Canada's benchmark stock index ended barely higher on Friday, with sharp gains for gold miners offset by a slump in Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD) after CBC News reported that its employees were being pressured to meet high sales revenue goals. Shares in TD, Canada's No 2 lender, closed down 5.6 percent at C$66.00, its biggest one-day decline since early 2009.
In an emailed response to Reuters regarding the CBC story, TD said, "The environment described in the media report is very much at odds with how we run our business, and we don't recognize it from our own perspective, experience or assessments." The financials group fell 1.1 percent, despite solid domestic jobs data broadly boosted bond yields.
Several major gold miners were among the most influential gainers as bullion recovered from a five-week low. The materials group, which includes precious and base metals miners and fertilizer companies, added 2.1 percent, with Barrick Gold Corp rising 2.6 percent to C$24.51. "I don't see a fundamental reason to be excited about the miners, or about gold itself, because anything that depends on a weaker US dollar just doesn't make sense to me with Donald Trump in the White House," said Allan Small, senior investment advisor at HollisWealth.
Published under arrangements with Reuters.
No content from Business Recorder shall be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten for broadcast or publication, or redistributed directly or indirectly in any medium.
Business Recorder shall not be responsible or held liable for any error of fact, opinion or recommendation and also for any loss, financial or otherwise, resulting from business or trade or speculation conducted, or investments made, on the basis of the information posted here. Nor shall Business Recorder be held liable for any actions taken in consequence." >Copyright Reuters, 2017