Monday, June 23, 2008

Financial Update

Oil and financials could weigh on TSX this week as Fed mulls interest rates

· TSX -209.48 as financial issues were hurt by inflation fears and worries over more U.S. mortgage-related problems, while consumer stocks also fell.

· Dow -220.40

· Dollar -.17c to $98.33.

· Oil +2.69 to $134.62US per barrel

· Gold -$.50US to $903.70US

Bond Rates: http://www.bankofcanada.ca/en/rates/bonds.html <http://www.bankofcanada.ca/en/rates/bonds.html>

By Malcolm Morrison, The Canadian Press

TORONTO - Gains could be tough to find on the Toronto stock market this week as investors wonder how much further the oil sector can carry the TSX, while financial shares fight fresh headwinds.

Concerns around those two areas again stopped the Toronto market's main index from establishing itself above the 15,000 mark last week.

On Monday, traders will be looking for the market's reaction to the Supreme Court's decision to allow the takeover of BCE Inc. to go ahead and a statement by the banks financing the deal that they "expect that the transaction will close in accordance with the definitive agreement between BCE and the sponsors."

Shares of BCE have traded well below the $42.75 per share price offered by the group led by the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan in recent weeks.

But investors will likely want to hold off on any big bets on the market ahead of the announcement on interest rates from the U.S. Federal Reserve on Wednesday.

"It's a Fed week," observed Michael Gregory, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets, adding that most analysts expect the U.S. central bank to leave its key interest rate unchanged at a four-year low of two per cent.

"I think they're very much on hold for awhile until they see how things pan out," Gregory said.

"I think they essentially indicated that (last) week with various Fed officials giving a sense that the market was getting way too ahead of itself in factoring in tightening."

But economists think there isn't much doubt that the Fed and other central banks will have to move rates upward sooner or later to prevent inflation from taking hold as near-record oil prices threaten to ripple through the economy.

"You talk about 2009, of course I think that's well within the cards," said Gregory.

Last week, the TSX composite index hit a record close of 15,073.13 before China moved to restrain fuel consumption by raising government-controlled prices and the energy sector stalled.

The index ended the week down 1.3 per cent, led by falling energy and financials.

The move by the Chinese government sent a chill through the Toronto market, where the oil sector has been largely responsible for the index's six per cent year-to-date gain.

The sector has surged 27 per cent so far this, but oil prices have been volatile.

"The fundamentals have put the market in such a position that even little things like (the Chinese announcement) cause huge price swings," said Gregory.

"We're at the point now where commodity price volatility has increased and will likely remain high going forward."

Meanwhile, the financial sector ended lower on a run of bad news at the end of the week.

This included a decision by Moody's Investors Service to downgrade the two biggest bond insurers, MBIA Inc. and Ambac Financial Group Inc., which underscored U.S. money-centre problems and heightened fears of bond-market instability.

And Citibank warned of more writedowns.

"I think there's more (bad news) out there somewhere," said Gregory, noting that investors remain cautious about banks and other financial service providers, especially in the United States.

"Yes these stocks are cheap but maybe there's a reason why they're cheap."