â–º Listen Live

AFTER THE BELL: Canada/U.S. trade relations pull down TSX, Amazon joins $1 trillion club

Uncertainty over NAFTA negotiations took a toll on the TSX today.

Canada and the U.S. weren’t able to meet Trump’s deadline on a trade agreement on Friday, with talks expected to resume on Wednesday.

Canada’s stock exchange finished 101 points lower with the sell-off largely attributed to NAFTA issues, which created hand-wringing among investors.

Negative Trump tweets targeting Canada over the weekend, including one that said there was “no political necessity to keep Canada in the new NAFTA deal” also impacted markets.

All but one of the TSX’s 12 major sectors slipped in the red with the biggest pull coming from materials, which dropped 1.6 percent with the price of gold plunging $9.60 to $1,192 an ounce.

On Wall Street, positive U.S. consumer data wasn’t enough to offset trade tensions and a tumble in Nike shares as the Dow ended the day down slightly by 12 points.

And falling Facebook shares factored into a decline on the Nasdaq, which lost 18 points despite Amazon hitting the $1 trillion mark in value earlier today.

Oil was flat, falling 43 cents to $69.37 US a barrel while the reeling loonie lost half a cent, dropping to $.07587 US.

Meanwhile, Amazon briefly became a member of the exclusive $1 trillion club today.

At one point of the trading day, the U.S. mega-company’s stock rose nearly two percent to  $2,050.50, allowing it to cross the $1 trillion mark, but then pulled back slightly to just $2,039.51, or 1.3 percent higher.

Continue Reading

cjsu Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

York Road fire under investigation

The North Cowichan Fire Department is investigating a blaze on the weekend that damaged a house on York Road.

Nonprofits say funding crisis affects vital community services

Nonprofits in BC warn that they are facing a funding crisis that will affect essential community services. Over two-hundred leaders of nonprofit organizations in the province have signed an open letter to funders to say they are “at the breaking point."

Public sector workers escalate job action as strike enters third week

The B.C. General Employees Union and the Professional Employees Association are escalating job action as their members enter a third week of strikes. 

B.C. approves environmental certificate for massive LNG project on northern coast

British Columbia has given the green light to a floating liquified natural gas (LNG) export facility on B.C.’s northern coast. 

B.C. forecast to reach record high $11.6B deficit this year

British Columbia’s deficit is only going up, according to the latest budget update.
- Advertisement -