada on
Tuesday. Target Canada president Tony Fisher made the announcement today during
a media tour of the retailer’s Guelph store in southwestern Ontario. The
Minneapolis-based retailer is expected to open between 125 and 135 locations in
Canada in spaces that were once owned by Zellers. Its shares closed up $2.31 to
US$66.44.
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